GINGER SHOT CLASSIC
A CLASSIC FOR A GOOD REASON
why it tastes good
WHAT'S IN IT?
Our Ginger Shot Classic is not just any juice! Only the best of the best is allowed in the old monastery recipe. The spiciness of the ginger and the natural sweetness of the agave form a harmonious team. For a perfect taste journey, the two bring sour-sweet lemon on board and create the ideally balanced ginger shot - organic, vegan and without artificial additives!
Fancy something spicy?
THE STAR OF THE SHOW
We admit it: we are picky. With our ingredients and especially with the star of the show: ginger!
Not all ginger makes it into ginger shots from Kloster Kitchen. Hand-picked ginger tubers are selected, freshly harvested, peeled and shaped into our unique pieces. Then everything goes into bottling - especially developed for our shots!
Sour? Super!
LEMON STRONG
What else needs to be in the shot? Of course, lemon! Why? Not only because it provides a very special natural freshness. The ginger variety that ends up in the Kloster Kitchen shots is slightly sweet and its taste is reminiscent of the bright yellow citrus fruit. Works together perfectly! So we put this freshness kick in the bottle and on we go!
Sweet as sugar? Not us!
AGAVE MAKES THE SHOT ROUND
A little sweetness is still needed. But who wants industrial sugar? You don't - we don't! That's why we take the natural route here too and use the sweetness of agave. An added bonus: the consistency of our shots is uniquely good because of that!
Agave rounds off our Ginger Shot Classic perfectly.
FENNEL RISOTTO WITH GINGER SHOT CLASSIC
This is where food & shot meet! The latest result you can find here - a fennel risotto creation with ginger shot ↓
THE ORIGINAL WITH GINGER PIECES.
Healthy is relative
FIND THE DIFFERENCE
Sugar has a bad reputation. Of course, too much of it is bad for you. But humans need the carbohydrates that are in it. Sugar, the energy supplier, is also found in healthy fruit, for example!
Don't forget: Our consumption recommendation is one shot a day.
That's 3.6 g of sugar - only about 7% of the daily sugar requirement of an average adult according to the World Health Organization.