Celery Soda

I have to admit that Celery Soda is not exactly a normal sounding recipe.  While watching Alton Brown whip together this recipe on Good Eats, my first thought was, “Celery WHAT?”  My incredulity notwithstanding, the idea took hold.

And boy did it ever take hold.  My brain kept trying to imagine how a syrup steeped with celery seeds would taste.  It’s not that it was a huge investment in time, resources or money.  It was just two measly tablespoons of celery seed, two cups of sugar and a cup of water. I enjoyed tossing around the idea of the soda almost more than I wanted to make it.  But make it I did.

And I could kick myself for waiting so long.

It’s not good.

It’s great.

It’s more complex than I ever imagined it to be.  Trying to nail down the flavors for description is like trying to get boys into the bath tub.  In a word?  Elusive.  Two words?  Elusive and slippery.  Every time you think you have it it evades you.  But I’ll try.  For you all, I’ll try.

The first impression is not of the sweetness, although it’s right there; your first sense of the syrup is the light smell of celery.  It’s not quite identifiable as celery; it’s a fresh, herbal scent.  And it smells more of celery than it tastes of it.  That light, fresh, herbal taste  is present, but if you didn’t know it was made from celery seed you might not be able to call it.  The biggest ‘A-ha!” moment from the whole experience is that the subtle tongue-tingling feeling that you get when you eat celery is there when you sip the syrup mixed with soda water.  Even that is more of a lower case “Is this celery?” than it is a “Hey!  Celery!”

What is not elusive and slippery about this is how refreshing it is.  My word.  A tall glass of this on a hot day and the world will melt away while you stay cool.  Not as cool as a cucumber but as cool as celery. It cools you on a cellular level.  This is going to be my secret weapon during the dog days this summer.  That is, if we ever get dog days…

According to Alton Brown, the celery syrup in this recipe is invaluable in mixing cocktails.  Feel free to wing it.  Let me know if you come up with something wild and wacky and mixological.  Maybe you’ll invent the newest cocktail craze.  Could happen.  All because of this syrup.

I probably don’t need to tell you this, but I will anyway; this is so much better for you than most off-the-shelf sodas you can buy.  And it’s almost sinfully less expensive than the fancy-pants gourmet and all-natural sodas that are available.  We’re talking about pennies per glass here.  No funky additives, no High Fructose Corn Syrup, no wacky extracts or bizarro unpronounceable ingredients.  Okay, some might argue that Celery Soda is -at the very least- unusual or exotic, but it’s refreshing and really dadburned good!

Psst.   There’s one other thing.  But it’s for adults-only.  I’ve been told by a reliable source that celery (in all it’s forms) has some potent aphrodisiac effects;  so use with caution.  Or without.  Wink wink.

Now you might print this one and  put it in the pile of recipes to try or file it away or bookmark it.  I’m all about that.  But don’t let the hot months get away from you before you try this.

Celery Soda

Scroll to the bottom of this post for an easy print version of this recipe.

from Alton Brown

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups granulated sugar
  • 1 cup of water
  • 2 Tablespoons of freshly crushed (lightly) celery seed
  • chilled unflavored seltzer or soda water

Stir the sugar and water together in a heavy-bottomed saucepan over medium heat until sugar is fully dissolved.  Remove the pan from the heat and stir in the celery seeds.  Cover the pan and steep, off of the hot burner, for one hour.

After an hour, it is time to strain.  Line a fine-mesh sieve or colander with dampened fine cheesecloth or coffee filters.  Pour the syrup into the strainer.  If you need to do this in stages, do so, but try not to overflow your cheesecloth or coffee filters as this will allow celery seeds into the syrup.

That wouldn’t be a disaster, but it would at a possibly undesirable textural element to your syrup.  Pour the syrup into a jar, fit on a tight lid and chill completely before use.

To mix a soda:

Pour 2 Tablespoons of chilled syrup into a tall glass with about 1/4 cup of chilled seltzer or soda water.  Stir well to combine so that the syrup is fully integrated into the soda.  Add ice to the glass and fill the rest of the glass with more chilled soda.  Serve immediately.  Ah!

Store unused syrup in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to six months.  That’s right!  It lasts for six whole months!

