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Re: apple cider vs KT OT

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Hi ,

I make all my own vinegar, but the mother that I tried so hard to get

in the beginning is totally unnecessary for making vinegar, in fact

it will at best inhibit the growth of the acetobacters and at worst

become a falling mother, rot and cause off flavours in your vinegar.

Throw the mother in the bin. To make good vinegar is very easy but

you need a good stock with the right amount of alcohol, a live

vinegar starter which you obviously have and enough oxygen for

fermentation. It's important to monitor the progress of your vinegar

and stop the fermentation at the right time by bottling it or it will

ferment to water and go bad.

Write off list if you would like to know more.

Jim

On 15 Sep 2007, at 10:16, Washabaugh wrote:

> I had a bottle of raw BRAGGS APPLE cider that started growing

> something

> very simular looking to a scoby. I have moveed it to a larger

> container

> a stone crock and trated it as if it was KT it seems very similuar

> does

> any one have any thoughts what this is the top is very white and shiny

> no mold I have kept it giong about 2 months now

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Hi ,

I make all my own vinegar, but the mother that I tried so hard to get

in the beginning is totally unnecessary for making vinegar, in fact

it will at best inhibit the growth of the acetobacters and at worst

become a falling mother, rot and cause off flavours in your vinegar.

Throw the mother in the bin. To make good vinegar is very easy but

you need a good stock with the right amount of alcohol, a live

vinegar starter which you obviously have and enough oxygen for

fermentation. It's important to monitor the progress of your vinegar

and stop the fermentation at the right time by bottling it or it will

ferment to water and go bad.

Write off list if you would like to know more.

Jim

On 15 Sep 2007, at 10:16, Washabaugh wrote:

> I had a bottle of raw BRAGGS APPLE cider that started growing

> something

> very simular looking to a scoby. I have moveed it to a larger

> container

> a stone crock and trated it as if it was KT it seems very similuar

> does

> any one have any thoughts what this is the top is very white and shiny

> no mold I have kept it giong about 2 months now

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Jim, from what I understand the major difference between Vinegar and

Kombucha is that kombucha has gluconic acid and vinegar does not. This is

due to the different strain of Acetobacteraceae used. The Acetobacteraceae

bacteria first produce acetic acid and then gluconic acid which initially

lags behind. IMO, gluconic acid has something to do with the formation of

the cellulose mushroom (SCOBY). Since vinegar producers are primary

interested in the acetic acid and not the gluconic acid (which reduces the

sharpness of the vinegar, making it appear weaker) the SCOBY formation is

discouraged.

In either vinegar or kombucha the yeasts are relatively unimportant. Their

role is to produce alcohol. (they contribute to taste even the dead yeasts

cells have a flavoring role but not a major role here) The Acetobacteraceae

can utilize either sugar or alcohol, but production (time) is compromised if

alcohol is not present. When alcohol is not present Acetobacteraceae may

cannibalize acetic acid (turns to carbon dioxide and water).

Acetobacteraceae is present in the air. But the specific species of

Acetobacteraceae, as in vinegar or kombucha which strain is most important.

reference: http://tinyurl.com/2nn87n

Peace

Ed Kasper LAc. & family

www.HappyHerbalist.com

................................................

Re: apple cider vs KT OT

Posted by: " jim " jim@... jm_chng

Sun Sep 16, 2007 9:48 am (PST)

Hi ,

I make all my own vinegar, but the mother that I tried so hard to get

in the beginning is totally unnecessary for making vinegar, in fact

it will at best inhibit the growth of the acetobacters and at worst

become a falling mother, rot and cause off flavours in your vinegar.

Throw the mother in the bin. To make good vinegar is very easy but

you need a good stock with the right amount of alcohol, a live

vinegar starter which you obviously have and enough oxygen for

fermentation. It's important to monitor the progress of your vinegar

and stop the fermentation at the right time by bottling it or it will

ferment to water and go bad.

Write off list if you would like to know more.

Jim

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Share on other sites

Jim, from what I understand the major difference between Vinegar and

Kombucha is that kombucha has gluconic acid and vinegar does not. This is

due to the different strain of Acetobacteraceae used. The Acetobacteraceae

bacteria first produce acetic acid and then gluconic acid which initially

lags behind. IMO, gluconic acid has something to do with the formation of

the cellulose mushroom (SCOBY). Since vinegar producers are primary

interested in the acetic acid and not the gluconic acid (which reduces the

sharpness of the vinegar, making it appear weaker) the SCOBY formation is

discouraged.

In either vinegar or kombucha the yeasts are relatively unimportant. Their

role is to produce alcohol. (they contribute to taste even the dead yeasts

cells have a flavoring role but not a major role here) The Acetobacteraceae

can utilize either sugar or alcohol, but production (time) is compromised if

alcohol is not present. When alcohol is not present Acetobacteraceae may

cannibalize acetic acid (turns to carbon dioxide and water).

Acetobacteraceae is present in the air. But the specific species of

Acetobacteraceae, as in vinegar or kombucha which strain is most important.

reference: http://tinyurl.com/2nn87n

Peace

Ed Kasper LAc. & family

www.HappyHerbalist.com

................................................

Re: apple cider vs KT OT

Posted by: " jim " jim@... jm_chng

Sun Sep 16, 2007 9:48 am (PST)

Hi ,

I make all my own vinegar, but the mother that I tried so hard to get

in the beginning is totally unnecessary for making vinegar, in fact

it will at best inhibit the growth of the acetobacters and at worst

become a falling mother, rot and cause off flavours in your vinegar.

