TarheelBrew13
Well-Known Member
If you boil a hop for over 30 min, all the flavor and aroma compounds will be driven off. Given how difficult it is to get Simcoe and Citra, it makes my heart die a little every time someone uses it as a bittering hop where Centennial would have provided the same effect.
Also, the FWH itself provides no aroma whatsoever, any chemicals volatile enough to be detected by smell after the beer is finished would be boiled off. It does affect the hop aroma of the beer by altering the ph. The reason its suggested that the brewer uses an aroma hop for the FWH addition is because those hops typically have lower AA%'s and are thus easier to control. You could substitute Cascade for Citra as the FWH and the only change that would be significant would be the change in PH, which is easily measured and adjusted to the Citra FWH levels.
I hate to be Chicken Little screaming the sky is falling but Citra and Simcoe will run out this summer and we're all going to wish we had used them more efficiently. I am a bit of a Citra zealot, however, so you may not agree. My lawyer is drawing up the papers as we speak for me to marry Citra.
Also, the FWH itself provides no aroma whatsoever, any chemicals volatile enough to be detected by smell after the beer is finished would be boiled off. It does affect the hop aroma of the beer by altering the ph. The reason its suggested that the brewer uses an aroma hop for the FWH addition is because those hops typically have lower AA%'s and are thus easier to control. You could substitute Cascade for Citra as the FWH and the only change that would be significant would be the change in PH, which is easily measured and adjusted to the Citra FWH levels.
I hate to be Chicken Little screaming the sky is falling but Citra and Simcoe will run out this summer and we're all going to wish we had used them more efficiently. I am a bit of a Citra zealot, however, so you may not agree. My lawyer is drawing up the papers as we speak for me to marry Citra.