Root beer

From Free net encyclopedia

Root beer is a fermented beverage made from a combination of vanilla, cherry tree bark, licorice root, sarsaparilla root, sassafras root bark, nutmeg, anise, and molasses among other ingredients. Many local brands of root beer exist, and homemade root beer is made from concentrate or (rarely) from actual roots. The drink gets its name from its unique texture. Like alcoholic beer, root beer has a thick and foamy head when poured.

Root beer is a uniquely North American beverage, constituting about 3% of the American soft drink market. It remains relatively unknown in Europe, the United Kingdom, and Asia. Foreign visitors to the U.S. often find root beer unpalatable, comparing its taste to that of toothpaste.

Contents

Ingredients

Other ingredients may include allspice, birch bark, coriander, juniper, ginger, wintergreen, hops, burdock root, dandelion root, spikenard, pipsissewa, guaiacum, spicewood, yellow dock, honey, clover, cinnamon, prickly ash bark, yucca, quillaja, and dog grass.

Due to the wide variety of ingredients possible the flavour of root beer is widely variable between brands. This is especially true of local brands.

Although root beer is a generic term used in America, in Britain there are several differentiated root beers, which rose to prominence with the temperance movement in the 20th century. These include sarsaparilla, dandelion and burdock and ginger beer. They were strongly flavoured drinks that people could use as an alternative to alcoholic beverages, and there tended to be a strong local preference for one of these. Well into the 1960s, these outsold cola drinks.

Traditional use

Root beer was a traditional beverage and herbal medicine. The beverage was often alcoholic, usually around 2%. As a medicine it was used for cough and mouth sores. Commercially prepared root beer was developed by Charles Elmer Hires on May 16, 1866. He presented root tea powder at the 1876 Philadelphia Centennial exhibition. In 1893 he began selling bottled carbonated root beer.

Home-made root beer is made using flavouring (either a concentrate, or actual roots and spices) to which is added sugar, water, and yeast. It is allowed to ferment under pressure to retain the carbonation and limit the alcohol produced by the yeast to low levels.

Sassafras controversy

The FDA banned sassafras root in the U.S. in 1960 as it contains safrole, a potential carcinogen. The young shoots, bark, and leaves do not contain this toxin, so commercial extracts are often made from these. Also, artificial flavouring agents have been developed which are used in some commercial root beers. Other varieties use sassafras root extract from which the safrole has been removed. The sassafras tree grows wild in most of the Eastern United States, and a person could harvest the wild plants; however, removing safrole from sassafras root extract, and verifying its safety for use, is a task that is beyond the ability and equipment of most homebrewers.

Root beer as a flavor

Root beer is also used as a flavoring for candy, cough drops, popcorn, root beer floats, cakes, and breads. An example of this is root beer Sanded Candy Drops made by Pennsylvania Dutch Candies.

Root beer in culture and entertainment

Root beer is occasionally used by the media when a beer-like beverage is portrayed which must be non-alcoholic for family audiences. An example is Tapper, a popular arcade video game from Bally Midway in 1983. The player is a bartender who must pour and serve beer to customers in several different bars. When this caused some controversy, a nearly-identical variant of the game was released the following year called Root Beer Tapper, with all the beer now being root beer instead.

British singer Jimmy Somerville released a short album called Root Beer in 2000, and its cover art featured a cartoon version of Somerville riding a root beer barrel like a rodeo bronco.

In the Monkey Island series of computer games, root beer is a weapon against ghosts.

In Charles Schulz's comic strip Peanuts, root beer is the beverage commonly drank by beagle Snoopy.

In the 1998 film The Big Lebowski, the narrator orders a sarsaparilla whilst talking to the Dude.

Commercial brands

Root beer brands include:

See also

External links

fr:Root beer ja:ルートビア la:Cervisia radicalis et:Kali