Showing posts with label Allspice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Allspice. Show all posts

Monday, July 29, 2013

Root Beer. and Birch Beer

Birch Beer, Root Beer, IBC, A&W

... I'm jumping in feet first to try to help those of us who remember real Root Beer.

As a food nut, I have looked far and wide for foods I like. Growing up in St. Louis, before 1960, I easily remember the flavor of IBC Root Beer. We even had a hamburger joint (Fitz's) that had root beer on "draft". It was soooo creamy. But IBC tasted better.

The Quest was on and my research brought me to: The Independent Liquorist by Leonard Monzert. (New York : Dick & Fitzgerald, 1866). Monzert gives a wonderful root beer recipe.

But before I go into the history of this beverage, I want to deal with the chemistry of birch and "sassafras" root. The chemical name for both wintergreen and sweet birch is: METHYL SALICYLATE. That should mean that both birch and root beer taste about the same, at least as to that one ingredient. So it must be the remaining ingredients that constitute the flavor you all remember.

Monzert's Recipe for 10 gallons of:

Root Beer:

1 ounce yellow dock

1 ounce wintergreen

1 ounce sassafras

1 ounce allspice

1/2 ounce coriander seed

1/2 ounce wild cherry bark

1/4 ounce hops

3 quarts molasses

8 fl. ozs. brewer's yeast.

10 gallons of Spring Water (that means soft water)

Pour boiling water over all the ingredients. Stand 24 hours. Filter and add 8 ounces brewer's yeast and it is ready for use 24 hours later.

Root Beer in lore and legend is supposedly a response to the amount of beer guzzling going on in mid 19th century America. The inventor, whose name is lost to time, wanted to make a drink that would taste good, but not inebriate. Unusually enough, the molasses and brewer's yeast do yield an alcoholic beverage, but the alcohol is about .5%. You would have to drink a six-pack of root beer to equal one Bud.

If you are going to bottle this batch, sterilize your bottles and have a quality capper on had. I give a slightly easier recipe below.

From The Standard Manual of Soda and Other Beverages by A. Emil Hiss (Chicago : G.P. Engelhard & Co., 1897) comes his recipe for:

Birch Beer

3 ounces Princess Pine leaves

1 1/2 ounces wintergreen

1 ounce ginger

1 gallon water

5 pounds sugar

4 fl. ounces birch or birch beer extract

Ferment or charge in a soda fountain. Hiss' instructions for making birch extract are somewhat "strange". He gives 4 differing recipes, of which, one I give here:

Birch Essence or Extract (I.)

Oil of wintergreen 5 fl. drams

Oil of lemon 2 fl. drams

Oil of cloves 1/2 fl. dram

Oil of sassafras 20 drops

Extract of vanilla 4 fl. ounces

Alcohol 16 fl. ounces.

Dissolve the oils in the alcohol and add the vanilla.

In 1958, the Federal gov't. passed the "Delaney Amendment" to the U.S. Food and Drug Act. It called for a "zero tolerance" policy for foods that could be suspected of causing cancer. Old fashioned root beer was one of the first "victims" of this Delaney act. It seems "reputable" scientists gave the equivalent of about 17,000 root beers a day to dogs and mice and they got cancer and died. I don't mean they force fed those animals that quantity. They gave the "safrol" oil, which is what sassafras bark has in it. So they used that concentrated oil, which is thousands of times "stronger" than ordinary. Who among us would consume 2 to 3 pounds of salt a day and believe it was a healthy idea? None the less, sassafras was made illegal for use in root beer. The soda pop industry reformulated about 1960 and root beer never tasted as good again. Curiously enough, mace, black pepper and nutmeg have small amounts of safrol in them, or safrol-like chemicals and the government never "zero-toleranced" them out of business.

Meanwhile, I've learned to make root beer extract with alcohol and the first recipes ingredients. It yields about 6 ounces of liquid to which I add hop essence (from the home beer making shop). That is then mixed with 96 ounces of simple syrup.

Approach it thusly:

Root Beer:

1 ounce yellow dock

1 ounce wintergreen

1 ounce sassafras

1 ounce allspice

1/2 ounce coriander seed

1/2 ounce wild cherry bark

1/4 ounce hops

Caramel coloring (Smart & Final, about $3 for a quart 2006 prices.)

From your local homebrewing shop obtain some hop extract.