5.0 from 1 reviews

Celery Soda
Author: 
Recipe type: Homemade Soda, Flavoured Syrup
Prep time: 
Cook time: 
Total time: 

Serves: 12
 

Refreshing, unique, and healthy, an icy glass of this unusual sounding homemade soda really hits the spot on steamy summer days. Serve this alongside grilled hot dogs or hamburgers and potato salad instead of a cola or sweet soda and you will never go back!
Ingredients
  • 2 cups granulated sugar
  • 1 cup of water
  • 2 Tablespoons of freshly crushed (lightly) celery seed
  • chilled unflavored seltzer or soda water

Instructions
To Make the Syrup:
  1. Stir the sugar and water together in a heavy-bottomed saucepan over medium heat until sugar is fully dissolved.
  2. Remove the pan from the heat and stir in the celery seeds.
  3. Cover the pan and steep, off of the hot burner, for one hour.
  4. After an hour, it is time to strain. Line a fine-mesh sieve or colander with dampened fine cheesecloth or coffee filters.
  5. Pour the syrup into the strainer. If you need to do this in stages, do so, but try not to overflow your cheesecloth or coffee filters as this will allow celery seeds into the syrup.
  6. Pour the syrup into a jar, fit on a tight lid and chill completely before use.
To Serve as Soda:
  1. Pour 2 Tablespoons of chilled syrup into a tall glass with about ¼ cup of chilled seltzer or soda water.
  2. Stir well to combine so that the syrup is fully integrated into the soda.
  3. Add ice to the glass and fill the rest of the glass with more chilled soda.
  4. Serve immediately. Ah!

 

Papa’s Homemade Hooch: Homemade Ginger Ale.

For a multitude of reasons I don’t buy soda.   Please don’t get me wrong. I’m not going all judgy-judgerton on soda.  It’s just that over the years, I have gotten to where I don’t really like most of it.  It’s just too derned sweet for me.  Once a year or so I’ll grab a Pepsi when I’m out on the town (Hmmm… Perhaps I only get Pepsi once a year because I only get out on the town once a year or so.  Please excuse me for a moment or two while I go mourn my lost ability to go where I want when I want…) but that’s about the extent of it.  I am, however, a big fan of ginger ale.

A few years back, my Dad found a recipe online and started making his own ginger ale so, naturally, we started teasing him.

(*This is a side note to give you a very important piece of information about interacting with people to whom I am related. We are a teasing family.  It’s how we show you we love you.  If we tease you we care. What that says about us I cannot tell you.  Perhaps someone with a bent for psychology could tell you weird and horrible things about our collective psyche based on that, but, eh… We is what we is.)

“Ah,” said us, “You’re home-brewing, eh Dad?” (My Dad does not drink alcohol.) “Sooooo, Papa, you’re moonshining? Making hooch?”  And thus was born the name of Dad’s ginger ale, “Papa’s Hooch”.  When Dad came to visit, he brought four bottles of “Papa’s Hooch” with him. I had ignored my Dad’s recommendation to open it over the sink and found myself wearing the top third of the contents of a very pressurized bottle.

Wow!   It was REAL ginger ale.  You could taste the ginger, lemon juice and lime juice that he had used, and boy howdy it was fizzy.  There was actual citrus pulp and ginger in the bottle.

Have you ever had a real, honest-to-goodness homemade soda?  As in one that was made from scratch?   I have to tell you that if the sum of your soda experience is contained in the fizzy-drinks aisle at the local grocery store that you are missing out.  Big time. I feel obliged to warn you that homemade ginger ale is worlds different than  Canada Dry, Schweppe’s or fill-in-the-blank brand.  It tastes closer to what most folks would consider a ginger beer (like a Reed’s Ginger Beer) and is somewhat similar to Vernor’s, which is about the only bottled ginger ale worth buying and drinking.  (Uh oh.  Look out!  My native Michigander is showing…)

*Science Content Warning!

Papa’s Hooch is a home fermented product.  That means that there will be a little sediment in the bottle.  And since it’s brewed with real, grated ginger and fresh squeezed citrus juice, there will be a small amount of pulp in the finished product.  If you pour carefully, the sediment should remain in the bottle.  If you find pulp objectionable (I personally find it really tasty and will fight anyone for their pulp) you can pour the hooch through a fine mesh strainer into your glass.

Since this is a fermented product, there is a miniscule amount of alcohol produced as a by-product of the yeast.  The original recipe called for a full cup of sugar, but Dad reduced that to a half cup.  Since there is less sugar to be eaten by the yeast, there will be less alcohol in the finished product than there was in the original recipe. To give you an idea of how much (or rather, how little) alcohol there really is let me share with you a quote from the page where Dad originally got the recipe (and if it sounds like it’s written by a scientist, that’s because it is.)

“We have tested in our lab the alcoholic content which results from the fermentation of this (ginger ale) and found it to be between 0.35 and 0.5 %. Comparing this to the 6% in many beers, it would require a person to drink about a gallon and a half of this (ginger ale) to be equivalent to one 12 ounce beer. I would call this amount of alcohol negligible, but for persons with metabolic problems who cannot metabolize alcohol properly, or religious prohibition against any alcohol,  consumption should be limited or avoided.”

