Ginger beer is quite easy to make and requires not special equipment. Just ginger, lemon, sugar, water, good yeast and time. This is the recipe I have worked from the last two times.
Because this is a brewed ginger beer, it is important that the beer sits somewhere warm while brewing otherwise it will take quite a long time to work though the sugar. Make sure to use plastic bottles – glass bottles are quite likely to shatter because if the pressure build up under the carbonation process.
This is quite a large portion, so if you want less ginger beer, just adjust using the recipe size adjuster.
Ginger Beer
Ingredients
- 8 liter water
- 1 kilogram sugar white sugar can be mixed with brown sugar for a deeper taste
- 30 gram ground ginger
- 100 gram fresh ginger grated or sliced
- 2 lemon peel & juice
- 1 pinch champagne yeast or dry yeast, but champagne yeast gives a cleaner taste. You can order the champagne yeast online - it is not expensive
Instructions
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Mix water, ginger, lemon and sugar
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Bring the mix to a boil. Take it off the stove and let it cool to body temperature (max 40 C)
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Mix the yeast with a bit of water and let it sit while the beer cools
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Stain the mixture through a sive.
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Put it in the container you are going to use for the fermentation process.
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Add the yeast water to the beer. Add some kind of lid to the container, but don't let it be air tight (use a yeast lock if you can). We do not want to create a oxygen starved environment
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Fermentation: Let it ferment for a few days in a warm place (room temperature - circa 20C). Taste the beer every day to see if it still taste unpleasantly of sugar. Mine have taken anywhere from two days to a week - it really depends on the yeast and on the room temperature, how long this will take. If the ginger taste is a bit weak, just add in more ginger.
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Once it tastes good bottle the mixture in plastic bottles. Leave off the milky dredges at the bottom - this is dead yeast and will just make things taste yeasty.
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Carbonation: Leave the bottles on the counter until they feel as hard as store brought soda - this means that the carbonation is done. Make sure your bottles are very clean.
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Put the bottles in the fridge to slow the carbonation down. They keep for about a month. If a bottle goes a bit stale after you have opened it, just pop it back on the counter again for a few hours - it will re-carbonate on it's own - super handy.
Recipe Notes
Because this is a brewed ginger beer, it is important that the beer sits somewhere warm while brewing otherwise it will take quite a long time to work though the sugar. Make sure to use plastic bottles - glass bottles are quite likely to shatter because if the pressure build up under the carbonation process.