Carbonate Your Own Ginger Ale - cooking recipe
Ingredients
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1 cup table sugar (cane sugar, or sucrose)
1 1/2 - 2 tablespoons grated fresh gingerroot
1 lemon, juice of
1/4 teaspoon fresh granular baker's yeast
cold fresh pure water
Preparation
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For equipment, you will need a clean 2-liter plastic soft drink bottle with cap (do not use glass as there is a risk of explosion),
a grater (preferably with fine \"cutting\" teeth, and a funnel.
Put the sugar into the bottle using the funnel. (Leave the funnel in place until you are ready to cap the bottle.).
Add baker's yeast, also through the funnel.
Shake to mix the yeast grains with the sugar granules.
Place grated ginger into a Pyrex measuring cup or similar.
Juice a whole lemon. Lemon is optional, giving a little tartness to the ginger ale. Try it both ways to see which you prefer.
Add the juice of a whole lemon to the grated ginger in the measuring cup. Stir to form a slurry.
Add the slurry to the bottle. It may stick in the funnel. Don't worry, the next step will wash it into the bottle.
Rinse containers with fresh clean water, and dump the water into the bottle, trying to wash any particles sticking to the funnel into the bottle.
Fill the bottle to the neck with fresh cool clean water, leaving about an inch of head space, securely screw cap down to seal. Invert repeatedly to thoroughly dissolve sugar.
Place in a warm location for 24 to 48 hours. (Do not leave at room temperature longer than necessary to feel \"hard.\" The excess pressure may cause an eruption when you open it, or even explode the bottle!).
Test to see if carbonation is complete by squeezing the bottle forcefully with your thumb. If it dents in as in the picture, it is not ready.
Once the bottle feels hard to a forceful squeeze, usually only 24-48 hours, place in the refrigerator. Before opening, refrigerate at least overnight to thoroughly chill. Crack the lid of the thoroughly chilled ginger ale just a little to release the pressure slowly. You do not want a ginger ale fountain!
Do not leave the finished ginger ale in a warm place any longer than the time it takes for the bottle to feel hard. Leaving it at room temperature longer than two days, especially in the summer when the temperature is high, can generate enough pressure to explode the bottle. Once it is thoroughly chilled, there is little danger of explosion.
Filter the ginger ale through a strainer if you find floating pieces of ginger objectionable. These are found in the first glass or two poured, and, since most of the ginger sinks to the bottom, the last glass or so may require filtering too. Rinse the bottle out immediately after serving the last of the batch.
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