Mrs Crocombe's recipe for Ginger Beer was copied from The Field newspaper, a field sports magazine first published in 1853 and still going today. Made by soaking ginger, lemon, bread and yeast in water, this Victorian ginger beer is a little insipid for modern tastes and far from the sweet varieties we enjoy in tin cans today. But with the addition of a sweetener such as honey or a dash of sweet whisky, this is a beautifully light and refreshing summer drink.
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INGREDIENTS
(Makes 4 litres / 7 pt / 4 14 quarts)
4 litres / 7 pt / 4 14 quarts water
23 tbsp sugar
30 g/1 oz fresh ginger, chopped
and bruised
zest of 1 lemon, cut off without pith
1 slice of thick-cut bread
4 tsp fresh (compressed) yeast, or 2 tsp dried yeast
METHOD
Heat the measured water and sugar until the sugar dissolves. Add the ginger and lemon zest. Allow to cool to room temperature and decant into a food-grade bucket or a large bowl.
Toast the bread. Mix the yeast with a little warm water to form a thick paste and spread this on the toast. Add the toast to the ginger beer mixture. Cover and leave to stand at room temperature for 1224 hours.
Strain the mixture through a fine sieve lined with kitchen paper or, better still, muslin or a jelly bag. Decant into clip-top jars or bottles, which will allow any gas to escape if it gets a bit lively.