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Who uses English hops?

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Oh, where to begin?

The first thing to say is that English hops vary a lot depending on the vintage, in the same way that higher-latitude wine regions like Burgundy show much more pronounced variation between vintages than warmer regions. Before I got long Covid I could pretty reliably tell what vintage of EKG a beer was made with, tasting blind. So a lot of the variation people see may just be vintage effects. A lot of English hops can get a bit earthy in really bad vintages, even Goldings, but Fuggle is a lot more prone to it. OTOH in sunny vintages she becomes a lot more citrusy, as you can see with French Fuggle, Savinjski Golding and Willamette, which are all essentially the same thing but grown in sunnier climates. Indeed, you will get English brewers specifying English Fuggle for the hotside, and French Fuggle coldside.

This is a nice appreciation of her :
https://web.archive.org/web/2020112...2.com/ferment/article/771/a-hop-called-fuggle
Henry Kirk, Head Brewer of Dark Star Brewery in West Sussex, is also a fan. He tells me that he has had both positive and negative experiences with Fuggles, which he says can vary widely in quality, but asserts that when they are at their best, they are a thing of beauty. “Minty in colour and aroma alongside sap, green tea and woody notes. Glorious.”

Even among other traditional English varieties, Fuggle plays a unique role, according to Andy Leman, Timothy Taylor’s head brewer. “The aim of creating and brewing a traditional style English Ale, is to have a juicy malt character, balanced by delicate hop aromas and flavours,” he says. “This results in a very drinkable beer, that always leaves you wanting more. Without extreme New World hop flavours, normally a blend of English hops is used to create layers of complexity. While our WGVs and Goldings provide flavours of citrus and marmalade, Fuggles give deeper flavours of stone fruits (often apricot), slightly earthy notes, and a minty finish. This is why we love Fuggles so much, and are trying to encourage farmers to continue to grow this beautiful English heritage variety.’’

Steve Dunkley of Beer Nouveau and Temperance Street Brewery in Manchester has experimented with larger volumes of Fuggle hops and reports incredible results. Beer Nouveau specialises in brewing historic and heritage beers, rebrewing recipes from as far back as Ancient Egypt and the time of the Vikings. Steve tells me that he used Fuggles in the recreation of a recipe from the 1800s. “The sheer volumes of hops that they used meant that the essential oils that carry the aromas couldn’t escape in steam during the boil, they recirculated back into the bulk of the wort and isomerised there” he explains. “Beers we’ve brewed like this have smelled as fresh 18 months later as they did when we first brewed them.” He goes on to explain that Fuggle is a great hop for understanding the impact of this effect. “When you use it in small quantities, like it has been done recently, it’s pretty average. But when you use a lot of it, you get wonderful mango/stone fruit aromas and flavours.” Steve tells me that the difference is so pronounced that the profile has confused many who have taken a sip. “Drinkers trying it without knowing the hops have guessed that it’s an NZ hop.”


Fuggle was really badly hit by wilt in the 1950s, but Peter Darby's final creation after decades of trying was a wilt-resistant Fuggle, now called Wye Fuggle. You probably won't see her for a while but if you do - that's what she is.
I absolutely adore Cilantro/coriander, but my wife thinks it tastes like soap.
That's a really clear genetic difference though, I'm not so sure about Fuggle, I think that's more about vintage and good/bad examples of her. The OR6A2 gene encodes a receptor in your nose that is sensitive to certain aldehydes in coriander/cilantro, and there is a version of the gene that is super-sensitive and tips over into perceiving soapiness.
If you can’t get Bramling then use East Kent Golding.
Except Bramling is a Golding from East Kent.

And while I'm at it, she's not spelled Brambling with an extra "b" in the middle, that's a bird in the chaffinch family. The Golding clone is named after a village near Canterbury called Bramling. That hop made babies with a brother of Bullion and Brewer's Gold to make a completely different hop, called Bramling Cross.

And either Bullion or Brewer's Gold would be a better sub than Golding as they have the blackcurrant thing of the early Salmon crosses, although these days Brewer's Gold is only really grown in Germany where they particularly like her soft bittering for helles. But that's a thing - British brewers have started using British hops in lagers and given the problems that Germany is having with climate change, other people might want to look at doing the same. After all, it seems both Fuggle and Golding are close relatives of Hersbrucker - there's a theory that they were spread around Europe by Huguenots fleeing France. I'd also mention Keyworth's Early, which is pretty rare these days but has a good lemony flavour that would work nicely in lagers.

