Root Beer of course! And no fancy forced carbonation equipment is needed. But first, an explanation of sorts is needed on the ingredient list.
I have come to find that Sassafras is illegal to sell in the United States. The main ingredient in Sassafras oil is Safrole - a chemical that has been determined to be mildly carcinogenic by the Food and Drug Administration. Bugger.
Safrole can be removed from Sassafras root oils - but it requires specialized equipment and stringent processing. Not something the average home soda maker can do. The alternative is, processed concentrate :P
Yes, by entering this - I am saying you could win my heart with a bottle of root beer (or even better, home made ginger ale).
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Signing UpStep 1: Ingredients and Materials
Funnel
1 Cup Cane Sugar
1/4 teaspoon Yeast
Filtered Water
1 tablespoon Root Beer Concentrate
Sterilization
Fill your bottle half way and then add about a quarter cup of chlorine bleach. Then fill the bottle with water to the top. Cap and allow to rest on its side for about fifteen minutes. Afterwards, rinse well.








































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I'm from an (IL.) area not far from Vincennes (IN.). Sassafras trees are common here. But some do not like to boil the roots { why ??? }.
One alternative in our area is "Pappy's Sassafras (concentrate) Instant Tea". Sold at our local I.G.A. food-chain. A 12oz (355ml) bottle is ruffly $4US. The last bottle I bought had UPC code 0-76299-10012-7. Via; H&K Products Inc, 10246 Road P, Columbus Grove, Ohio, 45830 { phone: 419-659-5110 }. They also have a website; www.sassafrastea.com, you might visit. No, I am not an agent for either of those companies. I just really enjoy my hot (honey sweetend) tea. The tea can also be "infused' to make candy (think Horehound, or root-beer), jelly / jam, or other stuff.
Hope this was helpful. Best wishes to all.
I have come to find that Sassafras is illegal to sell in the United States. The main ingredient in Sassafras oil is Safrole - a chemical that has been determined to be mildly carcinogenic by the Food and Drug Administration. Bugger.
Safrole can be removed from Sassafras root oils - but it requires specialized equipment and stringent processing. Not something the average home soda maker can do. The alternative is, processed concentrate :P
Outside of the US, I don't know.
The unfortunate thing about Safrole is that it's useful in MDMA manufacture. Junk science is merely the easy way to remove a precursor from the marketplace, your root beer be damned.
I personally have no issues with making my own homemade Sassafras tea, except for the medical side effects I experience from chewing on even a twig.
Who could have guessed an ingredient for making Ecstasy could be harmful to one's health...
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL&_udi=B6T6P-3X9415Y-3&_user=10&_rdoc=1&_fmt=&_orig=search&_sort=d&view=c&_acct=C000050221&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&_userid=10&md5=8ec1ea8630ab130def74241535d2fc11 - curse those FDA meddling Taiwanese!
I ask this because I understand that if you cram enough saccharine through a rat in the lab it might just develop cancer.
I've also failed to see the government act to stamp out the harmful practice of slow cooking pork while it is waifing in deadly hardwood smoke. (Ban anything that could be used to make a smoker, and have strict limits on the amount of Boston Butt one could buy. Check ID and make people sign their names in books that are forwarded to the police!)
Clearly there are what most people would say were appropriate reactions to risk factors, and then there are unreasonable freedom restricting policies in place designed to fight the war on (some) drugs. I think of the latter whenever I'm using my (no longer sold) iodine water purification kit in the backcountry.
Only junk science would say such a small decrease or increase in survivability is meaningful - screw you FDA for passing this in the first place.
How much did that stuff cost anyway (and how much was made in the 2 years it was out)?
If it's not repeatable, it's not science.
Let pharma go back to research and figure out why. Not until you know "why" can we address "how."
The internet seems to be full of claims of causality.
The best parallel I can think of is AZT. A breakthrough, the very first drug approved to fight HIV, the drug still has serious side effects and was fiendishly expensive.
Since the patent expired, there are now several generic forms of AZT.
I'm surprised at your complete unshaken faith in the FDA. You're certain that they are 100% benevolent?
"can you purchase root beer concentrate somewhere special, or can you get it you local supermarket?"
http://www.eckraus.com
http://www21.inetba.com/westboylstonhomebrewemporium/_hcatalog.htm
http://www.wineandcake.com/search.htm?step=2&viewfrom=1&numresults=10&searchterm=soda
http://www.prairiemoon.biz/index.html
http://www.leeners.com/sodapop.html