
Has anyone else noticed this with their hops? The only reason I can think of is that commercial ones are kiln-dried, whereas mine are dried over several days in the airing cupboard.
Except my garden in St. Louis, Missouri, USA. Believe me, I tried three different growing years with all my might!scuppeteer wrote:...whereas you can grow a Fuggle almost anywhere and still get a good crop...
Now you tell me!scuppeteer wrote:Sorry Seymour, I meant anywhere in Europe.
All I can suggest is that you are too far South for a Fuggle!
Ooohh. French Cascade that could be very interesting.stevetk189 wrote:I'm just venturing into home grown hops and if the first crop or second look anything like yours, I'll be well chuffed.
I've got Cascade and Bramling Cross, 2 hops I use a lot of and I'm really looking forward to seeing what the Limousin terroir and climate do with them.
scuppeteer wrote:Ooohh. French Cascade that could be very interesting.stevetk189 wrote:I'm just venturing into home grown hops and if the first crop or second look anything like yours, I'll be well chuffed.
I've got Cascade and Bramling Cross, 2 hops I use a lot of and I'm really looking forward to seeing what the Limousin terroir and climate do with them.![]()
You so have to do 4 different cascade brews with ones from each continent to see how they compare!