Homemade Root Beer (Traditional Recipe) (2024)

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  • Benefits of Homemade Fermented Beverages+
    • Ethnic Beverages Aid Digestion
  • Homemade Root Beer using Sassafras+
    • Benefits of Sassafras
    • Sassafras Tea
  • Root Beer using Sarsaparilla
  • From Herbal Tea to Modern Root Beer+
    • Wide Variety of Root Beer Recipes
    • Traditional Root Beer is BEST
  • Starter for Homemade Root Beer
  • Homemade Root Beer
  • More Information

Homemade Root Beer (Traditional Recipe) (1)

A favorite fermented beverage in our home is homemade root beer.

Root beer is a healthful and very traditional North American beverage. Enthusiasts typically brew it with sassafras bark (Sassafras albidium) or sarsaparilla (Smilax ornata).If you like hiking in the Great Smoky Mountains, you will find sassafras trees growing wild nearly everywhere you go. A handful of sassafras root bark is shown in the picture above.

Of course, modern versions of this traditional beverage don’t contain any beneficial herbs let alone the enzymes and probiotics like from centuries past.

Benefits of Homemade Fermented Beverages

Investigation of traditional cultures from around the world reveals that all of them utilized various types of fermented foods and beverages to assist digestion. Strong digestion keeps immunity strong. Of course, these cultures did not understand the science behind it. They only observed that by eating these foods regularly they stayed healthier. In other words, they didn’t easily develop chronic diseases and were less likely to contract infectious ones.

Fermented food and drink were also a very practical method of preservation.

We now know that traditional ferments contain an abundance of beneficial bacteria, enzymes, and nutritional co-factors not present in the non-fermented versions of the same food. Regular consumption of ferments can help you and your family sail through flu season with nothing more than a mild sniffle! These foods also encourage optimal digestion and assimilation of nutrients. In addition, they encourage healthy gut flora as they are loaded with probiotics.

Ethnic Beverages Aid Digestion

You aren’t what you eat; you are what you digest!

Traditional ethnic beverages are a fun way to begin the process of incorporating fermented foods into your home. Kombucha was the first traditionally fermented beverage I started with nearly 2 decades ago. It is still a regular fixture in our refrigerator. I’ve included links to the other fermented beverages I make regularly at the end of the article.

Homemade Root Beer using Sassafras

The sassafras tree is native to a wide area of North America primarily east of the Mississippi river.It is a medium-sized, moderately fast growing, aromatic tree that is little more than a shrub in northern areas like southwestern Maine, New York, and southern Ontario. In the south and particularly in the Great Smoky Mountains, the sassafras tree grows largest (25-39 feet/6-12 meters) providing an important food for wildlife. Deer browse the twigs in the winter and the leaves during spring and summer.

Benefits of Sassafras

Sassafras has historically provided a variety of commercial and domestic uses for humans as well. Sassafras tea is brewed from the bark of roots, while the leaves are used in thickening soups. The spongy, orange-brown colored wood has been used in centuries past to construct barrels, buckets, fence posts and furniture. The oil is considered of value for adding fragrance to soaps and perfumes and flavor to candy.

Agriculturally, the sassafras tree is considered beneficial for restoration of depleted soil for farmland. In Indiana and Illinois, it was considered superior to black locust or pine trees for this purpose(1).

Sassafras Tea

Sassafras tea has been a popular beverage for over three centuries in the lower Mississippi valley. It was first introduced to the explorer Ponce de Leon in 1512 and later to pioneers bythe Cherokee people. Native Americans used sassafras as a natural blood thinner, blood purifier, and to treat skin diseases, rheumatism, and other ailments.

Root Beer using Sarsaparilla

Root beer has also been traditionally made using sarsaparilla, a perennial trailing vine with prickly stems that is native to Mexico and Central America. It can grow to over 50 yards (46 meters) in length!

Like sassafras, sarsaparilla was valued by Native Americans for a variety of medicinal properties including gout, wounds, arthritis, cough, fever, hypertension, pain, and indigestion.

While sarsaparilla can be used to make homemade root beer, sassafras is arguably the more popular herb for this purpose in North American heritage.

From Herbal Tea to Modern Root Beer

With sassafras tea popular for so many centuries, it is easy to see how fermentation of the tea into root beer came to pass with the simple addition of sugar and a probiotic starter. With the Industrial Revolution so came the artificialization of root beer, starting with the pharmacist Charles Hires.

