Simcoe is the hop that I think defined a generation of American IPAs — the pine, passion fruit, and earthy combination produced the flavor profile that made Sierra Nevada Torpedo and a hundred other West Coast IPAs what they are.
John Brewster
John Brewster
John Brewster is the homebrewer and writer behind BrewMyBeer — over a decade of all-grain brewing, 80+ BIAB batches, and 1,000+ guides on fermentation science, water chemistry, hops, yeast, and homebrewing equipment. Every guide is written from genuine hands-on experience.
- Beer Brewing
Strata Hop Substitute Passion Fruit & Cannabis Alternatives
by John Brewster 3 minutes readStrata is one of those hop varieties where the flavor description reads like it shouldn’t work but does — passion fruit, cannabis/hash, citrus, and strawberry in a combination that sounds chaotic but produces genuinely interesting beers.
Idaho 7 is one of the most intensely aromatic American hops I’ve used — the first time I dry hopped a NEIPA with it, the tropical stone fruit character in the finished beer was immediately distinctive and more intense than …
Sabro is the hop variety that most surprised me in terms of how much flavor character it packs into a small dry hop addition.
El Dorado is the hop that I describe as candy-tropical when I’m trying to convey the character to someone who hasn’t used it.
- Beer Brewing
Columbus Hop Substitute High-Alpha Dual-Purpose Alternatives
by John Brewster 3 minutes readColumbus is the high-alpha workhorse that’s been in my hop freezer since I started homebrewing — it’s inexpensive, consistently available, high enough alpha for efficient bittering, and has enough character at late additions to justify using it beyon
Chinook is the hop I think of first when a recipe calls for assertive, resinous bitterness with grapefruit and pine — the combination that defined West Coast IPAs before Citra and Mosaic became the default.
Synthetic biology is shaping brewing in ways that range from already-commercial to still-speculative, and the distinction matters for anyone trying to understand the current state of the technology versus the projected future.
Brewing with desalinated seawater is a topic that sits at the intersection of water chemistry — which every serious brewer should understand — and the practical realities of water access in coastal and arid regions where desalination is a primary …
Nano breweries occupy the space I find most interesting in the current brewing landscape — small enough that a single passionate brewer can run the whole operation, large enough to produce commercially and build a sustainable business.