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On Mar 5, 10:16*am, Brooklyn1 <Gravesend1> wrote:
> On Mon, 05 Mar 2012 12:04:40 -0600, Andy > wrote: > >spamtrap1888 > wrote: > > >> On Mar 5, 12:44*am, Andy > wrote: > >>> spamtrap1888 > wrote: > >>> >> Finding real ginger ale is nearly impossible anymore. ˙Most of it > >>> >> is not made from ginger, even the ones that say "natural flavor". > > >>> When in Australia, my boss introduced us to Bundaberg ginger beer. > >>> While not an overdose of ginger it wasn't filtered and cloudy too and > >>> not overly sweet. It was delicious and I'd get it whenever we came to > >>> a town. A meat pie and a couple Bundabergs was the routine. > > >>> Trader Joe's sells an extra sharp Reed's brand ginger beer. A little > >>> too sweet, iirc. In a four pack of bottles. > > >>> I don't know of any medicinal properties of ginger. For that it's Bud > >>> Light. > > >> If you like some heat with your ginger ale, I suggest trying Blenheim, > >> from South Carolina. When I first had it, some 30 years ago, it was > >> available only in the Carolinas. Now you can order it online. But I > >> have a source within walking distance. > > >>http://www.blenheimgingerale.com/products/ > > >I visited their URL. > > >I'm not ready to commit to a case but I'll call around for it. > > >The Blenheim shop has a 24-pack of Hot #3 for $25.00. > > >Amazon is selling 12-packs for $29.00!!! The nerve! > > >One question... is it chugable? > > >Thanks for the FYI. > > >Andy > > Blenheim is a tiny village about a half hour drive from me, I almost > ended up living there until I discovered it's in a flood plain.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blenheim,_New_York > I would have been within sight of this bridge:http://www.coveredbridgesite.com/ny/blenheim.html Wow- that's an old bridge! For the US, at least! |
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merryb > wrote:
-snip- >> Blenheim is a tiny village about a half hour drive from me, I almost >> ended up living there until I discovered it's in a flood plain.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blenheim,_New_York >> I would have been within sight of this bridge:http://www.coveredbridgesite.com/ny/blenheim.html > >Wow- that's an old bridge! For the US, at least! And now it's gone. In the 50's it was washed off it's abutments and floated downstream a ways-- mostly intact. A lot of labor from folks who just wanted it back got it done and gave it a facelift. Last spring it got washed away in the Irene flood. I haven't seen mentioned on the news if any of it re-appeared somewhere this time. The villages above and below it suffered severe damage so news crews haven't been chasing bridges. Jim |
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merryb > wrote:
>On Mar 5, 10:16*am, Brooklyn1 <Gravesend1> wrote: -snip- >> >>http://www.blenheimgingerale.com/products/ >> -snip- >> >> Blenheim is a tiny village about a half hour drive from me, I almost >> ended up living there until I discovered it's in a flood plain.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blenheim,_New_York >> I would have been within sight of this bridge:http://www.coveredbridgesite.com/ny/blenheim.html > >Wow- that's an old bridge! For the US, at least! Just a FYI - the Blenheim Gingerale folks are in South Carolina-- the covered bridge is in NY. [was wondering how they snuck a ginger ale brewery into Schoharie county without me knowing] Jim |
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Doug Freyburger wrote:
> Jean B. wrote: >> Sqwertz wrote: >> >>> I make my own very potent ginger ale. >> >> recipe? Coincidentally, I am sniffing around for recipes for root >> beer, sarsaparilla, birch beer.... I need to make a list of >> ingredients and go back to a few shops that carry the >> more-esoteric ingredients. > > This weekend my wife was going through a box of ancient papers and in it > were ones I printed or copied in the late 1970s early 1980s. I'll see > if the page with root beer, birch beer and spruce beer is still > available. This is from page 53 of some book that I photocopied a few pages of back in that era. I've long since forgotten what the title of the book is. "Root beer You'll need 1/2 ounce each of hops and dried burdock, yellow dock, sarsaparilla, dandelion, sassafras and spikenard roots for each gallon of water. Wash and bruise them well, using a potato masher or pie crust blender. Cover with the water and bring to a boil over high heat. Lower heat and simmer 20 minutes. While still hot straininto a large crock, discarding roots. Add 1 1/2 cups molasses to each gallon of water and cool to lukewarm. When lukewarm add 1 teaspoon dry yeast (or 2 tablespoons homemade liquid yeast) and stir well to mix. Set the crock in a warm, draft-free corner where the temperature is 70 to 80 degrees. Cover with a cloth and let set for two hours. Then bottle, filling to within 1/2 inch of the top. Cap bottles using capper and metal caps not corks. Place capped bottles on their sides in a warm (70 to 