Understanding the Hop Stability Index: Key for smaller scale brewers

hop pellets

All hops degrade with time, especially if in contact with air. The HSI (Hop Stability Index) is a measure of the rate of oxidation of the alpha and beta acids with time. The value quoted relates to the extent of oxidation of these bittering acids when in the presence of air at 20 °C over a period of six months.

Why is this important?

Whilst the bittering potential of an open package of a high HSI hop will reduce significantly over time, it is not the economics which matter most to a brewer who only only brews infrequently or at a small scale. The issue which should concern you is a change in the nature of the bitterness which is imparted. As the bittering acids oxidise their flavour changes, and rather than the typical neutral bitterness you want, you are likely to get a vegetal like bitterness; like that you would get with overcooked cabbage or sprouts. This is not pleasant.

How do I avoid this problem?

All the time your hop pellets are in sealed, oxygen free, bags they cannot oxidise. It is open bags, which are now in contact with oxygen where you will have a problem. For more information, see this article. It is good practice to chill all of your hops, but this is even more important once the bag has been opened. If you want to store an open bag of hop pellets for more that a few weeks you are best advised to seal the bag as best you can and keep in a freezer. Larger breweries will use whole bags of pellets / whole tins of extract either within a batch, or within the week and this overcomes the issue, but for smaller producers, like brew pubs, or new smaller businesses this is not going to be an option.

The easiest and most practical option to manage hop acid oxidation is to choose your hop varieties carefully. Look up the characteristics of several hop varieties which give you the properties / flavour profile you are looking for, and choose only hops where the HSI is < 30%. To exemplify this consider Columbus, this is a very high alpha acid hop, seemingly ideal as a bittering hop. However the HSI is 45% and thus is not a variety I’d recommend to smaller breweries who will not use a whole bag within a fortnight. Similarly Centennial is a sublime aroma hop for lovely, well retained citrus / grapefruit flavours (see my article concerning hops whose flavour with the best retention into the final beer) but again it has a high HSI and will start to give you unpleasant flavours if the bag has been open for more than 2-3 weeks.

Good hop choices

Fortunately we are now blessed with such a broad range of hop varieties that, with access to the right knowledge one can choose a hop which has the flavours you want and is practical for your scale of operation. Here are some examples to get you started…

Variety

Duty

Flavour

HSI / %

( < 30% is good)

Pacific Gem

Bittering

N/A as FWH (link)

22

Apollo

Bittering

N/A as FWH (link)

15

Citra

Dual purpose

Citrus

27

Chinook

Aroma

Citrus / Pine

29

Rakau

Aroma

Tropical Fruits

21

El Dorado

Aroma

Tropical Fruits

30

Dana

Aroma

Floral

28

Cascade (US)

Aroma

Floral

36 (borderline, ok in practice)

Goldings (UK)

Dual Purpose

Woody / Herbal

22

Northern Brewer

Dual Purpose

Woody / Herbal

30

Which hop oils survive from the hot side – some recent research from Yakima Chief

My last post on hop addition timing attracted a lot of interest and someone from Yakima Chief reached out to me with a technical data-sheet which they published in 2021. I’ve shown the key chart below which quantifies the nature and level of hop flavour oils which they have detected in a finished beer vs. species and addition time.

hop-pellets

They don’t specify their methodology but compare a set of hop species whose oil content has the combination of concentration and properties (solubility, boiling point etc) which helps them to remain in the beer from the hot side and those whose qualities mean they are best added as a dry hop.

Species

Flavour / Comment*

2-Nonanone

Cheesy / Herbal

Geraniol

Floral

Linalool

Citrus / Fruity

2-Methylbutyl isobutyrate

Fruity / Apricot

Methyl Geranate

Floral

Isoamyl isobutyrate

Apricot / Banana

3-Mercaptohexanol

Tropical / Grapefruit

* A flavour combination is often different from the sum of it’s parts.

