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Bulk Hop Extract

Finally! I found a vendor (Yakima Valley Hops) that was willing to sell me a can of generic CO2 extracted hop extract. I already had some cheap syringes from eBay, so I purchased a 150g AA tin, and away we went.

DSC_6785.jpgMy box showed up today with a couple pounds of hops, and the can of hop extract. It’s definitely interesting stuff, and looks fairly gross when it’s in bulk sitting in the can. It’s very thick, so I found it much easier to work with after letting the can soak in very hot water first.

 

I had a couple wide gauge ‘needles’ for the syringes that act like a straw to suck up the hop extract. Even though they were reasonably wide, it does take awhile to fill the syringes, as the extract is very viscous. Anyway, after about 30 minutes, I ended up with around 130ml of hop extract, or the equivalent of around 26 Hop Shots from Northern Brewer. That’s about 60% cheaper than what Northern Brewer charges, so it’s definitely a bargin.
DSC_6787.jpgI won’t be using extract for all my beers this year, as I bought a pound of Apollo that I’ll be using for most of my general bittering. The extract is slotted for my big IPAs and DIPAs where I feel I’ll get the most out of it.

 

Anyway, it’s cool stuff, get your hands on some if you can.

29 thoughts on “Bulk Hop Extract”
  1. Jym Ferrier 11.24.2012 on 8:52 PM Reply

    Awesome idea. How do you plan to store them?

  2. Scott 11.24.2012 on 10:40 PM Reply

    I was thinking about in the freezer, but I wasn't sure how this stuff would freeze. I checked the Hop Union website, and they say it keeps for yeaarrrrs, so I think it'll be fine kept in the dark fridge. We'll see.

  3. Joseph Smith 11.25.2012 on 2:21 AM Reply

    Awesome stuff! I've been reading a lot of your older posts and liked you penguin bottles wax dipped. Could you or have you written a post on your process for that? I want to try it for my barleywine that I just put into secondary. Thanks.

  4. Scott 11.25.2012 on 5:03 AM Reply

    Thanks, ya I've been meaning to do a write up on the wax dipped bottles. I will here shortly, as I'm fermenting a stout that I'm planning to bottle some off.

    The short story is its wax crayons and hot glue sticks. I'll follow up with the long story soon.

  5. Joseph Smith 11.25.2012 on 5:26 AM Reply

    I was thinking that. I saw something similar on HBT. I'll wait for your write up though.

  6. pjdunn 12.05.2012 on 6:08 AM Reply

    Mind sharing how much they charged for the tin? I'm interested in doing something similar.

  7. Scott 12.05.2012 on 2:24 PM Reply

    Sure, it was in the mid 20's. Like 24-26. I forget the exact number.

  8. mikslen 02.01.2013 on 1:33 PM Reply

    Hi, how did you work out how many ml of extract you need?

  9. Scott 02.01.2013 on 5:53 PM Reply

    HopUnion has all the formulas. Basically it boils down to: 5ml of hop extract replaces 1oz of a 10% AA hop. (10AA). Or 1ml of hop extract = 2AAU.

  10. Joseph Smith 03.25.2013 on 3:13 PM Reply

    Scott, with all this enjoy by and pty/e talk going around I want to give these a try. I am considering buying a can myself becuase it is by far the best deal out there. but my concern is storage. In your post you said it should keep for a LONG time, but according to hopunion they say once can is open you should use with-in a few days. Thoughts? Do I do it anyway? Have you noticed any difference in the extract since you bought it a while back?

  11. Scott 03.27.2013 on 1:01 AM Reply

    I'm storing it in the syringes pictured above (identical to the hop shots from northern brewer). I keep those in the fridge in a zip lock bag. I've had them for probably 6 months now, and they're 100% fine.

    If you aren't storing them something relatively air-tight, ya, I would imagine it would degrade fairly fast.

  12. Joseph Smith 03.27.2013 on 3:19 PM Reply

    Cool! Thanks for the reply. I'm on it for sure now.

  13. Greg L. 04.11.2013 on 6:29 AM Reply

    Does the CO2 resin act like pellet hops? In other words, do the IBU's change at 60 min, 30 min etc.?

  14. Scott 04.15.2013 on 12:45 AM Reply

    Exactly.

    Personally though I wouldn't use hop extract for any aroma additions. There's no way to tell what variety of hop it is, or judge the quality of the hops that were used.

  15. Shawn 06.21.2013 on 2:23 PM Reply

    Chris, when using the extract in your boil, do you let the syringes warm up to room temp first, or do you even have to heat them higher? I may only have access to 3 mL syringes, which would force me to likely use 1&1/2 (or more) syringes at a time.

    Thanks!