80 degree) draft-free place for 5 days, then set upright in a cool place. Root beer is ready to drink after 10 days, but will keep well through the summer." My notes on the first time I made this recipe - Keep the bottles outside. A few exploded. The cloth cover during the resting period was insufficent as the surviving bottles foamed to much for all but a taste. Weird flavor. My notes from the second time I made this recipe - Using the metal cover not the cloth cover worked to prevent infection by bacteria or wild yeast. Should use beer brewing sanitation methods. The smell and flavor of the spikenard was far to wierd, suggest using more sassafras and/or sarsaparilla. The resulting soda was good to anyone not told it was root beer and I think it was the spikenard wierdness that did that. My notes many years later - The boil phase could probably be continued until the liquid was reduced to a concentrate. Soda could be made from that concentrate. I wonder how to get it to work with liquid Splenda drops to make a diet root beer. The recipe on the next page is for birch beer. Notice that the flavoring comes from wintergreen leaves as much as from birch bark. "Bark and root berr Gather a half bushel of mixed spruce boughs, sassafras roots, sarsaparilla roots, sweet fern, wintergreen leaves, black birch bark, black cherry bark, dandelion roots and burdock roots. Clean well, cut up and boil in 6 gallons of water to which has been added a large handfull of hops and a quart of wheat bran. Cook for 20 minutes then strain through a sieve into a large crock. Add 3 quarts of molasses. Cool, then stir in 1 cup liquid yeast (or 1 yeast cake disolved in 1 ccup of water). Cover and let set 3 days in a warm place. Bottle and cap. It will be ready to drink after 3 more days." As I have not tried this recipe I don't have notes from my experiences. |
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On 3/7/2012 3:06 PM, Doug Freyburger wrote:
> This is from page 53 of some book that I photocopied a few pages of back > in that era. I've long since forgotten what the title of the book is. > > "Root beer > > You'll need 1/2 ounce each of hops and dried burdock, yellow dock, > sarsaparilla, dandelion, sassafras and spikenard roots for each gallon > of water. Wash and bruise them well, using a potato masher or pie crust > blender. Cover with the water and bring to a boil over high heat. > Lower heat and simmer 20 minutes. While still hot straininto a large > crock, discarding roots. Add 1 1/2 cups molasses to each gallon of > water and cool to lukewarm. > > When lukewarm add 1 teaspoon dry yeast (or 2 tablespoons homemade liquid > yeast) and stir well to mix. Set the crock in a warm, draft-free corner > where the temperature is 70 to 80 degrees. Cover with a cloth and let > set for two hours. Then bottle, filling to within 1/2 inch of the top. > Cap bottles using capper and metal caps not corks. > > Place capped bottles on their sides in a warm (70 to 80 degree) > draft-free place for 5 days, then set upright in a cool place. Root > beer is ready to drink after 10 days, but will keep well through the > summer." > > My notes on the first time I made this recipe - Keep the bottles > outside. A few exploded. The cloth cover during the resting period was > insufficent as the surviving bottles foamed to much for all but a taste. > Weird flavor. > > My notes from the second time I made this recipe - Using the metal cover > not the cloth cover worked to prevent infection by bacteria or wild > yeast. Should use beer brewing sanitation methods. The smell and > flavor of the spikenard was far to wierd, suggest using more sassafras > and/or sarsaparilla. The resulting soda was good to anyone not told it > was root beer and I think it was the spikenard wierdness that did that. > > My notes many years later - The boil phase could probably be continued > until the liquid was reduced to a concentrate. Soda could be made from > that concentrate. I wonder how to get it to work with liquid Splenda > drops to make a diet root beer. > > The recipe on the next page is for birch beer. Notice that the > flavoring comes from wintergreen leaves as much as from birch bark. > > "Bark and root berr > > Gather a half bushel of mixed spruce boughs, sassafras roots, > sarsaparilla roots, sweet fern, wintergreen leaves, black birch bark, > black cherry bark, dandelion roots and burdock roots. Clean well, cut > up and boil in 6 gallons of water to which has been added a large > handfull of hops and a quart of wheat bran. > Cook for 20 minutes then strain through a sieve into a large crock. > Add 3 quarts of molasses. Cool, then stir in 1 cup liquid yeast (or 1 > yeast cake disolved in 1 ccup of water). Cover and let set 3 days in a > warm place. Bottle and cap. It will be ready to drink after 3 more > days." > > As I have not tried this recipe I don't have notes from my experiences. I saw a box of this stuff in my son's room. What a goofy idea - or is it? http://spikeyourjuice.com/ |
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