I thought that weight divided by 4 may be appropriate to calc wet hop additions but those in the know (Dr Smurto) suggested divide by 5 to give an 'equivalent' weight. Well beggar me, I dried 80g wet and they dried out to 16g - a factor of five! I know it is only one 'test' but it supports what I was told and I believe that advice to have credibility based on repetition.
I tried what I thought to be a novel way to dry my remaining hops:
I No Chilled my wort in a jerry can on it's side, laid a cloth over it and spread my wet hops (80g) on the cloth. 24hrs the wort was at ambient temperature and the hops were nicely dried! The stems will snap and the flowers themselves are like paper and will come apart when rubbed; I think they are dried (maybe even a little too much).
So on Sunday I did an APA(ish) brew with 200g of fresh Chinook hops (not the dried ones) for 15mins:
Even though I gave them a good stir, they took a while to get wet enough to actually be circulated in the boil.
But they made a good trub trap:
Oh and since this thread is meant to be about growing hops, here's a picture of my Hersbrucker taken today (all first year plants). I am planning on pulling the cones off it tommorrow.
I had trouble telling if they were dried enough, papery enough etc when picking. It seemed like the 'ripe' ones would pull away easily, often with them breaking a bit off the top and it remaining on the bine whilst the not so ripe ones would require the stalk to be snapped. So then I did a tug test, it felt good so I went back to picking hops...