
How to brew: Ginger Beer from Scratch
, by Nicky Stephens, 4 min reading time
, by Nicky Stephens, 4 min reading time
Ginger beer is a great drink for warmer weather. You may have found some ginger beer kits, but they can have an artificial taste and are lacking in spicy ginger bite. Our recipe below is for a classic ginger beer at around 4-5% alcohol content, but you can also make an alcohol-free version for the kids, and you can even substitute malt extract for honey or raw sugar to make a gluten free version (read our notes at the bottom of the page first!). Our recipe makes quite a spicy ginger beer and that’s how we like it, but you can reduce the amount of ginger if you prefer.
Stockpot (around 8L in volume for a 4.5L batch)
Grater or blender
Peeler or zester
Kitchen scales
Thermometer
Funnel
Non-Rinse Sanitiser
Fermenter + Airlock
Empty Bottles, Caps and Capper
Note: for all your brewing equipment you might consider our 5L starter kit or 23L starter kit instead.
280g Ginger
225g Raw Sugar
280g Light Dry Malt Extract (store any excess malt extract in an airtight container)
1/2 Sachet Ale Yeast
1 Pack Carbonation Drops
Optional: Small piece of a cinnamon stick or cassia bark, zest of 1 lemon.
1.25kg Ginger
1kg Raw Sugar
1 x 1.5kg Can of Light Liquid Malt Extract
1 Sachet Ale Yeast
1 Pack Carbonation Drops
Optional: A cinnamon stick or cassia bark, zest of 4 lemons.
Serve chilled and enjoy! You may wish to mix up a bottle of simple syrup to add a dash of sweetness to the ginger beer when serving. This is because the ginger beer is naturally very dry tasting (almost like champagne!), and adding extra sugar during bottling means more carbonation (and broken bottles) instead of more sweetness.
You can make an “alcohol free” version of this ginger beer (actually a very low alcohol version at less than 0.5%). Just omit the malt extract and raw sugar added to the boil. Once the mixture is cooled, add the yeast and stir and allow to sit for just 30 minutes before bottling with carbonation drops as usual.
Replace the dry or liquid malt extract with other sugar sources such as honey, additional raw sugar, agave syrup, brown rice syrup etc.
We recommend using a little cinnamon and lemon zest but you can try using other spices like some crushed cardomom, coriander seed – some people even add extra heat using chillies! You can get creative but we recommend sticking to the simpler recipe for your first attempt.
We love helping our purchasing customers with their questions in the store, but please read our FAQ’s page and do a little research online as we’re unable to field calls and emails asking for general brewing advice. Chances are the information you need already exists online. If you send us an email asking an easily searched question or one that’s answered in our FAQ’s you will receive no reply.