Doing a little web research recently about Virginia
brewing. Between the Brewers Association
website and my own recollection, I was trying to name off, out of the 61
Virginia craft breweries, how many of them are near (within a two hours’ drive)
Hawksbill Cabin. Here’s what I came up
with:
·
Harrisonburg:
Three Brothers, Three Notched
·
Lexington:
Devil’s Backbone Outpost, Blue Lab
·
Lynchburg:
Jefferson Street, Apocalypse
·
Front Royal:
Backroom
·
Purcellville:
Corcoran, Adroit Theory
·
Leesburg:
Crooked Run, Barnhouse
·
Ashburn:
Lost Rhino
This list has the makings of a year-long day-trip fest to
taste beers in breweries, especially if you add in several breweries to the
east that you would encounter as you drove back towards (or out from) Washington,
DC, including Old Busthead in Vint Hill (Manassas area), Bad Wolf in Manassas, Mad
Fox in Falls Church, and Port City in Alexandria. Last year I exchanged emails with a few of
these about where they get their hops – I also talked to two larger brewers in
the Tidewater area.
Also from the Brewers Association website, there was news
that about 130,000 barrels of craft beer are produced annually in
Virginia. The selection of breweries I
highlighted range in size from nano, producing less than 5,000 barrels
annually, to regional, producing more than 15,000 barrels per year, but they
probably add up to about one-quarter of the craft beer produced in Virginia, or
approximately 32,500 barrels.
It’s just a point of interest to me at this point, but
thinking about Dan’s (and Bill's - shown here) hop yard, and the other hop yards that are springing up
throughout the state, I wanted to take this review to the next step of
calculating how much hops this level of brewery production required. Here’s what I came up with:
·
Approximate (dried) hops per barrel: 1.5 pounds
·
Total (dried) hops needed for 32,500
barrels: 48,750 pounds
·
Estimated (dried) hops produced by known
Virginia hop yards: 14,000 pounds
None of the hop yards that I am familiar with actually dry
their hops for commercial sales – that is a level of investment in machinery they haven’t made
yet. Instead, they sell their fresh hops
into the market place, and we get some very good seasonal “harvest” beers, best
consumed fresh, and only available in limited quantities for a very short time. Fresh hops contain a lot of water, and are
typically dried in an oasting process that reduces their mass by 80 percent.
What would happen in this market if a hop yard were to come
on the market with the capability to produce high quality dried hops – either whole
or in pellets? There certainly appears
to be room for the product on the demand size, since these craft breweries
identified survive and prosper without local hops, acquiring them instead from
large, national distributers, such as Brewers Supply Group, Fresh Hops, and
Hops Union.
I guess I’ll have to leave the question as a rhetorical one
for now. But it is definitely food for
thought.