Difference between revisions of ""Kick a Ginger" Beer"

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(Created page with "Ingredients: * 1/2 cup fresh ginger (see Tips below) (125 ml) * 1 1/2 cups water (375 ml) * 1 1/4 cups sugar (310 ml) * 1/2 tsp cream of tartar (2 ml) * 1 pinch yeast Directions...")
 
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[[Category:Meme Cookbook]]
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Ingredients:
 
Ingredients:
 
* 1/2 cup fresh ginger (see Tips below) (125 ml)
 
* 1/2 cup fresh ginger (see Tips below) (125 ml)

Latest revision as of 15:21, 4 October 2017


Ingredients:

  • 1/2 cup fresh ginger (see Tips below) (125 ml)
  • 1 1/2 cups water (375 ml)
  • 1 1/4 cups sugar (310 ml)
  • 1/2 tsp cream of tartar (2 ml)
  • 1 pinch yeast

Directions:

  1. Purée ginger with a little of the water in a food processor or blender. (Don’t bother peeling the ginger first.) Transfer to a medium pan with remaining water and sugar and bring to a boil, stirring until sugar dissolves. Cover and let cool.
  2. Strain mixture through a fine-mesh strainer. Using a funnel, pour liquid into a 2-litre plastic soft drink bottle.
  3. Add cream of tartar and yeast, then pour in more room-temperature water to fill bottle, leaving a gap of about 2″ (5 cm) at the top. Cap the bottle tightly and place in a warm spot.
  4. Squeeze the bottle every 8 hours or so. At first, the bottle will be soft, but after 1-2 days the bottle will become hard and rigid. When it does, crack open the cap to release some pressure. Reseal, refrigerate, and serve cold.

Tips:

  • You can just estimate the amount of ginger, but it’s worth measuring accurately–then you can be more consistent when you adjust it to taste in your next bottle. To measure fresh ginger precisely, use the displacement method: Fill a 1 cup (250 ml) measure with 1/2 cup (125 ml) water, then add ginger until the water reaches the 1-cup (250-ml) level. Eureka!
  • Instead of straining the ginger-sugar mixture directly into the pop bottle, it’s a lot easier to strain it into a bowl, and then pour from the bowl into the bottle. It’s just too fiddly and slow to strain and funnel into the bottle in one step. (Voice of experience.)
  • Brewer’s yeast or ordinary baking yeast works well. Don’t use nutritional yeast flakes; they’re inactive.
  • The sediment in the bottle is mostly bits of puréed ginger and yeast. It’s not harmful, but as with wine, just pour carefully so it stays in the bottle.

Variations: Lime Ginger Beer

  • Add the zest of 1 lime to the ginger-sugar mixture before heating. Replace the cream of tartar with the juice of 1/2 a lime in Step 3.

Spiced Ginger Beer

  • Add 5 whole cloves and 1/2 tsp (2 ml) grated nutmeg to the ginger-sugar mixture before heating.