Ginger Beer Sierra Leone Style {Gluten-Free}

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This Ginger Beer recipe is light, refreshing and sooo good. Suitable for Gluten-Free diets.

Whenever I go home to Sierra Leone, the first thing I am handed is a glass of ice cold ginger beer.

Before I even unpack my bags.

So over the UK summer when I am not making lemonade, I am making my other drink ie gingerbeer in good old Sierra Leone style.

Or almost. Because in Sierra Leone the large heap of peeled ginger will be pounded  in a huge mortar and two pestles by two people working in synchrony with each other. Pound, pound, pound, pound, pound, pound as the sun rises so that the ginger beer would be as fresh as possible and in time for breakfast. As much as I  do love waking up to or contributing to that pounding sound I have a much easier way of doing it. AKA the blender.

So I get the taste of Sierra Leonean ginger beer for a tenth of the work. No contest, right?

Don't forget to tag #recipesfromapantry on Instagram or Twitter if you try Ginger Beer Sierra Leone Style! It is really, really awesome for me when you make one of my recipes and I'd love to see it. You can also share it on my Facebook page. Please pin this recipe to Pinterest too! Thank you for reading Recipes from a Pantry.

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5 from 1 vote

Ginger Beer Sierra Leone Style

Homemade ginger beer West African style.
Cook Time15 minutes
Total Time15 minutes
Course: Drinks
Servings: 6
Calories: 56kcal
Author: Bintu Hardy

Ingredients

  • 120 g (4 1/4 oz) fresh root ginger
  • 1 L (4 1/4 cups) of boiling water (or sparkling water)
  • 2 cloves or more
  • 2-4 tbsp sugar to taste
  • Juice of half a lime or more to taste

Instructions

  • Peel the ginger and chop into large bits
  • Add the ginger to a blender with about 50ml of water and blend into a paste.
  • Pour the ginger paste into a large heatproof bowl and top with the boiling water.
  • Add in the cloves and let stand for a couple of hours so the ginger flavour develops.
  • Slowly strain the ginger beer through a sieve into a new container and throw away the bits left in the sieve.
  • Add in the sugar and lime to taste and then let the ginger beer cool in the fridge before you serve it.
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Notes

After settling for a few hours you will notice that the bottom of the ginger beer is cloudy. That is the heat of the ginger beer. If you don't want it hot especially if serving children then be careful to leave that cloudy bit behind when straining it.

Nutrition

Calories: 56kcal | Carbohydrates: 16g | Sodium: 12mg | Potassium: 168mg | Fiber: 2g | Sugar: 5g | Vitamin A: 40IU | Vitamin C: 25.2mg | Calcium: 36mg | Iron: 0.6mg

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16 Comments

  1. My Dad loves ginger beer, I shall be making him some for Fathers Day so ty very much!

  2. OMG! I love Salone ginger beer! I never could get my homemade one to taste like I remembered, now I know it’s the cloves!
    Thanks for sharing Bintu! 🙂

  3. No contest at all! I love making ginger beer too because it always reminds me of Sierra Leone. How I miss sweet Salone! Love this recipe Bintu.

  4. So glad I stumbled by your blog today – thanks so much for sharing this recipe! I have not had fresh ginger beer since I was a child in Sri Lanka!

  5. I feel like I’ve been deprived I’ve never had this before, can’t wait to give it a try. I am all for convenience who needs a huge mortar and two pestles – its over kill. You’re bringing lots of memory back with the mortar and pestle though, its like back home they used that for everything – fufu is one i remember fondly – Aww good times.