
Anybody make homemade ginger ale?
#1
Posted 18 January 2010 - 01:30 PM
#2
Posted 18 January 2010 - 01:41 PM
I've tried it - it's not for everyone. I think the amount of alcohol is pretty negligible but maybe I'm wrong.My buddy's daughter (just turned 10) keeps asking when I am going to make rootbeer. I really dont want to gum up a keg, so I have been avoiding it. Then I saw Good Eats with AB making a homemade ginger ale in a 2 liter bottle. She loves ginger ale too, so I figured this would be a fun little experiment. Then I figured active dry yeast will still produce some alcohol (?) So the recipe calls for 6 oz of sugar for a 2 liter batch, will this alcohol even be detectable? Anybody have a tried and true ginger ale or rootbeer recipe?AB's recipe: https://www.foodnetw...cipe/index.html
#3
Posted 18 January 2010 - 01:58 PM
#4
Posted 18 January 2010 - 01:59 PM
#5
Posted 18 January 2010 - 02:23 PM
I never even thought of that. I just looked at some online HBS and they have lots of kits, they all seem to be add sugar and water, carbonate. Spechler makes an already mixed concentrate, I could just dilute it and carb cap it. Now the curiosity is peaked, is their an "all grain" type of way of making soda? Meaning instead of using extract, steeping the flavor to make my own extract. That is essentially what I am doing with the ginger ale, can this be done effectively for root beer too?Instead of a keg can't you make the root beer in 2 liter bottles with a carb cap?
#6
Posted 18 January 2010 - 02:40 PM
#7
Posted 18 January 2010 - 04:35 PM
Let's assume you are able to stop the fermentation when there is exactly 3 volumes of CO2. The yeast will have generated 6 liters of CO2. My calcs show that that is about 0.8% ABV.Then I figured active dry yeast will still produce some alcohol (?) So the recipe calls for 6 oz of sugar for a 2 liter batch, will this alcohol even be detectable?
#8
Posted 18 January 2010 - 05:09 PM
That would probably be similar to the the low alcoholic level you find in kvass, the Russian soft drink made from bread. I have drunk large amounts of it with no hint of effects from the alcohol, nor does it have any noticeable flavor of alcohol. I know it is widely accepted as perfectly legitimate for children to drink it.Let's assume you are able to stop the fermentation when there is exactly 3 volumes of CO2. The yeast will have generated 6 liters of CO2. My calcs show that that is about 0.8% ABV.
#9
Posted 18 January 2010 - 05:15 PM
#10
Posted 18 January 2010 - 05:40 PM
#11
Posted 18 January 2010 - 05:51 PM
Right I forgot this wasn't going to ferment the whole was out.Let's assume you are able to stop the fermentation when there is exactly 3 volumes of CO2. The yeast will have generated 6 liters of CO2. My calcs show that that is about 0.8% ABV.
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