11/09/2023
Hops!
Humulus lupulis
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Not an ingredient I use often in blends. Mostly reserved for personal use, as harvests tend to be sporadic, and the flavor is quite strong. This member of the Cannabis family is the most effective sedative herb I've grown, hands down. Even kicks chamomile off of its sleep-aid pedestal. Steep 5-6 cones in hot water for 10min, and you'll have some of the best sleep of your life. Hops is incredibly bitter, usually accompanied by citrus & pine notes. These flavors are even more concentrated with a bit of mindful harvesting. Glands at the top of the cone produce lupuline, a yellow pollen-like substance containing concentrated oils & other compounds found throughout the plant. (See second slide)
For a rapidly growing vine, I find it to be tame. Aside from the occasional trimming to improve airflow or adjusting stray tendrils, it stays well behaved. The first slide features a healthy specimen at my childhood home in Southeastern VA. I planted this hops as a Father's Day gift back in 2015. Our mild winters on the coast have never killed it all the way back. Always returning in the spring to climb whatever supports it can find along the fence. She flowers well & large, usually with a flush in the early summer, then fall. Without the height one would normally see hops using in a cultivated setting, it tumbles on top of itself while spilling over & through the cracks of the fence. Winter cleanup never takes more than half an hour as all the plant requires is the dead material to be removed and tossed with the yard waste.
If you've got the climate for it, try hops in your garden. They provide lots of asthetic & practical benefits in the yard. Hops even hosts native butterfly & moth species in VA