This means, that the final alcohol content of Papa’s Hooch is going to be roughly half of what the original recipe’s alcohol content was.  Translation: You’d need to drink 3 gallons of Papa’s Hooch to get the alcohol that is in the average 12 ounce beer.

Also.  You’ll want to keep in mind that the bottle in which you ferment the hooch will be under a great deal of pressure.  It’s best to use an empty plastic two-liter seltzer or soda bottle with a tight fitting screw top for the process.  You wouldn’t want to use an empty milk jug, glass bottle or mason jar for this project.  If you use glass you run a very real risk of explosion.  Heck, there’s bit of a risk of explosion with the plastic bottle, too.  But you’re a lot less likely to incur injury or property damage from an exploding plastic bottle than an exploding glass one.  And using a plastic bottle along with the safety precautions laid out in the recipe makes it a pretty safe bet that you’ll be fine.  But, really… I’m not asking you to fillet and eat your own fugu.  It’s just ginger ale.  As long as you use a plastic bottle, the biggest risk you’re flirting with is that you’ll have a puddle to clean up and you might have to wipe down a wall or two.  I’d say that’s worth it!

Onto the ginger ale.  If you make this tonight, it should be ready to drink by Sunday morning.

For a photo-free, printer friendly version of this recipe, click here!

Papa’s Homemade Hooch

Ingredients:

papashooch1

  • 1/2 cup granulated sugar
  • One lemon or one lime (or half of each)
  • 2 inches of fresh gingerroot
  • 1/4 teaspoon of yeast

Fit the top of a clean, dry, empty 2-liter soda bottle with a funnel.  Pour the sugar and yeast into the bottle.

papashooch2

Swirl gently to distribute the yeast through the sugar.  Leave the funnel in the bottle and set aside.

Grate the ginger into a measuring cup.

papashooch3Juice the lemon and/or lime.  I prefer to use half each of a lemon and a lime.

Freaky claw hand juices citrus.  Stay tuned for more...

Freaky claw hand juices citrus. Stay tuned for more...

Combine the citrus juice and the grated gingerroot in a measuring cup and swirl to mix.

papashooch5

Pour through the funnel into the bottle.

papashooch6

There will be some ginger and citrus pulp left in the funnel and measuring cup.

Can't waste all that ginger you grated!

Can't waste all that ginger you grated!

We’ll take care of that right now!  To rinse the additional pulp out of the measuring cup and into the bottle add clean drinking water to the measuring cup and swirl.

papashooch8

Pour this through the funnel.  That should have cleaned out the measuring cup and the funnel.

No ginger left behind! Not in THIS kitchen!

No ginger left behind! Not in THIS kitchen!

Remove the funnel and screw the cap on tightly.  Shake the bottle vigorously to mix.  Remove the cap and fill the bottle to within an inch of the top (that should be just about where the bottle starts to narrow at the neck), cap tightly and invert repeatedly to dissolve sugar.

This is a good part of the process to get the kids involved.  They love shaking things vigorously.  It comes naturally.

This is a good part of the process to get the kids involved. They love shaking things vigorously. It comes naturally.

Use your thumb to press in the side of the bottle and take note of how far it gives under the pressure.

See how far in the bottle goes when I press it with my thumb?  That means this is not done yet!

See how far in the bottle goes when I press it with my thumb? That means this is not done yet!

Place bottle in a warm (but not hot) place for about 24-48 hours, or until the bottle is very firm.  When the bottle does not yield to firm pressure it is time to refrigerate!

Freaky claw hand is back to show you a bottle of finished hooch.  See how the bottle doesn't indent at all when pressed really, REALLY hard?  This needs to go into the fridge.  And now.

Freaky claw hand is back to show you a bottle of finished hooch. See how the bottle doesn't indent at all when pressed really, REALLY hard? This needs to go into the fridge. And now.

Do not leave the bottle out for more than 48 hours as you run the risk of it bursting after that point.  Chill completely, preferably overnight.  When it is completely chilled, caaaaaarefully loosen the lid…

Do this over your sink or over a surface that is easy to clean.  Trust me.

Do this over your sink or over a surface that is easy to clean. Trust me.

and pour over ice.

papashooch-14papashooch-15

This is pure refreshment.

This is pure refreshment.

If you find pulp and small bits of ginger objectionable, strain your soda into the glass.

This last bit of advice comes straight from my Dad. Heed him well.  “Rinse the bottle out with water immediately after pouring your last glass.  Otherwise you’ll never get the dad-burned stuff out of there.”  He’s right.  I tried washing out an empty hooch bottle after it had sat out, capped- I might add, overnight.  I ended up recycling the blasted thing.  When will I learn to listen to my Dad the first time?