  16. Scott 07.04.2013 on 9:18 PM Reply

    I let them warm up to room temp, but room temp in Arizona is 80F+. I usually don't have much of an issue getting them to flow.

  17. Shawn 07.05.2013 on 2:02 PM Reply

    Thanks!

    And, I don't know why I called you Chris… sorry, Scott!

  18. Apeks Supercritical 07.15.2013 on 7:19 PM Reply

    Apeks Supercritical can extract hops – http://www.apekssupercritical.com/apeks-extracts-hops-oil/

  19. Rob Pitingolo 10.04.2013 on 3:37 PM Reply

    Hi. I'm thinking of buying a can of hop extract from Yakima Valley. The cans they have for sale now are 100g for $22. Can you give a bit more information about the "cheap ebay syringes" you bought? Or a link to a syringe product that would work? I'm not at all familiar with them and the price seems to vary wildly depending on a number of factors. Thanks!

  20. Scott 10.04.2013 on 3:56 PM Reply

    Search ebay for 'luer lock syringe'. You can get a box of 100 for like $6. You'll need at least 250cc worth of syringes.

  21. Richard Olah 10.29.2013 on 2:34 AM Reply

    Hi,

    Can i ask where you got the black caps to seal the syringes after extraction

  22. Scott 10.29.2013 on 4:38 AM Reply

    If memory serves me right they came with my syringes. If not search for luer lock caps

  23. kurineru 12.17.2013 on 2:46 AM Reply

    Thanks for sharing your experiences with hop extract as well as all your Pliny recipes. My 100g can of extract from Yakima Valley got here today and I'm getting ready to brew my own PtE. I just wanted to check with you about the number of syringes you used. In your post, you said that the can yielded 130cc of extract. I've got 16 x 10cc syringes, and I wanted to make sure that would cover everything before I opened the can.

  24. Richard Olah 01.02.2014 on 11:11 PM Reply

    This comment has been removed by the author.

  25. Richard Olah 01.02.2014 on 11:14 PM Reply

    Hi Scott,

    Can I ask what gauge needle you are using? I only have the 18 and am worried it may be too small in diameter to suck up the extract.

    Cheers

    Richard

  26. Scott 02.12.2014 on 3:47 PM Reply

    14ga. It was a little slow, but it got the job done.

  27. ttbrewer 02.02.2016 on 4:59 AM Reply

    Scott,
    I would like to make sure you are comfortable with your numbers for Hop Shot that basically say a 5ml syringe is equivalent to 1 oz of 10 AA hops. In my eyes you are in conflict with the Chart at Northern Brewer and the statement by Yakima Valley. They say "one milliliter of Hop Shot correlates to approximately 10 IBUs in 5 gallons of 1.050 wort —" Your 1 ml equals 2 AA is only one-fifth of their 1 ml equals 10 AA. I will follow your recipe for Pliny Younger and use 35 ml and 5ml, but I will be wondering if I have 140 IBU or 700 IBU. If the recipe works all is fine. However I will have formulate recipes to use the other Hop Shots I made up. Any help you can give me will be appreciated. If you get this post twice I am sorry. First one appeared to get lost in cyber space. Thank you for your help, great website!

  28. Scott 02.22.2016 on 11:06 PM Reply

    I am comfortable with the numbers. The math was all pulled from HopUnion's website. With that said, The beer doesn't need nearly that much bittering hops. From seeing the actual brew sheet from Russian river, they use WAYYY less AAU than everyone thought.

    About 30AAU at 90 minutes for Younger should be plenty. The rest is just a waste of money in retrospect.

    • ttbrewer 02.04.2017 on 9:04 PM Reply

      Scott,
      A year has passed. Looking at this thread I wonder if I was mixing up AAU and IBU last year. Anyway here is what happened. I have been brewing an APA recipe 20 years now. The recipe uses 100% Cascade. I tried using 20 mil of Hop Shot in place of some of the Cascade, but still used 9 oz of Cascade in a 12 gallon batch. Beer Smith put me at 118 IBU using 1mil equal to 2 AAU. That was a good ballpark number so I went with it. The beer came out very good, but I prefer all Cascade. I then used the yeast over to make an IPA Using your Pliny The Younger as a model. 80 mil of Hop Shot was used. I came up short on my OG 1.080. I never ever check FG, It is whatever it ends up as. Beer Smith clocked me in at 222 IBU. The beer took second place in the State Competition. There were 550 entries. The beer I brewed was judged against 15 other IPA. I did not enter as Imperial. Bottom line is I am with you on your figures for the Hop Shot. The judges and I all think it is a harsh bitterness. That is OK for an IPA. Thanks for all the wonderful information you have put out to assist others.

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