Join BYO for a New England Beer & Baseball Adventure, Aug. 2-7, 2026 Click here for details.

recipe

Easy Tesgüino

This recipe is easy to reproduce in a modern homebrewery. In the recipe for easy tesgüino, the fermentable sugars are derived from sugar rather than corn.

Easy Tesgüino

(5 gallons/19 L)
OG = up to 1.046 FG = ~1.006
ABV = ~3.3%

Ingredients

4.4 lbs. (2 kg) dry, large-kernel corn
11 cones piloncillo sugar (or ~44 oz./1.3 kg cane sugar)
Ale yeast (your choice)

Step by Step

Grind the corn and boil with 2–3 gallons (7.6–11 L) of water and 11 cones of piloncillo cane sugar, stirring so that the sugar dissolves. As an option, you can add a few pieces of whole cinnamon. Cook the ingredients over low heat for one hour; remove from heat, add 2–4 more sticks of cinnamon (optional), and let sit in pot for 20 minutes. Cool and transfer to fermenter, leaving behind as much of the corn solids as feasible. Top up to 5 gallons (19 L) and ferment with ale yeast for about 4 days. Throw a party and drink the entire batch immediately.

More traditional option: Some Latino specialty markets sell jora (malted corn) and you can substitute about 7 lbs. (3.2 kg) of this for the (unmalted) corn and sugar above. Heat mixture of 5 gallons (19 L) water and jora slowly to a boil. (Traditional tesgüino pots are heated over open flames.) Spend at least 1 hour ramping through the 140–162 °F/60–72 °C range. Simmer for 3 hours. Cool with immersion chiller and ferment in brewpot. (Traditional tesgüino pots cool in the cold mountain air.) Ferment with the yeast of your choice. (Traditional tesgüino is inoculated by stirring the mixture with grass leaves laden with suitable wild yeasts.) Serve lightly chilled (think cool mountain temperatures), unfiltered and uncarbonated with four friends. (Traditionally, most folks attending a tesgüinada consume around 4 quarts /~4 L of tesgüino.) In this version of tesgüino, your OG will be lower (around 1.034), but the “beer” will be stronger because it will contain less starch than the easy version above. The alcoholic strength will depend on how much extract you get from the jora and your yeast’s attenuation, but roughly 4% ABV is a fair estimate.

You might also like…

recipe

Comrade John & Tim’s American Light

This American-style Light Lager won Best of Show at the 21st Annual Dixie Cup
   Comrades John Donaldson and Tim White

recipe

Autumn Apple Spiced Ale

recipe

Schloss Eggenberg: Samichlaus clone

For a long time, Samiclaus held the title as strongest beer in the world. Samichlaus is a doppelbock that continues to develop the longer it

recipe

P. Ballantine & Sons Brewing Company: Ballantine XXX clone

Ballantine was founded in New Jersey in 1840, making it one of the oldest brands of beer in the United States, and was at one time the third