The terroir is not just wine. It is the expression of soil, climate, cultivation, and the hands that work it. And in beer? Hops also have their own terroir, and Amer-Amer by Brouwerij De Ranke demonstrates this in an exemplary way. A beer that takes its name from its bitter heart: “Amer” in French means bitter, and the second “Amer” refers to the American hops — Centennial and Cascade — two iconic varieties from the USA… but grown in Poperinge, in the Belgian Flanders. Another climate, another soil, another agricultural hand: the result? The same hops change character, giving rise to a bitterness that is clean but earthy, floral but rustic, decidedly Belgian. A “Steam” beer, inspired by the now closed Anchor Brewing, with bottom fermentation and refermentation in the bottle, to combine tradition and originality. De Ranke (with Amer Amer) will be the star of the workshop with Kuaska “New Hop Routes – IPA and beyond, between schools and revolutions.” An aromatic journey from Gothenburg to Chicago, from Copenhagen to Brianza, and finally to Belgium, discovering the many faces of hops in the glass: Stigbergets (Sweden): the Nordic elegance of NEIPA Alefarm (Denmark): hoppy cleanliness and refinement Messorem Bracitorium (Canada): juicy and uncompromising Mikerphone Brewing (USA): music, creativity and beer Birrificio Rurale (Italy): Italian hop pioneers Kashmir (Italy): personal visions between hops and creativity From the roots of European tradition to the aromatic explosions of NEIPA, a journey that tells a simple truth: hops are never just hops. They are territory, culture, people.
