A phone call from Jonathan my first flatmate in Wellington with the promise of a visit prompted a chat about related old friends in our early days in Wellington...which randomly led onto George Rose and Rebecca Hardie-Boys...originally from Mike's hometown Nelson who makes Organic Ginger Beer in New Zealand. A quick google and here we are on the roll of making our own Ginger Beer. I say a roll as it needs feeding daily [like the cat!] and you have to bottle weekly...a bit of a commitment!
http://phoenixorganics.co.nz/what-we-do/browse/330ml-bottles.aspx
Our guests this weekend were a couple of solicitors from London and their three young children on their way to the mountains. Quiche with the last of the frozen cherry tomatoes, Confit de Canard with cherry sauce and mini Pavlova's for dessert. Over breakfast we shared notes on making sloe gin and ginger beer. After a quick tasting they went away with the promise of a recipe exchange and a carefully packed, potentially explosive bottle of our latest batch of Ginger Beer...labeled and ready to drink!
As for the recipe..see Rebecca's below but meanwhile drink lots of lovely Belgium beer with clip top bottles [or ask the local pub to save them for you so you can do your bit for the environment]. Makes about half a dozen bottles a week...keep it in a warm place for a few days then store somewhere cooler to stop the gas production...always serve chilled so the gas is inactive when opened! A little less fun [and dangerous] than serving warm!
Ginger Beer with Rebecca Hardieboys of Hardieboys Beverages.
Recipe for Ginger Beer Bug from Tony Simpson's book, "A Distant Feast"
10gm fresh yeast or 5gm dried beer or bread yeast
2 tsp ground ginger
2 tsp sugar
400ml water
To make the bug:
Mix these ingredients together and leave for 24 hours, then 'feed' daily for 7 days with 1 teaspoon of ground ginger and 1 teaspoon of sugar.
Strain and reserve both the solid and the liquid. If you want to keep the bug going for further brews, halve the solid, add the 400 mls of water and start again.
Keep bug loosely covered in a warm light place.
To make the ginger beer:
strained liquid from bug
3 litres cold water
juice of 2 lemons
675g sugar
1 litre boiling water
1 tbsp finely grated fresh ginger (optional)
Mix the strained liquid with 3 litres of cold water and add lemon juice. Dissolve sugar in boiling water and add to brew. For extra zing, add grated fresh ginger. Bottle the gingerbeer and keep for at least a week before using. It will get fizzier with age so take care opening it. Store in fridge when ready to drink..
NOTE: Beer yeast is available from home brewing stores. Don't use bread yeasts with added dough improvers.
In the summer it will be a good non-alcoholic organic thirst quencher for young and old and may stir a few memories for those of us that grew up with home brewed Ginger Beer in the garden shed and got their kicks out of the excitment and danger of opening a bottle left a little too long...how times have changed!
The Rosemary and Olive soap also turned out to be a good brew...a lovely passionfruit colour with flecks of crushed dried rosemary from the garden and a fresh aromatic oil blend for fragance...our first attempt at stamping 'O YES' was also fun with Liliana joining in on the 'banging'...one week to go and we can finally start using the first batch!
1 comment:
Oh my mouth is watering after reading this post! I had a wonderful surprise visit from Sharon and pete yesterday.. on the great big roaring motorbike. Happy birthday Amelia!
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