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Harry Potter’s ButterBeer

I know I don’t normally publish during the week, but I couldn’t let this recipe wait until next year. Well, I spent a lot of time doing it, but due to overwork I had to slow down the pace of the weekly publications. I hope to be able to resume them as I was doing them at some point. Although with this crazy life, I don’t know, hahaha. In any case, I had to leave you this Harry Potter ButterBeer for this Halloween.

It is an absolute and complete delicious recipe, promise. You can’t miss your favorite movie (in my case, “Hocus Pocus“, there is no Halloween that I don’t watch it) with your blanket, your choice of snacks and this wonderful and comforting refreshment. It’s actually a warm drink, at least this format I’m going to share with you. So that makes it doubly recommendable for this time of year, which is colder.

Wizard’s drink?

Butterbeer is the preferred drink of young magicians. It can be served either hot or cold and, in both cases, will have a comforting effect and make us feel warm. Although it is true that members of the house can become intoxicated with Butterbeer, the amount of alcohol it contains has a negligible effect on witches and wizards.

The amount of alcohol, much or little, that butterbeer possesses is open to debate among scholars and amateurs of this drink, but most agree that it contains some alcohol. Not too much. In fact, we are more likely to have a reaction due to the amount of sugar, before the alcohol exerts any effect on the body.

But, is there a non-alcoholic variant of butterbeer?

Yes, there is.

In fact, it was created especially for the Harry Potter theme parks (there are currently 4) and reviewed by the author herself, J.K. Rowling. Before creating it, the author herself was asked how she would describe the taste of butterbeer, to which she responded that it would be sweet.

Thus, they created the famous Butterbeer that can be consumed in all their parks and whose recipe is secret. It is only known that it does not contain alcohol or dairy ingredients. It can be found in two formats; frozen and normal. People define it as a mixture between cream soda (a soda drink with a vanilla flavor) and butterscotch (a sugar candy with butter), although there are also opinions that define it as a mixture of shortbread and butterscotch.

Maybe we should go one day to try it to find out for sure…

Ok, we will need sound music for this post…

All opinions agree that it is a very sweet drink, with a toasted color and a thick layer of foam on top.

For those who want to make the recipe without alcohol, they can use cream soda. I thought of making a variant with ice cream or vanilla and soda shake, to give it a gaseous feeling. And, in this case, we’ll omit the egg.

To create the “foam” in the non-alcoholic butterbeer, we can crown it with whipped cream or even an Italian meringue.

What is the real origin of butterbeer?

Surely many of us link its origin to the Harry Potter film. And one thing we all agree on is that if it weren’t for the movie, many of us (most likely, almost certainly) would never have met it. This is a reality.

But its origin dates back much further than J.K. Rowling’s films.

Butterbeer, or “Buttered beere” as it was described in 1594, has existed for many centuries. At the time of the Tudors, beer was already a typical and commonly consumed drink. In fact, there was a very mild ale known as “small beer” that was consumed by everyone, even children. The reason was that the water was not considered very safe for consumption, since the river waters were contaminated and made people sick.

This was done by mixing the beer with butter, sugar, spices and eggs. The recipe can be seen in the book “The Good Huswifes Handmaide for the Kitchin“.

The recipe was detailed as follows:

To make Buttered Beere: Take three pintes of Beere, put five yolkes of Egges to it, straine them together, and set it in a pewter pot to the fyre, and put to it halfe a pound of sugar, one penniworth of Nutmegs beaten, one penniworth of Cloves beaten, and a halfepenniworth of Ginger beaten, and when it is all in, take another pewter pot and brewe them together, and set it to the fire againe, and when it is readie to boyle, take it from the fire, and put a dish of sweet butter into it, and brewe them together out of one pot into an other.

There is another later recipe, published in 1664 by Robert May in his recipe book “The Accomplisht Cook“, in which liquorice root and aniseed are also added.

What does this drink consist of?

Butterbeer has a fairly simple composition and only one of its ingredients has an alcohol content.

Recipe Harry Potter's Butterbeer

Ingredients for 1 drink Recipe adapted from In Literature *Make a responsible drinking

Instructions

Make Butterbeer.
  1. Leave the glass prepared where we are going to serve the butterbeer.
  2. Pour the beer into a saucepan and place it on a medium heat.
  3. Add the spices along with sugar, stir and leave on a low heat for 3-4 minutes. The beer should never boil, it should always be kept at a medium, gentle and constant heat. Simmer.
  4. Whisk the yolks.
  5. Lower the heat to low and begin to integrate the yolks into a fine thread, whisking at the same time to prevent it from curdling and finding lumps.
  6. Once we have integrated all the yolks,stir for 1-2 minutes.
  7. Add the butter and mix to integrate it completely into the mixture.
  8. Remove from heat and pour the mixture into the KitchenAid bowl.
  9. Beat with the whisk attachment at medium-high speed for 1-2 minutes. Our aim is to create a foam that will simulate the foam of the beer.
Serve.
  1. Pour the butterbeer in a glass or jug.
  2. While pouring the beer, we will help ourselves with a spoon to prevent the foam from falling. We must leave this one for the end.
  3. Once we have all the butterbeer in the glass, pour the foam on it.
  4. Serve immediately.

Notes

I am clear that this Halloween I plan to make this Harry Potter's ButterBeer at home. My son, my husband and I will celebrate it because of the circumstances we are currently living through. But I'm sure we'll have a good time, I already have a lot of things planned, hahaha I really encourage you to try it, the taste, even the texture, is very surprising. I wasn't sure if I would like it at home, and I can tell you that everyone told me it was incredibly good. Yes, they love me, but when they don't like something, they tell me straight out. Something I like very much because I can trust their judgment. By the way, I'm moving the weekly publication from Friday to Saturday because the theme is related to Halloween. Big hugs and happy Thursday! Eva Sources: In Literature, Quora, Scholars Commons, Santa Cecilia Make a responsible drinking
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