Hires apparently discovered the herbal tea base for his commercial root beer creation while on his honeymoon. It blendedover twenty-five herbs, berries and roots. He introduced this proprietary root beer beverage using carbonated water at the 1876 Philadelphia Centennial exhibition. Commercial abandonment of fermented root beer soon followed. The Hires family manufactured root beer for decades and introduced and distributed bottled root beer beginning in 1893.

Wide Variety of Root Beer Recipes

Root beer has no standard recipe. However, the common ingredients for modern commercial versions include sugar (GMO in North America) and artificial sassafras flavoring. Hormone disrupting soybean protein is sometimes used to create a foamy quality. Caramel coloring, a potential carcinogen, is used to make the beverage artificially brown.

Traditional Root Beer is BEST

You can see why the trend to homemade root beer is making a comeback with such nasty ingredients! While some versions call for processed extracts made in a factory, it is more healthful to make it the traditional way using unprocessed herbs and roots. The result can be alcoholic or non-alcoholic, carbonated or not.

The recipe I am sharing with you below is the very simple one I use that is non-alcoholic and mildly sweet with only slight carbonation from the natural fermentation process. If you wish a more bubbly beverage, you can do a secondary fermentation using sealed bottles to further enhance enzyme and probiotic activity.

Starter for Homemade Root Beer

The first thing you must have before brewing your own homemade root beer is a starter “bug”. The starter is the beneficial bacterial culture used to inoculate the fermentation. This is what triggers the brewing process to begin. You only have to make a starter culture one time. For subsequent batches, a few ounces of the previous batch serves as the starter.

The linked articleplus video demonstration details how to make a homemade soda starter.

Note thatteaching children basic cooking skillsis very important. One of the key lessons is how to make tasty, healthy fermented beverages such as root beer. This will help keep them from developing a soda habit when they leave home.

Homemade Root Beer

Once you have your soda starter ready, you can brew your own healthful root beer. This recipe makes approximately 2 gallons (7.6 liters).This homemade root beer recipe is particularly hydrating and is very refreshing after hot, summer yard work.

Note that while I recommend sucanat as the sweetener as it is widely available, jaggery is also a very healthy option.

*Please note that sassafras is contraindicated for pregnancy and breastfeeding.

Homemade Root Beer (Traditional Recipe) (2)

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Traditional Homemade Root Beer Recipe

Easy recipe for root beer that is made with real herbs and cultured starter to ferment into a healthy, probiotic and bubbly beverage.

Prep Time 30 minutes

Servings 16

Author Sarah Pope

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. Bring one gallon of filtered water to a boil with the sassafras root bark.

  2. Once boiling, mix in sucanat and allspice. Once completely dissolved, remove pot from heat and strain with a mesh strainer (stainless steel not plastic) lined with a white cotton dishtowel into a 2 gallon glass jar (sources).

  3. Add one more gallon of filtered water and stir. Wait for the mixture to cool slightly (about 30 minutes) and then stir in the juice of 2 lemons. Wait for the mixture to cool to 118 °F/48 °C or lower and then add 1 1/2 cups of starter. Note: if the mixture is too hot, the heat will kill the starter culture so be sure to wait until it is only warm to the touch. If you let the mixture cool and sit too long on the counter, however, you introduce the chance for mold. So be sure to add the starter at the appropriate time.

  4. Cover your container with a white, unbleached cloth secured with a large rubber band. Leave on the counter for 5-7 days depending on the weather (the warmer the weather, the shorter the brew time).

  5. When the initial fermentation is complete, the root beer is ready to drink as is. If you desire enhanced carbonation, proceed to the bottling step. Fill your soda bottles (sources) and cap them. Leave some room (I leave 2 inches) at the top of each bottle to allow for carbonation. See this link on homemade soda bottlingfor visual and written instructions.

  6. Leave at room temperature for a day or two longer to carbonate. Then refrigerate and enjoy!

  7. Only open the root beer bottles in the kitchen sink and when the bottle is very cold to prevent messy explosions!

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Homemade Root Beer (Traditional Recipe) (2024)

FAQs

What was the original recipe for root beer? ›

Ingredients in early and traditional root beers include allspice, birch bark, coriander, juniper, ginger, wintergreen, hops, burdock root, dandelion root, spikenard, pipsissewa, guaiacum chips, sarsaparilla, spicewood, wild cherry bark, yellow dock, prickly ash bark, sassafras root, vanilla beans, dog grass, molasses ...

