Your Recipe

Homemade Alcoholic Ginger Beer

Ingredient Amount Calories
Lemon 130g 38kcal
Ginger root 42g 34kcal
Tap water 600g 0kcal
Peppers, jalapeno, raw 14g 4kcal
Sugars, granulated 84g 325kcal

Recipe Instructions:

2 1/2 cups warm, filtered water (not too hot or you'll kill the yeast)
1 1/2 teaspoons champagne yeast
2 lemons, juiced
1 jalapeño, sliced (optional)
7 tablespoons finely grated ginger, divided
7 tablespoons granulated sugar, divided, plus more
1 large glass jar
2 clean soda bottles

First off, make a "plant" for your ginger beer. In a medium bowl, stir the water and yeast until dissolved. Add the lemon juice, jalapeño, if using, 1 tablespoon of the ginger, and 1 tablespoon of the sugar and stir to combine. The jalapeño will give your ginger beer that kick you can feel in the back of your throat; if you don't roll like that, omit it. Pour into a glass jar, one that's large enough for the liquid to fit comfortably, with a bit of extra space. Cover with a clean, dry kitchen towel and secure over the jar with a rubber band. Place the jar in the warmest place in your house, like next to your heater, near the refrigerator, or by a heating vent.
Every day for the next week, you'll have to "feed" your ginger beer. First off, feel the bottle—it should be slightly warm. If it's too cold. your yeast will go into hibernation, and if it's too hot, it could kill your yeast. Take off the towel and add 1 tablespoon of the ginger and 1 tablespoon of the sugar. Stir until the sugar dissolves, then replace the towel and put your plant back in a warm place. Do this every day for a week—think of it as your neighbor's dog you've promised to dog sit.
After about a week, you should see small bubbles floating to the surface of your plant. You can certainly keep your plant at this stage longer; the more you feed it, the more concentrated the ginger flavor will become. You can adjust the flavors later!
Now it's time to bottle. Think ahead to how many bottles of ginger beer you'll want to make. Make sure to use PLASTIC soda bottles—glass bottles could explode from carbonation, which would not be pretty. Estimate how much water you'll need to fill these bottles three-quarters of the way full, then boil the water to purify. Dissolve enough sugar in the water so that it tastes very sweet, as sweet as soda. You can adjust this later as well.
Using cheesecloth, strain the plant out into a large measuring cup or bowl. Using a funnel, add about 1 cup of the plant liquid to each clean, dry soda bottle—more if you want it stronger, less if you want it less intense. Add the sweetened water to the bottles until they are three-quarters of the way full, then stir with a chopstick to combine. You can dip your finger in and taste to see if the mixture needs more ginger. If so, add more plant liquid. Don't worry if it seems too sweet; the yeast will eat the sugar and turn it to alcohol, so most of it will disappear. You can add it back later.
Tightly seal the bottles with their caps and place them back in the warm place you had your plant. Squeeze the bottles once a day to test how they're carbonating. After a few days, they should be hard to compress; when they are impossible to compress at all, slowly start to unscrew the cap just until the carbonation begins to release—do not open it all the way! Do this whenever you can't compress the bottle at all.
After a week and a half to two weeks, the yeast should have eaten up most of the sugar in the bottle. This means your ginger beer is ready to open up and taste! If you have multiple bottles, open one and taste test. Add more sugar or lemon juice if you think your ginger beer needs it. Serve ice cold with citrus, and a rum float if you're feeling dangerous. Make sure to consume the whole bottle within 24 hours once you've opened it—feel free it enlist a friend here. It's impossible to gauge the alcohol content of your ginger beer, but it should be a bit less than a light beer. Enjoy!

Nutrition Facts
Portion Size 870 g | ml
Amount Per Portion 400
1675
kcal
kilojoules
% Daily Value *
Total Fat 0.8g 1%
Saturated Fat 0.1g 1%
Sodium 33mg 1%
Total Carbohydrate 105g 38%
Dietary Fiber 4.9g 17%
Sugar 88g
Protein 2.3g 5%
Vitamin D 0mcg 0%
Calcium 61mg 5%
Iron 1.1mg 6%
Potassium 390mg 8%
* The % Daily Value (DV) tells you how much a nutrient in a serving of food contribute to a daily diet. 2000 calories a day is used for general nutrition advice.
Vitamins
Nutrient Amount DV
Vitamin A 8.86 mcg 1%
Thiamin [B1] 0.068 mg 6%
Riboflavin [B2] 0.066 mg 5%
Niacin [B3] 0.624 mg 4%
Pantothenic acid [B5] 0.376 mg 8%
Vitamin B6 0.23 mg 14%
Cobalamin [B12] 0 mcg 0%
Floate [B9] 22.7 mcg 0%
Vitamin C 87.604 mg 97%
Vitamin D 0 mcg 0%
Vitamin E 0.805 mg 5%
Vitamin K 2.632 mcg 2%
Betaine 0 mg 0%
Choline 19.776 mg 4%
Carbohydrates
Nutrient Amount DV
Total carbohydrate 104.5 g 38%
Sugars 88.4 g 177%
Dietary fiber 4.9 g 17%
Carbohydrate 19.6 g 0%
Net carbs 16.1g
Aminoacids
Nutrient Amount DV
Alanine 0.013 g 0%
Arginine 0.018 g 0%
Aspartic acid 0.087 g 0%
Cysteine 0.003 g 0%
Glutamic acid 0.068 g 0%
Glycine 0.018 g 0%
Histidine 0.013 g 0%
Isoleucine 0.021 g 0%
Leucine 0.031 g 0%
Lysine 0.024 g 0%
Methionine 0.005 g 0%
Phenylalanine 0.019 g 0%
Proline 0.017 g 0%
Serine 0.019 g 0%
Threonine 0.015 g 0%
Tryptophan 0.005 g 0%
Tyrosine 0.008 g 0%
Valine 0.031 g 0%
Minerals
Nutrient Amount DV
Calcium 61.04 mg 5%
Copper 0.22 mg 25%
Fluoride 427.2 mcg 0%
Iron 1.11 mg 6%
Magnesium 36.56 mg 9%
Manganese 0.15 mg 7%
Phosphorus 38.72 mg 3%
Potassium 390.1 mg 8%
Selenium 1.37 mcg 2%
Sodium 33.32 mg 1%
Zinc 0.31 mg 3%
Other
Nutrient Amount DV
Water 761.109 g 0%
Ash 1.058 g 0%