But going back to the vintage thing, in really hot years like 2018, Bramling Cross loses her characteristic blackcurrant and reverts back to something closer to her Golding mother.
I see many of your outlets stock Target, which I find an unlikely representative of English hops. I don't recall seeing many recipes on this side of the Pond. Again, it;s high time I reacquainted myself with this hop.
She was really important in the 1970s, as the first good wilt-resistant variety, so I guess some foreign retailers have locked onto her for that reason. Not just in England either - she got up to something like 75% of the Belgian crop at one point, so is "authentic" for any Belgian style.

The thing she's great for is introducing a little "raspiness" into bittering - everyone these days is so obsessed with "clean" bittering, and to my taste it's just not as nice or interesting as something with a bit of that rasp to it. I've also heard of people using her as a late addition with success, but have no direct experience.

I could go on, I haven't even mentioned all the new wave of Faram hops like Harlequin, Mystic and Jester. We do seem to have a bit of a new style of pale ale emerging of around 5% on cask, anchored on Harlequin and/or Ernest, with other Faram hops in the blend.
 
I could go on, I haven't even mentioned all the new wave of Faram hops like Harlequin, Mystic and Jester. We do seem to have a bit of a new style of pale ale emerging of around 5% on cask, anchored on Harlequin and/or Ernest, with other Faram hops in the blend.
Please do go on.
Your knowledge is encyclopedic! How do you do it?
I started this post in response to an uncertainty on another forum about how familiar American brewers were with English hops. The results so far have been very interesting indeed, but I note that although at least one big U S supplier stocks Harlequin, Jester, etc, nobody here has mentioned them. Well I suppose somebody must be using them.
 
Please do go on.
Your knowledge is encyclopedic! How do you do it?
I started this post in response to an uncertainty on another forum about how familiar American brewers were with English hops. The results so far have been very interesting indeed, but I note that although at least one big U S supplier stocks Harlequin, Jester, etc, nobody here has mentioned them. Well I suppose somebody must be using them. Which reminds me, NB mentioned Bullion, another English hop, but I think it's Also grown in the US. This is a great hop for stouts and porters with real depth of flavour, but even better in a stout, if you can find it, is Phoenix, which smells of chocolate and molasses in the boil.
Don't know what happened here, but I added a it to the previous post.
 
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My two favorite styles are Irish Stout and British Brown Ale. I am very happy with the bittering using EKG (first in, longer boil time) followed by some fuggles. Dosage is on the lighter side as those are both malt forward recipes (vs a hop forward IPA for instance). I usually go thru a couple pounds of EKG every year. Love both of those. Not very impressed with the "lesser known" UK hop varieties but I shoot for more traditional than modern in my beer preference .
 
EKG and Fuggles here, too, but just for British styles so far. I tried to find Bramling Cross for my Butty Bach but was unsuccessful. Which others should we definitely explore, and for what?
I'm English, in England. Full declaration!

English hops are used a fair bit in Belgian beers, I believe, and they grow some English hops breeds in Belgium.

I buy and use Pilgrim hops regularly. They are cheap and I really like them in all English styles. Would work for Belgian styles too, I'm sure. They have around 10% alpha, used a lot for bittering but work well at all stages of the boil. I mostly hop beers at the start and end of the boil. I discovered that idea when I helped out in a small brewery from a pro brewer.

In my opinion English hops vary but have a similar character, mostly. We don't get the pungency with our cool climate. If your palate is firmly adjusted to American hops you are likely to struggle with English hops.

The newer English hops have been bred to have the fruity character of US hops, but are like a diluted version. Some people like that, others don't. Harlequin and Jester are probably the best examples. Fruity but not pungent.

The English hops I use most are Pilgrim, Golding, First Gold, Northdown, Bramling Cross and Challenger. Progress sometimes.

If you buy Northern Brewer or Brewers Gold they are probably grown in Germany. Brewers Gold seems to be vanishing here. Shame, I like them. BG has been used widely in Belgian and German beers I think.
 
