
thumb|Hop flower in a hop yard in the Hallertau, Germany thumb|Cross-section drawing of a hop alt=Full grown hops .|thumb|upright=1.3|Fully grown Vine#Twining vines|hops bines ready for harvest on the [[Yakama Indian Reservation]] thumb|Humulus on a house
thumb|Hop flower in a hop yard in the Hallertau, Germany thumb|Cross-section drawing of a hop alt=Full grown hops .|thumb|upright=1.3|Fully grown Vine#Twining vines|hops bines ready for harvest on the [[Yakama Indian Reservation]] thumb|Humulus on a house
Hops are the flowers (also called seed cones or strobiles) of the hop plant Humulus lupulus, a member of the Cannabaceae family of flowering plants. They are used primarily as a bittering, flavouring, and stability agent in beer, to which, in addition to bitterness, they impart floral, fruity, or citrus flavours and aromas. Hops are also used for various purposes in other beverages and herbal medicine. The hops plants have separate female and male plants, and only female plants are used for commercial production. The hop plant is a vigorous climbing herbaceous perennial, usually trained to grow up strings in a field called a hopfield, hop garden (in the South of England), or hop yard (in the West Country and United States) when grown commercially. Many different varieties of hops are grown by farmers around the world, with different types used for particular styles of beer.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).