I might never be able to walk into a bar and order another dark and stormy. It just won’t be the same.
This was one in a series of melodramatic thoughts I had as I sat at the empty bar of Red Door (2118 N. Damen Ave.) in the middle of the afternoon, sipping the simple ginger beer, lime, and dark spiced rum cocktail. I’d been chatting with the chef/owner and bar manager there about the ginger beer, which they make in-house a couple times a week—and which I had already tasted on its own.
It was very good, but this cocktail was something else entirely.
I had always thought of the dark and stormy as a relatively boring (or, uh, classic?) cocktail, and would almost never order one out at a bar. Cloying, flat, and generally uninteresting to my palate, this was a drink that simply did not interest me.
Until now.
Unlike root beer, which everyone knows has absolutely no booze, I’ve found that many people make the mistaken assumption that ginger beer is a type of beer-beer, AKA alcoholic. Why this is, I have no idea. There is such a thing as ginger beer with alcohol, but for the sake of this story, let’s just pretend that doesn’t exist.
Unlike ginger ale, which is terrible in cocktails, ginger beer has a distinctly bracing ginger-y-ness, and is certainly not for the faint of heart (or those who don’t actually like ginger). In short, ginger ale tastes absolutely nothing like ginger.
The beer version is, in fact, often made with brewing yeasts—likely champagne yeasts, since they’re the lightest and bubbliest, and the least likely to lend a funky flavor to the soda. In the brewing process, a tiny amount of natural alcohol might occur (similar to kombucha), but the amount is so small it would be imperceptible, unless you’re a baby. Once the yeasts and sugars have interacted to create carbonation, the beer is quickly refrigerated to halt the fermentation, thus preventing the production of alcohol.
At Red Door, their ginger beer is force-carbonated, and once I tried it, I felt certain that I’d never had real ginger beer in my life. This was spicy and warm—drink it too fast and it might make your eyes water.
The chef and owner there, Troy Graves, explained the production process to me: the ginger is boiled with sugar, water, lemon juice, and fresh thyme, mellowing the spiciness a bit. The resulting product is cooled, puréed, and then added to small 5-gallon soda kegs, where it’s force-carbonated with CO2. After some vigorous shaking to help integrate the fizz, it’s left to sit for a few hours so the carbonation evenly distributes and the foam settles. The result streams out an opaque, golden yellow with an even, foamy white head from a jerry-rigged tap they built on top of a beer cooler where the ginger beer and another seasonal soda live.
Juxtaposed alongside the sweet, mellow flavors of cane sugar and baking spices in the rum, I sat, sipping, suddenly feeling as though I’d discovered something. How had I not heard about this before? My ignorance was bordering on shameful.
I’ll have to atone for my sins by returning for one or two more.
Photo by Andrew Nawrocki.