We started our kombucha brewing a couple of weeks ago and put the jars of kombucha in the closet under the stairs to ferment. Then we decanted it into quart bottles after ten days to develop the effervescence.
We checked it after a couple of days and everything seemed all right. The kombucha I made with the white coconut tea and added lime and coconut juice had some lime pulp visible around the top, but everything seem fine, so we left it there to continue the fermentation process for a couple more days.
After a few more days we went back to check it and discovered that one of the bottles had exploded. Fortunately, we had had the foresight to put a tray under the bottles, but even so much of the kombucha had dripped over the edge of the small tray and onto the bins of Christmas decorations, but it was easy enough to clean off the tray. And the bins. And the floor.
So I started a new batch on Sunday and checked it yesterday. Didn't look right. Cindy confirmed today that it probably shouldn't have green fuzzy stuff growing on top of it.
The joys of fermentation.
Sigh.
We live in San Diego, a Mediterranean type climate with the Pacific Ocean to the west, mountains and desert to the east and about 10 inches of rainfall per year. Water is a scarce resource in this environment and gardening here must always be conscious of that fact of life.
Wednesday, October 25, 2017
Wednesday, October 18, 2017
Booch Madness
Cindy's guild in the San Diego County Garden Guild this year is the Food Preservation Guild. She's always done some form or other of food preservation, but recently she's been interested in experimenting with fermentation.
During her chemo last Spring she couldn't drink wine, so we started drinking kombucha instead. Kombucha is a fermented tea drink made by combining tea, sugar, water and yeast with a SCOBY (Symbiotic Culture of Bacteria and Yeast) and allowing it to ferment.
I had never heard of it before, but once we had, we started seeing it in all the grocery stores and even on some restaurant menus. We tried a number of different flavors and liked most of them. We even found a place not far from where we live that brews the stuff.
It seemed like a natural step to try brewing our own, so Cindy took a short class a couple of weekends ago at the Living Tea Brewing Company, then we started our culture. It's been fermenting away in the closet under the stairs for about ten days, so this morning we took the jars out, removed the SCOBYs, added some flavoring to each one and decanted the liquid into bottles.
Cindy's Sour Cherry Kombucha |
Cindy used a green tea base to brew her version; she loves sour cherry juice, so that's what she added to flavor hers.
My Coconut Lime Kombucha |
My favorite flavor of the commercial varieties we've tried is a coconut lime version, so that's what I added to mine. I started with a coconut flavored white tea, and thought the stuff tasted pretty good without any additional flavoring, but I had already started juicing the limes, so I added about half a cup of lime juice and half a cup of coconut juice to it.
Then we bottled both versions and put them back under the stairs to continue fermenting.
Still Fermenting |
We'll let them develop some effervescence for a few days, and then see what we've got.
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