Ginger Beer Alcohol Content
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- Joined: Thursday Aug 31, 2006 3:08 am
- Location: Perth, Western Australia
Ginger Beer Alcohol Content
Hey crew
I am about to put on a ginger beer, but I want to increase the alcohol content. The can says it wil come out at about 3.5%, but I want to boost it to at least 5%. I was considering adding an extra 500g of sugar, but I don't know if this will make it too sweet. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Cheers,
David.
I am about to put on a ginger beer, but I want to increase the alcohol content. The can says it wil come out at about 3.5%, but I want to boost it to at least 5%. I was considering adding an extra 500g of sugar, but I don't know if this will make it too sweet. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Cheers,
David.
Re: Ginger Beer Alcohol Content
The sugar (dextrose/glucose/sucrose) should ferment out ok.allonblack wrote:Hey crew
I am about to put on a ginger beer, but I want to increase the alcohol content. The can says it wil come out at about 3.5%, but I want to boost it to at least 5%. I was considering adding an extra 500g of sugar, but I don't know if this will make it too sweet. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Cheers,
David.
If anything it'll make it dryer rather than sweet(er) assuming that the yeast hangs in there and chomps its way through everything.
"Ask most people to name a Mexican beer and they'll name Corona. Coincidentally, if you ask most people to name a bodily fluid, they'll name urine."
- John Carroll explaining why Dos Equis > Corona.
- John Carroll explaining why Dos Equis > Corona.
I asked the good people at Coopers about this, wanting to boost it to 6-7%, but concerned the added alcohol would drown out the gingery spice and make it watery.
The bloke who replied agreed it would probably destroy the taste to add 1kg of dextrose but adding a 1.5kg tin of liquid malt extract would probably work.
I did just that, and it worked a treat, same flavour pretty much, but with a lot more warmth in the aftertaste.
I really recommend the malt, but then, maybe you can get away with 500g of dextrose if you only want 5%.
The bloke who replied agreed it would probably destroy the taste to add 1kg of dextrose but adding a 1.5kg tin of liquid malt extract would probably work.
I did just that, and it worked a treat, same flavour pretty much, but with a lot more warmth in the aftertaste.
I really recommend the malt, but then, maybe you can get away with 500g of dextrose if you only want 5%.
Chris, have you ever measured with hydrometer to test final alc content?Chris wrote:allonblack, adding sugar to your brew will not sweeten it. The sugar is fermented down to alcohol, leaving almost zero residual sweetness. It is the best way to kick the alcohol without effecting the percieved sweetness.
I like to use 2 kg of raw sugar- especially when Coles does 2kg bags for $2.
A homebrew is like a fart, only the brewer thinks it's great.
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Not underrated in my house, Stones is excellentChris wrote:I added a bit of LDM as well to keep the body up a bit, and some more ginger for a better bite. And it IS a good winter warmer. It almost reminds me of Stones Ginger wine- fantastic stuff, highly under-rated.

Will try the LDM as I bought .5kg 2day.

A homebrew is like a fart, only the brewer thinks it's great.
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I use Coopers in about 21 Litres with 1 KG of Brown/Raw Sugar.Chris wrote:Love the Stones. Great neat, but also good with a bit of whiskey.
As for the ginger beer, I really recommend adding grated ginger root if you like it stronger, as the flavour can be a bit weak. Otherwise, you can reduce your volume a bit.
What do You use Chris?

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Well i just put in a chimay blue and i can tell you there is alot of difference, Main thing i noticed ( i used dark brown sugar) was the strong smell of molasses and the almost wet feel of it, it was sticky and clumped together, White sugar is very dry and has bugger all smell, almost like the goodness has been completely sucked out of it, This is what i noticed but as i dont use sugar very often, its probably a pretty vague description




Raw sugar and brown sugar are traditionally less refined than white sugar. Hence, the molassesy stuff is still there in differing amounts. Obviosly more in dark brown sugar than in raw.
Technically, brown sugar is white sugar to which molasses is added now days, as they decided it was cheap to manufacture this way.
But the brown stuff- molasses and other impurities add flavour and even some body to your brew in a similar way to malt (but to a much lesser extent). It will give a degree of residual sweetness to your brew, as well as a toffee/caramel flavour (depending on the amount used).
Boonie, my last recipe for ginger was:
Coopers GB kit- got a stack of them for $4.00
2kg raw (but substitution of some brown for raw works well too)
500g LDM
2 inches of grated ginger root
2 lemons worth of juice
5g of all-spice
It's a hell of a ginger beer.
Technically, brown sugar is white sugar to which molasses is added now days, as they decided it was cheap to manufacture this way.
But the brown stuff- molasses and other impurities add flavour and even some body to your brew in a similar way to malt (but to a much lesser extent). It will give a degree of residual sweetness to your brew, as well as a toffee/caramel flavour (depending on the amount used).
Boonie, my last recipe for ginger was:
Coopers GB kit- got a stack of them for $4.00
2kg raw (but substitution of some brown for raw works well too)
500g LDM
2 inches of grated ginger root
2 lemons worth of juice
5g of all-spice
It's a hell of a ginger beer.
4 bucks, lucky bugger.Chris wrote:Raw sugar and brown sugar are traditionally less refined than white sugar. Hence, the molassesy stuff is still there in differing amounts. Obviosly more in dark brown sugar than in raw.
Technically, brown sugar is white sugar to which molasses is added now days, as they decided it was cheap to manufacture this way.
But the brown stuff- molasses and other impurities add flavour and even some body to your brew in a similar way to malt (but to a much lesser extent). It will give a degree of residual sweetness to your brew, as well as a toffee/caramel flavour (depending on the amount used).
Boonie, my last recipe for ginger was:
Coopers GB kit- got a stack of them for $4.00
2kg raw (but substitution of some brown for raw works well too)
500g LDM
2 inches of grated ginger root
2 lemons worth of juice
5g of all-spice
It's a hell of a ginger beer.

Showed my neighbour the recipe as he loves the GBeer and he is keen to help.

Where did you get the Ginger Root? No not that Ginger from Gilligans Island....

A homebrew is like a fart, only the brewer thinks it's great.
Give me a flying headbutt.......
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Nice one Chris, Coupla daysChris wrote:Unfortunately I got it from the greengrocer. His name is Con...

My mate recommended Vanilla root for another style of beer, but I am buggered if I can find any.

Does the Ginger Root really spice up the Ginger Beer?

A homebrew is like a fart, only the brewer thinks it's great.
Give me a flying headbutt.......
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