Strathmore sparkling water bottles, got a load of 330ml and 750ml screw tops from a mate with a restaurant.Diesel1 said:That looks nice. So does the bottle, it looks very familiar, what is it?
I am going to put 25 litres of ginger beer on this weekend , it will be a C.I.I.A.S.W.H. (chuck it in and see what happens) brew!
Diesel1.
Kinleycat said:Strathmore sparkling water bottles, got a load of 330ml and 750ml screw tops from a mate with a restaurant.
The opposite actually, cream of tartar is essentially tartaric acid (the kind of acid that's predominant in grapes) - I reckon you could replace it with extra citrus fruit.second2none said:cream of tarta, think of it as an anti acid that takes some of the tart bite out of bitter ginger
Sounds nice, if you're ever passing Wakefield I'll swap you for a couple of mine.Diesel1 said:Me and Mrs Diesel have enjoyed a pint or two of my fiery ginger beer tonight and it went down a treat! I used this recipe......
Fiery Ginger Beer 5 gallons
2 kg Fresh grated peeled ginger
3 Stalks chopped rhubarb
3 Unwaxed lemons sliced
2 kg Sugar
1 tsp Yeast nutrient
1 tsp Pectolase
1 tsp Gervin ale yeast
6 Cloves
1/8 tsp Ground black pepper. I estimate this as 10 grains/pieces.
1 tsp Cayenne powder
Boil the sugar, ginger and lemons until the lemons are soft. Put the ginger/lemon syrup into your bucket/barrel and top up with cold water to 25 litres. If/when cooled to 20 C or below add the yeast, nutrient, pectolase, cloves, black pepper and cayenne.
Gh
Diesel1.
1.2kg of local (NZ) ginger (seemed a bit spicier than thai when raw) grated with a micro grater (hours!)
4 lemons, zested, squeezed, and pith sliced out
1 lime as above
a few crushed cloves
half a stick of grated cinnamon
1 tsp cream of tartar
4 tsp ginger powder
1/2 tsp cayenne pepper
boiled for a good hour, then
1.1kg white sugar
400g Muscavado dark brown sugar
added and stirred in, left to cool down, before transferring to the bucket and topping up to 9.5L. Champaigne yeast and yeast nutrient then dry pitched, stirred, and the lid closed.
Bottled and primed after 9 days.
BUT AGAIN, taking a taste of it, there is basically no ginger to it. AGAIN, it's like the last two attempts, but with a bit of the muscovado sugar's own taste coming through. Taste once decently carbonated after a week might be up to 4/10, but it's still hardly ginger beer without a ginger taste. It's just like numerous people in the thread, just like the guy two posts above. The yeast is clearly doing its job, but the recipe just doesn't seem to be working.
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