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Hops

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Hop oils also generally degrade over time, however their degradation rates are more complex. [http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jf00070a043 Lam et al. (1986)] found that aging both cascade and North American grown Hallertauer Mittelfrueh resulted in an increase in grapefruit-like character, although the compound that caused this was not identified. In the case of Cascade the intensity of this flavor correlated with the age of the hops <ref name="Lam et al., 1986"> [http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jf00070a043 Aging of Hops and Their Contribution to Beer Flavor. Lam et al. 1986.] </ref>. In the Hallertauer hops, aging resulted in an increase in a spicy/herbal character <ref name="Lam et al., 1986"/>, which is in agreement with reports of oxidized sesquiterpenes (specifically humulenol II, humulene diepoxides, caryophyllene, and to a lesser extent humulene monoepoxides and alpha-humulene) contributing a spicy/herbal flavor to beer <ref name="Goiris et al., 2002">[http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/j.2050-0416.2002.tb00129.x/abstract Goiris et al., 2002]</ref><ref name="Mikyška_2012" />. Many of the oils followed in the Lam et al. (1986) study which increased during a short accelerated aging period (2 weeks at 90°F) then decreased during extended aging (60 additional days at 90°F). The cascade hops lost more of the fruity/citrusy hop oils (myrecene, linalool, geranial) than Hallertauer, suggesting that different strains of hops can withstand aging better than others. The concentration of hop oils are affected by the brewing process and fermentation (see the table) <ref name="Lam et al., 1986"/>. Another study found that beta-ionone (classified as a ketone, and characterized as "floral" and "woody" <ref>[http://www.thegoodscentscompany.com/data/rw1006632.html Beta-ionone. Good Scents Company. Retrieved 11/22/2016.]</ref>) increased in beers brewed with hops that were aged for 30 days at 40°C versus beers brewed with aged hops <ref name="kishimoto_2007" />.
Aging hops while exposed to oxygen develops a cheesy aroma due to [[Isovaleric Acd|isovaleric acid]], isobutyric acid, and 2-methylbutyric acid. Cheesy oxidation compounds which can be esterfied to form fruity tasting compounds<ref name="Shellhammer, Vollmer and Sharp, CBC 2015"/>.
* [http://scottjanish.com/increasing-bitterness-dry-hopping/ "Increasing Bitterness By Dry Hopping", article by Scott Janish on oxidized alpha acids.]

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