Guest guest Posted December 30, 2006 Report Share Posted December 30, 2006 When home-made (i.e., from a culture), kombucha " goes bad " in two cases: 1) when the culture itself develops mold, in which case the entire batch must be discarded; or 2), when the finished brew becomes so vinegary and acidic that nothing could induce you to drink it. oftentimes, when left to sit, the finished brew develops a few " ooglies " or strands/blobs of culture. I have many such bottles and simply pour out the baby cultures into a holding jar full of other babies swimming in liquid. I do not know the answer about when your kombucha comes from a commercially produced version like GT Dave's, because they flavor their kombucha after it's brewed. I notice the GT kombucha needs to be kept refrigerated whereas a homemade culture generally keeps well inside a grolsch bottle. I have never refrigerated my cultures because they go dormant if refrigerated. Hope this clears it up. ~Joe Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 30, 2006 Report Share Posted December 30, 2006 I have to chime in on this conversation as I'm having a KT right now. MOLD- When you start a brand new batch you need to add about 2 cup of previously- made tea/gallon of tea brew, OR add about 1 cup distilled vinegar/gallon of tea. This will protect the batch until it starts making it's own lactic acid and other mold inhibitors. If you forget to do this, and the mother gets moldy, throw everything away and start over. 2ND FERMENTATION- This is done after the iinitial brewing. To determine when the 1st brew is " done " I go by both taste and pH, I wait until it drops from the original 6.5 or so down to below 3 (use pH paper test strips). I then decant and strain it, bottle it and let it sit on the counter for another 5 days. I also add the GINGER slices when bottling. If I use fresh fruit juices for flavoring I don't do the 2nd fermentation because the fruit wouldn't be stable. It goes right into the refrigerator. GOING " BAD " Since this is a lacto-fermented product this would take a long, long time, especially if refrigerated or stored properly. Go by taste. G.T. Dave's is aged 30 days before it's sold. KT is CHEAP so you can afford to toss it if it's 10 years old and you are in doubt. BABIES/CHILDREN This is an excellent subsitute for soda pop and other sugary fruit juices. I've never seen any information on the safety for infants. The pH is low but all the nutrients are very good for you. If it's for children use tea with low caffeine. Will Winter Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 30, 2006 Report Share Posted December 30, 2006 Pictures of Kombucha mushrooms that went bad. This web site has very good pictures of Kombucha mushrooms or SCOBYs that are still good, and those with mold. When I first started I really didn't know if that white stuff growing was the mold people were talking about or just the normal development. It was normal, but it was confusing at first. This site talks about continuous brewing (an interesting idea), but has pictures towards the bottom of the page that show normal white and dark SCOBYs and ones with mold. The mold looks more like cheese mold, blue, green or pink and very different from the normal development of the SCOBY. http://www.happyherbalist.com/continuous_brewing.htm <http://www.happyherbalist.com/continuous_brewing.htm> ~Jan > > I have to chime in on this conversation as I'm having a KT right now. > > MOLD- When you start a brand new batch you need to add about 2 cup of previously- > made tea/gallon of tea brew, OR add about 1 cup distilled vinegar/gallon of tea. This will > protect the batch until it starts making it's own lactic acid and other mold inhibitors. If > you forget to do this, and the mother gets moldy, throw everything away and start over. > > 2ND FERMENTATION- This is done after the iinitial brewing. To determine when the 1st > brew is " done " I go by both taste and pH, I wait until it drops from the original 6.5 or so > down to below 3 (use pH paper test strips). I then decant and strain it, bottle it and let it > sit on the counter for another 5 days. I also add the GINGER slices when bottling. If I use > fresh fruit juices for flavoring I don't do the 2nd fermentation because the fruit wouldn't > be stable. It goes right into the refrigerator. > > GOING " BAD " Since this is a lacto-fermented product this would take a long, long time, > especially if refrigerated or stored properly. Go by taste. G.T. Dave's is aged 30 days > before it's sold. KT is CHEAP so you can afford to toss it if it's 10 years old and you are in > doubt. > > BABIES/CHILDREN This is an excellent subsitute for soda pop and other sugary fruit > juices. I've never seen any information on the safety for infants. The pH is low but all the > nutrients are very good for you. If it's for children use tea with low caffeine. > > Will Winter > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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