Buy a bottle of vodka. If you don't regularly drink vodka, a pint will do fine. You need 6 to 9 fl. ozs. to start with. Grind the herbs or have your herbalist pulverise them for you. Herbs of Mexico, here in Los Angeles, charges 75¢ extra, but the herbs come out as a nice size particle. In to a mason or other, clean, jar, put the herbs, then 6 fl. ozs. of the vodka. Stir well. Put the lid on and shake for 30 seconds to a minute. Get the menstruum well mixed. Put the jar into a dark cupboard, the liquid becomes light sensitive and must be kept in the darkest spot available to you. In the morning, line a sieve with a Mr. Coffee filter or equivalent. Put the sieve and filter over a bowl to catch the liquid. Empty the jar. Next, allow it to stand until you collect at least 6 fl. Ozs. of extract. If you have a dark room, so much the better. It won't take more than an hour. Or at least it shouldn't. If you don't have 6 fl. Ozs. pour more vodka over the menstruum to obtain it. Wash the grounds out, so to speak.

Put the 6 fl. Ozs. into a sterilized (including lid) small bottle. Keep in a dark place. I use a hot sauce bottle, as this leaves little air space above the liquid.

Next, make your simple syrup. To 96 fl. Ozs. of water, add 96 ozs. of sugar. Bring to a strong boil, being careful not to let the sugar burn before it dissolves completely. Add the caramel coloring until you get a very dark color. Four to six ounces should be enough. Allow to cool and once the syrup is at room temperature, add the root beer extract. Decant into one gallon jar and a one quart jar. Keep the lid on tightly.

To serve: add 2 to 3 ounces of root beer syrup to a glass, ice and pour sparkling water over. I use Perrier.


Tuesday, July 01, 2003

Jerk Food and the Allspice Tree

The Real Jerk : New Caribbean Cuisine
by Lily Pottinger, Ed Pottinger
Paperback: 188 pages
Dimensions (in inches): 0.50 x 9.68 x 7.50
Publisher: Arsenal Pulp Press; (October 2002)
ISBN: 1551521156


Strange name for a cookbook I thought to myself, as I settled into an easy chair at the public library and scanned it for "goodness".


I've yet to taste Caribbean or Jamaican food that meant much to my palate. But, the Food sections and the bookstores do seem to promote this cuisine as something special. Ahh, before I forget it, I must say that the closest I've ever been to that part of the world is Cancun Mexico.


I flip open to a page of The Real Jerk and find that to jerk chicken you must make up The Real Jerk (Jerk's) jerk sauce. So far so good. The recipe for The Real Jerk jerk is pretty much the same as every else I've seen.


NOW FOR THE REVELATION:


(as to why you should consider Jamaican cuisine important)


The foods (meat, poultry, fish) were traditionally pit cooked food! Of course this tastes good! Of course, the authors say that was then. Now-a-days, at there restaurant "The Real Jerk" (strange name for a restaurant, I thought to myself!), they have a stove and oven, et cetera.


"So where is the REVELATION" you ask?


Jamaicans use the wood of the Allspice (pimento) tree in the pit. Naturally foods taste better grilled over a spice.


So that answers the question: What is special about Jamaican cuisine.


An old recipe using an herb to flavor food on the grill:


Grilled Trout with Bay.


Ingredients:


1 to 1 1/2 trout per person


Bay leaves
Salt and Pepper
Oil for wiping the grate or grid
1 lemon, cut in half
olive oil


Equipment:


A grill, either wood, charcoal or propane
Large Metal spatula


Here in LA, I can buy dried bay leaves, not too long off the tree, in one ounce bags for under a dollar. Unless you are rich, don't buy Shilling's or McCormick's bay leaves in a jar. The cost is prohibitive.


Cut the lemon crosswise. Put one half aside for the meal. Squeeze a few drops of juice on each side of the trout and wipe the juice over the surface of the fish with a paper towel or your finger.


Using a sharp knife, make shallow slashes diagonally across the thickest part of the fish. Viz.: / / /


The / / / represent the slashes.


Next, drip olive oil on both sides of the trout and set the fishies on a platter. In the fridge, if more than an hour from cooking time, please.


Fire up the grill, allowing a 20 minute warm-up for propane or until the charcoal turns white or until the wood glows bright orange. Fold up a paper napkin, pour a small amount of oil on it and wipe the grid or grate to slicken the surface. Drop half a dozen bay leaves on the coals. Or if you have propane, on the rocks. Throw (not literally) the fish on the grill, close the lid and cook 7 minutes per inch of thickness of fish. Turn at the half cooked time, adding more bay leaves. Close the lid and cook for the remainder of the time.


Serving ideas:


French fries
Salad
White wine
Sherbet and champagne dessert