Ginger Beer Force Carbonation

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ausdb

Copper kettles don't kill people....
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I have just kegged a deliverance ginger beer kit into a keg and want to have it drinkable by friday night

The fridge is at 5C what sort of pressure should I use?

Cheers

Ausdb
 
No idea? But I will be keen to hear how the kit tastes! :)
 
While in Adelaide I tried a Coopers ginger beer at Goliaths , best ginger beer i have had , just like the old ones made with a ginger beer plant
 
Hi Batz,
I want to try one of these. Do you know if any extras were added? Or was it just per the instructions on the can.
Did Goliath make it?
If any extras were added any chance of the recipe?

cheers

johnno
 
He made it as per the instructions , this one he made no alchol , kegged , carbonated and away you go.
 
ausdb said:
I have just kegged a deliverance ginger beer kit into a keg and want to have it drinkable by friday night

The fridge is at 5C what sort of pressure should I use?
A table I converted to SI units is at:
http://www.metrak.com/homebrew/co2.html

My reading is 124kPa @ 5C for 3 volumes of CO2. With ginger beer, I would err on the side of overcarbonating, but that is just me and soft drinks are generally more highly carbonated than beer IIRC.

At least that is where you want to get to. I would crash carbonate in the "usual way" and you should be right. I have had beer quite drinkable in less than 12 hours after kegging, even quicker if it went in the keg cold.
 
Goat from the fermenter it was definately gingery, my partners comment who it was for was 'thats strong'
I made it up with a kilo of the coopers sugar/dextrose mix laying around and a few spoonfuls of brown sugar for good measure OG was only around 1.036 I need to measure the final result.

Off to the shed for a taste/carbonation test now I'll see how it is going
 
I've kegged a couple of ginger beers, i just corbonated at 60kpa for a couple of days.
On the topic of kits, i reckon the morgans is the best. I find the coopers is too sweet, and has a chemically aftertaste - like artificial sweetner or something.
 
Batz said:
He made it as per the instructions , this one he made no alchol , kegged , carbonated and away you go.
Sorry for the thread hijack ausdb. Hope you have that ginger beer gassed up for tomorrow.
I've just tried the Buderim Ginger refresher and its pretty good stuff. Used the kids soda stream to carbonate the water and its the best ginger cordial I have ever tried. For a non alcoholic Ginger beer this would go very nice in a keg.
But of course in the brewing tradition I will make a Coopers kit up. Not sure if I will make it alcoholic or not.
Arghh..this stuff is burning the back of my throat. Talk about gingery spice...mmmm

cheers johnno
 
Since everyone is talking kit ginger beer, I thought I would at least post my "AG" ginger beer recipe (goto http://metrak.com/brewsta/recipes/ and click on the ginger beer print button for a nicely formatted version)


Brewsta: Ginger Beer

recipe volume 12.0
boil volume 12.0
total gravity 115.61
IBU 0.0

OG 1.036
BG 1.036
mash efficiency 85.0%
BU:GU 0.000

So easy to make I have never attempted a ginger beer kit. I have noticed that quite a few of the kits have artificial sweetners in them. The trick with ginger beer is timing, bottle before it has finished fermenting and then drink before the bottles explode - what could be easier.
Fermentables
name quantity potential use colour
Sugar Cane 1.14 1.046 extract 0
Hops
name form AA Qty time IBU
Other Ingredients
name quantity notes
Lemon juice 0.0 4 lemons
Lemon zest 0.0 from 4 lemons, use a fine grater.
Fresh grated ginger 0.24 More or less to taste.
Citric acid 0.01 None
Ale yeast 0.01 I had a pack of wander yeast from supermarket handy.
Yeast nutrient 0.002 The comprehensive kind, not just DAP
 
Sosman, I can't get that to come up- the link is fine but nothing happens when I click the print icon. :(
FWIW, we have made three batches of non-alcoholic ginger beer. One was a Brigalow kit, which was pretty bad and hasn't improved after 5 months in the bottle. Artificially sweetened & watery.
The other two were from an old Women's Weekly type cook book, made with sultanas, lemon juice sugar water & dried ginger. You feed it more sugar & ginger every day for two weeks then dilute to taste and bottle. It is excellent fiery stuff, though both batches have had a couple of bottle explosions.
Not sure what process goes on in this- there is no yeast to ferment anything, but the "plant" gives off bubbles, and some sort of activity continues in the bottle. Anyone know?
 
BLB,

The sultanas have wild yeast on the skins, that's what fires up the "plant" or wild yeast starter.