What did Native Americans use to make root beer? ›

The original root beer recipe called for a combination of 25 roots, barks, berries, and flowers. However, the main flavor profile of the drink comes from the sassafras and wintergreen. It also had sarsaparilla, dandelion, wild cherry bark, prickly ash, cinchona, and juniper berry. These are all native medicines.

What is traditional root beer? ›

Historically made using the root of the sassafras plant with that being its primary flavour, there is no standard recipe. Root beer can vary from mild and easy drinking to strong and more challenging, but to give a very general definition it is a sweetened, carbonated beverage.

How did pioneers make root beer? ›

The colonists did not have barley or other grains for brewing at first, so they used the ingredients that were available: berries, bark and roots. The alcohol was the preservative. The beer was boiled and brewed like tea to blend the flavors and kill the germs. It was then cooled and fermented with yeast.

What is the secret ingredient in root beer? ›

Sassafras Root Beverages

Sassafras is a genus of three different types of trees found across North America and parts of East Asia. The sassafras tree is incredibly fragrant and its roots are the backbone of root beer's original flavor.

Why was sarsaparilla banned? ›

Well, sassafras and sarsaparilla both contain safrole, a compound recently banned by the FDA due to its carcinogenic effects. Safrole was found to contribute to liver cancer in rats when given in high doses, and thus it and sassafras or sarsaparilla-containing products were banned.

Is sassafras and sarsaparilla the same thing? ›

Both beverages are named after their distinct differences in ingredients when they were first made. Sarsaparilla was made from the Sarsaparilla vine, while Root Beer, roots of the sassafras tree. These days, Root Beer recipes do not include sassafras as the plant has been found to cause serious health issues.

Can you make your own root beer? ›

Combine 2 quarts water, sassafras, sarsaparilla, birch, mint, star anise, ginger, and vanilla in a medium saucepan. Bring to a boil, reduce to a simmer, and cook for 10 minutes. Remove pot from heat, cover, and let steep for 2 hours. Strain liquid through a fine-mesh strainer lined with cheesecloth into a large pot.

How is root beer made from sassafras? ›

Just boil the roots with some spices and molasses, strain, add sugar, and store as a syrup. Mix the syrup with soda water to make the root beer.

Is root beer still made with sassafras? ›

Sarsaparilla was made from the Sarsaparilla vine, while Root Beer, roots of the sassafras tree. These days, Root Beer recipes do not include sassafras as the plant has been found to cause serious health issues.

Is sassafras illegal in the US? ›

People used to drink sassafras tea. However, sassafras tea contains a high concentration of safrole, which was about 4.5 times the permissible dose. Thus, in 1976, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) banned the sales of sassafras tea. Moreover, the FDA prohibited the use of sassafras as food additives.

What is a good substitute for sassafras? ›

Thanks for any tips! Supposedly, the flavor of sassafras can be approximated by a mixture of citrus fruits, spearmint, and wintergreen. Another website suggests wintergreen, anise, cloves, lemon oil, and orange oil.

Did Native Americans create root beer? ›

Root beer owes it beginnings to the indigenous populations of early America. Far before colonists arrived on our young nation's shores, native people were already using different parts of the sassafras tree to create medicinal tonics and delicious cuisines, alike.

What is the primary flavor in root beer? ›

The primary flavor of root beer is sassafras, but the root beer we've come to love today is a medley of many flavors. There has never been a standard recipe for root beer, and it's contained hundreds of ingredients over the years.

What flavor is sassafras? ›

Native Americans used sassafras leaves as a fresh spice, like bay leaves, in soups and meat stews. The delicate flavour is described as spicy and earthy. Depending on the palate, notes of vanilla, liquorice and/or aniseed are present.

Was root beer invented before Dr Pepper? ›

It wasn't until the creation of root beer in 1876 that soda began to evolve into a drink option. Cola flavored soda entered the market shortly after in 1881. Dr Pepper was created in 1885 and believed to be the first soda as we know it today followed by Coca-Cola one year later.

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