Boost Your Hop Aroma and Beer Yield with HyperBoost™

Yakima Chief Hops (YCH) is proud to bring out a first-of-its-kind flowable hop oil. Meet HyperBoost™—a groundbreaking addition to our innovative lineup of hop products!

Yakima Chief Hops (Sponsored) Aug 22, 2024 - 9 min read

Boost Your Hop Aroma and Beer Yield with HyperBoost™ Primary Image

HyperBoost™, a high-oil hop extract, can be used anywhere pellets are normally used. It is designed to easily pour into the fermentor as a cold-side addition. It excels at amplifying hop aroma and increasing final beer yield.

Produced via a novel super-critical extraction technique, HyperBoost is made from single-hop varieties to deliver variety-specific aromas to finished beer. It is currently available in:

  • Citra®
  • Simcoe®
  • Mosaic®
  • Krush™
  • And more!

Brewers who participated in the inaugural cohort of YCH’s FWD Program, a hop innovation trial program by YCH and Yakima Chief Ranches (YCR), received samples of HyperBoost for brewing trials and were most excited about the increase in beer yield, ease of use, and notable increase in hop aromas. The product also offers a much smaller footprint in your cooler (or freezer).

Tessa Schilaty, YCH’s technical marketing manager, oversees the FWD Program. Working directly with brewers around the globe to trial HyperBoost in different applications, she says, “It has been very exciting watching the different ways our brewing partners have battle-tested this new product. The positive feedback confirms that we have achieved our goal to create a unique product that can increase beer yield and improve flavor.”

Photo: Courtesy Wren House Brewing Company

Wren House Brewing Company

One of those brewery partners is Wren House Brewing Company in Phoenix, where cofounder and head brewer Preston Thoeny did side-by-side trials to compare flavor and measure the efficiency of a recipe brewed with traditional T-90 hop pellets next to the same one with HyperBoost. For Wren House, a change in process must enhance overall quality, and repeatability is critical. “We were on board with this product before we even got our hands on it,” says Thoeny. “Pulling that plant matter out of the dry hop is important to us.”

In the trial, Wren House used the same wort stream separated into two fermentors, then proceeded with a Chinook T-90 dry hop for one stream and a Chinook HyperBoost “dry” hop for the other. “Anecdotally, we saw just over a 10 percent increase in efficiency,” Thoeny says of the vessel that received HyperBoost. He is quick to note that more trials need to take place and chuckles, “I’m not ready to rest my reputation on that just yet.” When they shared the experiment with taproom guests for their feedback, 61 percent preferred the HyperBoost in blind tastings.

Aside from efficiency gains and customer preference, Thoeny has observed another advantage to this trade-up. Dry hops go in through the top port, via a rolling staircase with safety measures in place. Boxes of hops are hauled up the staircase to be funneled into the fermentor, but a bottle of HyperBoost can ascend in a back pocket and simply be poured in. “Once you dump pellets in, maybe you spill a little. You throw that mylar bag down and hop dust fans out. You have to clean all that up. It’s part of the job, but when you don’t have to do it anymore, it seems archaic. You win back time.”

Steve Luke. Photo: Courtesy Cloudburst Brewing

Cloudburst Brewing

Being able to bring a new product to a flagship brand is critical for loyal customer satisfaction. But what if you don’t have a flagship brand, in the traditional sense? Cloudburst Brewing in Seattle is consistently changing things up, “We have our American Pils, and we don’t mess with that recipe. But our IPAs, it’s a new IPA every week. Different hop combos, maybe different swings in malt, but IPA is what we make, and they are always a little different,” says Steve Luke, head brewer and founder of Cloudburst.

Cloudburst is also part of YCH’s FWD Program. Luke brewed a pale ale and a West Coast IPA with the samples they received. For the pale ale, he used Chinook HyperBoost in place of 22 pounds (10 kilos) of T-90s in the dry hop. For the West Coast IPA, HyperBoost went straight into the fermentor at knock-out, as a bonus. Luke emphasizes, “We didn’t sub anything, we just added it. Because the West Coast gets more.” He says that the pale ale came out with a very pleasant, dank pine and the West Coast IPA revealed a brighter, fresher pine. “The depth of flavor with this product added where we’re adding it, it’s unrivaled. We get this resinous mid-palate of concentrated hop flavor.”

In addition, Luke mentions, “HyperBoost doesn’t leave any residue in the tank, so that’s great.” Cloudburst has used the YCH-suggested dosing guidelines and is overall satisfied with the results.

What about efficiency gains? Luke cites their pale ale trial, “On our 15-barrel batch, we substituted HyperBoost for T-90s in the dry hop and gained a barrel of extra beer. Just HyperBoost and Cryo™. So, we used two way more efficient products for aroma, and then got two extra kegs? That pretty much pays for itself.”

When asked if he has any advice for brewers dabbling with HyperBoost, he offers, “If you are going for an increase in yield, then go for that dry-hop addition.” He acknowledges that it may be subject to the experience level and equipment used. “It’s important to keep experimenting, keep playing. Many of us don’t have R&D spots, so we have to make a full batch. Start by using a variety you are super-familiar with, so you can feel more comfortable comparing the two.”

Dosing Recommendations

With an industry finding its ceiling and breweries struggling to differentiate themselves to an increasingly fickle consumer base, efficiency and product perception are critical factors. Schilaty says, “HyperBoost is one of the most exciting product launches that I’ve worked on. It fills such an important need in the industry right now.” The reduction of cooler space, ease of use (and potential for increased brewery safety), customer satisfaction, big bright hop character, and a noteworthy increase in efficiency all make HyperBoost a truly groundbreaking product.

For dry-hop additions, YCH recommends using HyperBoost for 25–50 percent of the addition and adding T-90 or Cryo® pellets for the remainder of the hop charge. Most brewers are using HyperBoost in the fermentor as a dry-hop addition, with some using HyperBoost in the whirlpool. For whirlpool use, brewers can replace up to 100 percent of the pellets with HyperBoost.

Dosing will vary by process, equipment, and desired outcome. As a dry hop, we suggest starting with a replacement rate of 1:100 HyperBoost to T-90 pellets by weight (10 grams HyperBoost in place of 1kilogram T-90) to 1:125 (8 grams HyperBoost in place of 1 kilogram T-90). We suggest replacing T-90 pellet additions in the whirlpool at a rate of 1:50: by weight (20 grams of HyperBoost to replace 1 kilogram T-90). You might choose to use more or less depending on beer style or overall goal.

Still not sure how to get started? YCH partnered with Natalie Baldwin of Wayfinder Beer in Portland, Oregon, to put together a how-to video for brewing with HyperBoost. Watch it here:

Embedded content: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P-3ZOzEyl7E

HyperBoost is ready to ship in 100 g and 1 kg aluminum bottles and should be stored between 20° and 41°F (-6° and 5°C). HyperBoost will remain fluid even at freezing temperatures and stable in its sealed container for two years. Thanks to the high oil concentration of 40–70 percent, HyperBoost has a low flash point. It must be labeled, shipped, and stored according to local, state, and federal guidelines. Alpha acids are variety-dependent and typically range in concentration from 15 to 40 percent.

We are happy to help with questions about utilization, storage, product specifications, or anything else you can think of. Contact your sales representative directly or contact [email protected].

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