louthepoo wrote:thanks for that detailed explanation Frothy, glad its that simple then
well it tastes nice anyway!!

Hops obviously have different levels of bitterness, and between seasons there can be quite a lot of variation in the bitterness of hops; hop bitterness is measured in alpha acids or AAUs which is basically the bitterness provided in relation to the weight of hops.
For example, I recently used styrian goldings; the recipe I used assumed the hops had an alpha acid of about 8, but my hops had an alpha acid of about 4. This means that the hops had half the bitterness that the recipe assumed. If you stick to recipes, and the recipes give the alpha acid assumed for the hops, you can very simply adjust the amount of hops needed using the following equation:
(weight of the original hop in the recipe x the alpha acid of the hop assumed in the original recipe) / the alpha acid of your hops.
Therefore, assuming the recipe says to use 40 grams of Styrian goldings with an assumed alpha acid of 8 AAUs, but your hops have an AAU of 4, the weight of styrian goldings you should use:
(40 x 8 ) / 4 = 80 grams.
This adjustment does not apply to hops added at the end of the boil, or after the boil, as not much bitterness is extracted from late hops.
I hope this is helpful; frothy's post above is also worth getting you head around.