Oh, where to begin?

The first thing to say is that English hops vary a lot depending on the vintage, in the same way that higher-latitude wine regions like Burgundy show much more pronounced variation between vintages than warmer regions. Before I got long Covid I could pretty reliably tell what vintage of EKG a beer was made with, tasting blind. So a lot of the variation people see may just be vintage effects. A lot of English hops can get a bit earthy in really bad vintages, even Goldings, but Fuggle is a lot more prone to it. OTOH in sunny vintages she becomes a lot more citrusy, as you can see with French Fuggle, Savinjski Golding and Willamette, which are all essentially the same thing but grown in sunnier climates. Indeed, you will get English brewers specifying English Fuggle for the hotside, and French Fuggle coldside.

This is a nice appreciation of her :
https://web.archive.org/web/2020112...2.com/ferment/article/771/a-hop-called-fuggle
Henry Kirk, Head Brewer of Dark Star Brewery in West Sussex, is also a fan. He tells me that he has had both positive and negative experiences with Fuggles, which he says can vary widely in quality, but asserts that when they are at their best, they are a thing of beauty. “Minty in colour and aroma alongside sap, green tea and woody notes. Glorious.”

Even among other traditional English varieties, Fuggle plays a unique role, according to Andy Leman, Timothy Taylor’s head brewer. “The aim of creating and brewing a traditional style English Ale, is to have a juicy malt character, balanced by delicate hop aromas and flavours,” he says. “This results in a very drinkable beer, that always leaves you wanting more. Without extreme New World hop flavours, normally a blend of English hops is used to create layers of complexity. While our WGVs and Goldings provide flavours of citrus and marmalade, Fuggles give deeper flavours of stone fruits (often apricot), slightly earthy notes, and a minty finish. This is why we love Fuggles so much, and are trying to encourage farmers to continue to grow this beautiful English heritage variety.’’

Steve Dunkley of Beer Nouveau and Temperance Street Brewery in Manchester has experimented with larger volumes of Fuggle hops and reports incredible results. Beer Nouveau specialises in brewing historic and heritage beers, rebrewing recipes from as far back as Ancient Egypt and the time of the Vikings. Steve tells me that he used Fuggles in the recreation of a recipe from the 1800s. “The sheer volumes of hops that they used meant that the essential oils that carry the aromas couldn’t escape in steam during the boil, they recirculated back into the bulk of the wort and isomerised there” he explains. “Beers we’ve brewed like this have smelled as fresh 18 months later as they did when we first brewed them.” He goes on to explain that Fuggle is a great hop for understanding the impact of this effect. “When you use it in small quantities, like it has been done recently, it’s pretty average. But when you use a lot of it, you get wonderful mango/stone fruit aromas and flavours.” Steve tells me that the difference is so pronounced that the profile has confused many who have taken a sip. “Drinkers trying it without knowing the hops have guessed that it’s an NZ hop.”


Fuggle was really badly hit by wilt in the 1950s, but Peter Darby's final creation after decades of trying was a wilt-resistant Fuggle, now called Wye Fuggle. You probably won't see her for a while but if you do - that's what she is.

That's a really clear genetic difference though, I'm not so sure about Fuggle, I think that's more about vintage and good/bad examples of her. The OR6A2 gene encodes a receptor in your nose that is sensitive to certain aldehydes in coriander/cilantro, and there is a version of the gene that is super-sensitive and tips over into perceiving soapiness.

Except Bramling is a Golding from East Kent.

And while I'm at it, she's not spelled Brambling with an extra "b" in the middle, that's a bird in the chaffinch family. The Golding clone is named after a village near Canterbury called Bramling. That hop made babies with a brother of Bullion and Brewer's Gold to make a completely different hop, called Bramling Cross.

And either Bullion or Brewer's Gold would be a better sub than Golding as they have the blackcurrant thing of the early Salmon crosses, although these days Brewer's Gold is only really grown in Germany where they particularly like her soft bittering for helles. But that's a thing - British brewers have started using British hops in lagers and given the problems that Germany is having with climate change, other people might want to look at doing the same. After all, it seems both Fuggle and Golding are close relatives of Hersbrucker - there's a theory that they were spread around Europe by Huguenots fleeing France. I'd also mention Keyworth's Early, which is pretty rare these days but has a good lemony flavour that would work nicely in lagers.