Information of hop oil composition is hard to find, so whilst the chart is only qualitative and only covers US varieties it does give a good guide to a range of 20 popular aroma hops. I know that one use I will be able to put this to is to combine hops with different oil profiles to better maximise the breadth of flavour experience in my beers.

A copy of the full data-sheet can be downloaded from here or here. If you are a micro-brewery wanting help with a beer design, please do get in touch and let’s see how I might help.

Towards a theory to explain the best time for hop additions

Is it possible to rationalise the best time to add specific hops into the wort boil? Not simply to maximise their bittering potential (that’s simple), but to extract and retain their flavour potential. This is the question I asked myself. Brewing is my second career, I started my working life as a problem solving chemist underpinned by a Ph.D in chemical mechanisms. Thus it has always been useful to me to understand the reasoning behind how a process is run. The why behind the what. So whilst it’s clear that late addition hops will lose less of their essential oils to evaporation, would it be possible to come up with an overall theoretical basis for which any hop flavour is best obtained at specific times within the boil? (not just the trendy ones.) I think the answer is yes.

I’ll not squander your time on the ideas that didn’t work and cut to the chase. When I drew up a list of all the essential oils which I could name if was clear that different flavour classes fell into different chemical functional group classes. i.e. All woody and spices flavour oils are higher molecular weight (MW) hydrocarbons or oxidation products of these.  Citrus flavours come from low molecular weight (C10) unsaturated terpenes / terpene alcohols and so on. Here is my list of those chemical classes:

Aroma / Flavour

Chemical class

Spicy / Herbal

Oxidation product (high MW)

Woody

Oxidation product (high MW)

Purely spicy

Oxidation product (low MW)

Passion Fruit

Thiol

Tropical Fruit

Thiol

Citrus

Unsaturated oxygenate

Floral

Unsaturated oxygenate or Biotransformate

Pine

Terpene

Resinous

Terpene

Grassy

Aldehyde (low MW)

If you then list the oils by boiling point, the rationale behind their use starts to becomes clear.

So what do we learn?

  • Hop derived traditional British beer flavours can survive from the first wort hop additions because of their high boiling point.

  • In general spicy herbal flavours are likely to require a reasonable length of time in the boil to facilitate their oxidation to epoxides, probably at least 20 minutes.

  • Experience suggests that oils with a boiling point below 230 C are readily lost and should be added at the whirlpool.(1)

  • Flavours from biotransformation are best achieved by dry hopping or whirlpool additions.

  • Add to the above knowledge the very low concentration of thiols present in hops and you can see that tropical flavours are only likely to be obvious from whirlpool or dry hop additions.

On these basis we can rationally add hops into the wort at the point which will maximise the flavour component we are seeking. So take Perle hops for example, which can offer both spicy and orange flavours. The spicy flavours would be best gained by adding in the flavour section to (+20 / +30 min) to allow time for oxidation. However, if we want the pine / orange flavours from this hop then this would be best achieved at the whirlpool. Observations such as this explain why the addition of the same hop at different stages of the boil can give a greater breadth of flavour to the beer. The same is true with dry hopping where additions during active fermentation should be expected to yield more biotransformation flavours that those added during warm conditioning. Thus a rationale for double dry hopping, but only if the correct hop varieties are used (those containing Geraniol / Linalool). Although I still suspect that the DDH moniker is more of a marketing term than a zymological one.

What I’d like to do next is to tabulate the flavour threshold of all of these oils to see what extra insight this sheds into the area. Highly experienced brewers are likely to have come to the above conclusions simply through their breadth of experience, but I know I’ve found it satisfying to bring some rational (ab initio) light to shine on this question.

I would really love to hear your constructive feedback on these ideas.

(1) 85% of hop oils added at the start of a wort boil are lost during the boil – F.R. Sharpe & D.R.J. Laws, J. Inst, Brew, 1981, vol 87, 96-107.

Acknowledgements: My thanks to Will Rodgers at Charles Faram and Thomas Shellhammer at Orgegon State University for helpful discussions