Cerveza preparada

Cerveza Preparada
Primary alcohol by volume
Served
  • No ice
Standard drinkware
Commonly used ingredients

Cerveza preparada (Spanish pronunciation: [serˈβesa pɾepaˈɾaða], prepared beer) is a Mexican term for beer mixed with tomato juice, hot sauce, or salsa. In English-speaking countries, it would be considered a variety of shandy.

The drink dates back to the 1940s, when it became popular in Mexico.

The basic recipe is tomato juice (sometimes Clamato or V8 Vegetable Juice) mixed with beer and the juice of half a lime in an ice-cold, salt-rimmed pint glass. The beer is added by pouring it from high above the glass so that the contents will mix properly.

Variations

Chavela
Primary alcohol by volume
Served
Standard garnish

Optionally one or both of

Standard drinkware
Commonly used ingredients

Chamochela

A chamochela is a beer-based drink prepared with lemon, salt, chili powder and chamoy. It is served with ice and garnished with tamarind candy. It was popularized in the 2000s in Mexico.

Chavela

A chavela is a cerveza preparada that is popular in Mexican restaurants both as a drink and as an appetizer if it is served with a garnish. It is made with tomato juice, Clamato, or V8 Vegetable Juice mixed with beer and seasoned with hot sauce (e.g., Tabasco, Tapatio, or Búfalo). It is served on the rocks in an ice-cold, salt-rimmed mug and garnished with crudités (carrot and celery sticks) or shrimp.

Clamato Beer

Fill a beer mug with ice. Coat the rim with a mixture of salt and chili powder. Pour in one part Clamato and the juice of half a lime or lemon. Add three parts Mexican beer and hot sauce to taste.

Michelada

Main article: Michelada

A michelada is a Mexican drink made from beer mixed with spice, sauce and lime.

Negro y Marron

Fill a beer mug with ice. Coat the rim with salt. Mix one or one-and-a-half parts of Clamato and the juice of half a lemon or lime. Add four parts of beer and ⅓ part of tequila. Season with hot sauce to taste.

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/12/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.