But going back to the vintage thing, in really hot years like 2018, Bramling Cross loses her characteristic blackcurrant and reverts back to something closer to her Golding mother.

She was really important in the 1970s, as the first good wilt-resistant variety, so I guess some foreign retailers have locked onto her for that reason. Not just in England either - she got up to something like 75% of the Belgian crop at one point, so is "authentic" for any Belgian style.

The thing she's great for is introducing a little "raspiness" into bittering - everyone these days is so obsessed with "clean" bittering, and to my taste it's just not as nice or interesting as something with a bit of that rasp to it. I've also heard of people using her as a late addition with success, but have no direct experience.

I could go on, I haven't even mentioned all the new wave of Faram hops like Harlequin, Mystic and Jester. We do seem to have a bit of a new style of pale ale emerging of around 5% on cask, anchored on Harlequin and/or Ernest, with other Faram hops in the blend.
That's a fantastic post, thank you! Shame that Beer Nouveau went out of business. Great quotes from him and Andy Leman. Five Points bitter must benefit from that Fuggle saturation thing. Fullers uses Target late in one of its beers. Bengal Lancer I think. Dry hop possibly.
 
That's a fantastic post, thank you! Shame that Beer Nouveau went out of business.
Steve's on his way back - he's had some complicated family stuff but is now restarting back in his original neck of the woods, Peterborough with a new venture, Bonsai Sake and some brewing as well, he's got as far as the HMRC visit...
Fullers uses Target late in one of its beers. Bengal Lancer I think. Dry hop possibly.
The main partigyle uses Target for bittering and Northdown/Challenger/Goldings for aroma, and some of them like ESB get some Target dry hop.

https://www.homebrewtalk.com/thread...imperials-neipa-from-the-horses-mouth.642756/
https://www.asahibeer.co.uk/products/fullers-london-pride

100% Target bittering can be a bit much, there's an argument for diluting it down a bit with something smoother.
 
I currently have Goldings and Bramling Cross from the UK in the freezer.

A few years ago I bought hops directly from Stocks Farm in the UK. They focus on homebrewers, not breweries. Shipping was outrageous to the US but I was very happy with the hops. I don't see Endeavour hops on their current list, but I bought some from them a few years back and thought they were quite nice in a bitter.

On a related note, the American Homebrewer's Association just released their annual "Learn to Homebrew" recipes for 2025 and while the recipe for an extract bitter looks very nice, I am shocked that the suggested hops are:

whole English Northdown hops @ 60 min
whole English Bramling Cross or Wye Challenger @ 60 min
whole English Fuggles @ 20 min
whole English Kent Goldings, 2 to 5 min steep @ knockout

To expect American homebrewers who are learning to brew (much less experienced homebrewers who actually focus on British beers) to come up with these hops is totally bonkers! No note about replacing them with pellets if you can't find whole hops (which will be a challenge!). WTF are they thinking??
 
I currently have Goldings and Bramling Cross from the UK in the freezer.

A few years ago I bought hops directly from Stocks Farm in the UK. They focus on homebrewers, not breweries. Shipping was outrageous to the US but I was very happy with the hops. I don't see Endeavour hops on their current list, but I bought some from them a few years back and thought they were quite nice in a bitter.

On a related note, the American Homebrewer's Association just released their annual "Learn to Homebrew" recipes for 2025 and while the recipe for an extract bitter looks very nice, I am shocked that the suggested hops are:

whole English Northdown hops @ 60 min
whole English Bramling Cross or Wye Challenger @ 60 min
whole English Fuggles @ 20 min
whole English Kent Goldings, 2 to 5 min steep @ knockout

To expect American homebrewers who are learning to brew (much less experienced homebrewers who actually focus on British beers) to come up with these hops is totally bonkers! No note about replacing them with pellets if you can't find whole hops (which will be a challenge!). WTF are they thinking??

The other recipe on that list (Vienna lager) is rather busy, too. That grain bill...but at least it's a single hop.

I don't doubt they are good recipes, but if they want to draw in new people, less is more. Perhaps the air is a bit rarefied at the top echelons of AHA, and it's hard to put themselves in the shoes of new brewers.
 
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