For the link you can't get to work - what browser are you running? I just realized it works fine with Mozilla but IE doesn't seem to want to view the XML. I will have to look into it, I needed to speak to Bill regarding something else too.

cheers
 
sosman said:
For the link you can't get to work - what browser are you running? I just realized it works fine with Mozilla but IE doesn't seem to want to view the XML.
Yeah, IE here and no go :(

Sorry to whore... better get this back on topic. I'm planning a ginger beer recipe tomorrow. I've got an old recipe from my late grandmother that looks fairly good as a non-alcoholic version, but will myself be doing a kit for some punch. I think Doc's recipe will be first, followed by GMK's. Hopefully both excellent drops.

-----

Gran's Ginger Beer

TO MAKE PLANT:
1/2 cup sugar
4 cups water
1 dsp ground ginger
1 large lemon (juice only)

Stir sugar until disolves, allow to stand 4 days, gently pour off water until 2 cups remain
Feed daily for 4 days with 1tsp ground ginger & 4 tsp sugar

TO MAKE GINGER BEER:
Stir plant slightly and strain off liquid into large pot, add:
4 cups sugar
4 cups boiling water, stir until sugar disolved then add,
6 lemons (strained juice only)
26 cups cold water

Bottle and cork, ready for use in 6 days (store in a cool place)

PLANT:
Halve plant and feed one half with:
2 cups cold water
1 heaped tsp ground ginger
4 tsp sugar
feed for 6 days before making more beer in same manner as before

The remaining half of plant can be given or thrown away. Bottles do sometimes explode if kept too long, so store where they can do no damage.
-----

I've never tried this recipe so can't comment on it. It's been passed down to me :unsure:
 
I believe I have fixed the CGI script so it works with IE and Mozilla.

BTW the fresh wort cubes make a good sized fermenter for the home made ginger beer.
 
back on topic
Sodastream bottle has run out and its not quite carbonated up yet. Its still taking CO2 when shaking and baking at 125kPA off to Kmart for a new one and see if I can steal a fire extinguisher from somewhere!
It has a slight mediciney taste I think there is a bit of artificial sweetener used in this kit.

Its drinkable but I think I'll try from scratch next time

Ausdb
 
I reckon a really neat setup for making ginger beer would be the equivlatent of a keg + oztop. Bung all the ingredients in, leave at room temperature until desired taste parameters achieved and then cool.

Trouble is, I don't have the equivalent of an oztop. Would need some sort of adjustable pressure relief valve. I guess I could just bung a gauge on it and relieve pressure manually.
 
You could try doing something with a spare keg lid possibly? Tig or braze a fitting on it that you could screw the Oztop to.
 
ausdb said:
You could try doing something with a spare keg lid possibly? Tig or braze a fitting on it that you could screw the Oztop to.
I was thinking along those lines, or even an adapter for the gas-in QD.

I figure there must be industrial style pressure relief valves out there that probably screw straight into the 1/2" BSP.
 
NRB said:
sosman said:
For the link you can't get to work - what browser are you running? I just realized it works fine with Mozilla but IE doesn't seem to want to view the XML.
Yeah, IE here and no go :(

Sorry to whore... better get this back on topic. I'm planning a ginger beer recipe tomorrow. I've got an old recipe from my late grandmother that looks fairly good as a non-alcoholic version, but will myself be doing a kit for some punch. I think Doc's recipe will be first, followed by GMK's. Hopefully both excellent drops.

-----

Gran's Ginger Beer

TO MAKE PLANT:
1/2 cup sugar
4 cups water
1 dsp ground ginger
1 large lemon (juice only)

Stir sugar until disolves, allow to stand 4 days, gently pour off water until 2 cups remain
Feed daily for 4 days with 1tsp ground ginger & 4 tsp sugar

TO MAKE GINGER BEER:
Stir plant slightly and strain off liquid into large pot, add:
4 cups sugar
4 cups boiling water, stir until sugar disolved then add,
6 lemons (strained juice only)
26 cups cold water

Bottle and cork, ready for use in 6 days (store in a cool place)

PLANT:
Halve plant and feed one half with:
2 cups cold water
1 heaped tsp ground ginger
4 tsp sugar
feed for 6 days before making more beer in same manner as before

The remaining half of plant can be given or thrown away. Bottles do sometimes explode if kept too long, so store where they can do no damage.
-----

I've never tried this recipe so can't comment on it. It's been passed down to me :unsure:
Shouldn't there be a sultana in the plant?
 
Batz said:
Shouldn't there be a sultana in the plant?
With this recipe apparently not. I've heard of recipes that do.

In the end I used a Doc/GMK hybrid which I've just finished bottling. I bulk primed with 130g caster sugar and 250mL Buderim Ginger Refresher cordial. I hope I don't create any bottle bombs, but Rod suggested using this as he's done on many occasions.

I can't wait to taste .
 
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