Amanda Benson (1),
 Victor Algazzali (2), Lindsay Barr (3), Tiffany Pitra (4); (1) 
Deschutes Brewery, Bend, OR, U.S.A.; (2) John I. Haas, U.S.A.; (3) New 
Belgium Brewing Company, U.S.A.; (4) Hopsteiner, U.S.A.
Sensory
Poster
The most common form of aroma evaluation of raw hops is the hand-rub 
technique, as described in the ASBC Methods of Analysis (Hops-2). The 
purpose of the hop tea method is a cool water extract of hops for 
sensory analysis as an alternative to the traditional hand-rub technique
 for raw hop evaluation. Whole cone or pellet hops are added to water in
 a French press and placed on a stir plate for 20 min. The water is then
 decanted off the hops, and the resulting hop tea is evaluated for 
aroma. Standardization of the method is being conducted between four 
different sensory labs. Potential benefits include the fact that the hop
 tea method minimizes the carry over that you might see with the 
hand-rub technique, and the teas can also be made ahead and refrigerated
 for a fixed amount of time before analysis. Validation of the method is
 being conducted with (more) sensory labs, using triangle tests to 
determine repeatability and sensitivity. Raw material evaluation is 
important in brewery quality, and this method is another low-cost 
technique for raw hop evaluation and assessing potential dry-hop aroma 
qualities.
Amanda Benson received a B.S. degree in food science, with an 
emphasis on fermentation science, from Oregon State University in 
Corvallis, OR, in 2000. In 2013 she completed the Applied Sensory and 
Consumer Science Certificate Program through the UC Davis Extension 
Program. In 2000, she began working at Deschutes Brewery in the Brewing 
Department and in 2003 moved to the Quality Assurance Department. In 
2006 she started the sensory program for Deschutes Brewery as part of 
the Quality Assurance Program. She has been a member of ASBC since 2008 
and is a member of the ASBC Sensory Subcommittee.
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