Thursday 19 July 2012

Easy Peasy Ginger Beer



I wanted to make something special for my husband when he came home last month, after not seeing him for an entire 30 days!  That's what I get for marrying an archaeologist (though he did the same, and as of now I'm off in France!!).

I thought it would be nice to make something tasty - and although I'm not a big fan of ginger beer myself, I know he is, and this recipe sounded yummy!  It's one of Jamie Oliver's, and I love Jamie.


"Ginger beer is one of my favourite things in the world, especially blooming good in the summer when it's getting hot. I can't think of anything more sexy than having a big jug of iced ginger beer on the table with a barbecue on a hot day. The classic real ginger beers use a starter, and these are fantastic but slow, so here's my shortcut for getting amazing results taking hardly any time.



140g/5oz fresh ginger
4 tablespoons muscovado sugar
2 to 3 lemons
1 litre/1¾ pints soda water or sparkling mineral water
sprigs of fresh mint


First of all you need to grate your ginger on a coarse cheese grater – you can leave the skin on if you like. Put the ginger with its pulpy juice into a bowl and sprinkle in your muscovado sugar. Remove the rind from 2 of your lemons with a vegetable peeler, add to the bowl, and slightly bash and squash with something heavy like a pestle or a rolling-pin. Just do this for 10 seconds, to mix up all the flavours. Squeeze the juice from all 3 lemons and add most of it to the bowl. Pour in your fizzy water or soda water. Allow to sit for 10 minutes and then taste. You may feel that the lemons are slightly too sour, therefore add a little more sugar; if it's slightly too sweet, add a little more lemon juice. To be honest, these amounts are always a little variable so just follow your own taste. Pass the ginger beer through a coarse sieve into a large jug and add lots of ice and some sprigs of mint."
I found it needed a lot more sugar than this - and I mean a LOT.  Maybe it's casue I was looking for something much sweeter than he had in mind, or something resembling the ginger beer you get in shops.  Either way, I used all three lemons, and a mysterious unmeasured quantity of grated ginger.  That's how I roll in the kitchen.

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