Throw the mother in the bin. To make good vinegar is very easy but

you need a good stock with the right amount of alcohol, a live

vinegar starter which you obviously have and enough oxygen for

fermentation. It's important to monitor the progress of your vinegar

and stop the fermentation at the right time by bottling it or it will

ferment to water and go bad.

Write off list if you would like to know more.

Jim

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Share on other sites

Ed I don't think you understood what was being asked or what I replied to. I

wasn't making any comments about kombucha. Acetobacteraceae is a family of

bacteria to lump all species in one family together like that is like saying

that strawberries, apples and plums are all the same. I was answering a question

about cider vinegar and the 'mother' that had formed on the top of it. The

acetobacter responsible for vinegar production is Acetobacter aceti it needs

alcohol to make good vinegar you don't want yeast in there fermenting sugar

while you're trying to ferment the alcohol. Even if you wanted to eventually

make vinegar from grape juice you would avoid contamination with A. aceti at all

costs. It is not the same as kombucha there is no SCOBY in vinegar production,

there's no yeast involved in vinegar production after the alcohol is fermented

from sugars. A pure culture of A. aceti will make a cellulose mass if fed pure

-OH diluted enough in H20 with enough nutrients added to feed their metabolism.

I have no opinion on this I'm just quoting facts. Again I'm not comparing or

commenting on kombuch just answering an OT question about cider vinegar making.

Jim

========================================

Message Received: Sep 17 2007, 07:41 PM

From: " Happy Herbalist "

kombucha tea

Cc:

Subject: Re: apple cider vs KT OT

Jim, from what I understand the major difference between Vinegar and

Kombucha is that kombucha has gluconic acid and vinegar does not. This is

due to the different strain of Acetobacteraceae used. The Acetobacteraceae

bacteria first produce acetic acid and then gluconic acid which initially

lags behind. IMO, gluconic acid has something to do with the formation of

the cellulose mushroom (SCOBY). Since vinegar producers are primary

interested in the acetic acid and not the gluconic acid (which reduces the

sharpness of the vinegar, making it appear weaker) the SCOBY formation is

discouraged.

In either vinegar or kombucha the yeasts are relatively unimportant. Their

role is to produce alcohol. (they contribute to taste even the dead yeasts

cells have a flavoring role but not a major role here) The Acetobacteraceae

can utilize either sugar or alcohol, but production (time) is compromised if

alcohol is not present. When alcohol is not present Acetobacteraceae may

cannibalize acetic acid (turns to carbon dioxide and water).

Acetobacteraceae is present in the air. But the specific species of

Acetobacteraceae, as in vinegar or kombucha which strain is most important.

reference: http://tinyurl.com/2nn87n

Peace

Ed Kasper LAc. & family

www.HappyHerbalist.com

................................................

Re: apple cider vs KT OT

Posted by: " jim " jim@... jm_chng

Sun Sep 16, 2007 9:48 am (PST)

Hi ,

I make all my own vinegar, but the mother that I tried so hard to get

in the beginning is totally unnecessary for making vinegar, in fact

it will at best inhibit the growth of the acetobacters and at worst

become a falling mother, rot and cause off flavours in your vinegar.

Throw the mother in the bin. To make good vinegar is very easy but

you need a good stock with the right amount of alcohol, a live

vinegar starter which you obviously have and enough oxygen for

fermentation. It's important to monitor the progress of your vinegar

and stop the fermentation at the right time by bottling it or it will

ferment to water and go bad.

Write off list if you would like to know more.

Jim

Take care,

Jim

Ignorance is the root of all suffering.

P SAVE A TREE... PLEASE DON'T PRINT THIS E-MAIL UNLESS YOU REALLY NEED TO…

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Share on other sites

Ed I don't think you understood what was being asked or what I replied to. I

wasn't making any comments about kombucha. Acetobacteraceae is a family of

bacteria to lump all species in one family together like that is like saying

that strawberries, apples and plums are all the same. I was answering a question

about cider vinegar and the 'mother' that had formed on the top of it. The

acetobacter responsible for vinegar production is Acetobacter aceti it needs

alcohol to make good vinegar you don't want yeast in there fermenting sugar

while you're trying to ferment the alcohol. Even if you wanted to eventually

make vinegar from grape juice you would avoid contamination with A. aceti at all

costs. It is not the same as kombucha there is no SCOBY in vinegar production,

there's no yeast involved in vinegar production after the alcohol is fermented

from sugars. A pure culture of A. aceti will make a cellulose mass if fed pure

-OH diluted enough in H20 with enough nutrients added to feed their metabolism.

I have no opinion on this I'm just quoting facts. Again I'm not comparing or

commenting on kombuch just answering an OT question about cider vinegar making.

Jim

========================================

Message Received: Sep 17 2007, 07:41 PM

From: " Happy Herbalist "

kombucha tea

Cc:

Subject: Re: apple cider vs KT OT

Jim, from what I understand the major difference between Vinegar and

Kombucha is that kombucha has gluconic acid and vinegar does not. This is

due to the different strain of Acetobacteraceae used. The Acetobacteraceae

bacteria first produce acetic acid and then gluconic acid which initially

lags behind. IMO, gluconic acid has something to do with the formation of

the cellulose mushroom (SCOBY). Since vinegar producers are primary

interested in the acetic acid and not the gluconic acid (which reduces the

sharpness of the vinegar, making it appear weaker) the SCOBY formation is

discouraged.

In either vinegar or kombucha the yeasts are relatively unimportant. Their

role is to produce alcohol. (they contribute to taste even the dead yeasts

cells have a flavoring role but not a major role here) The Acetobacteraceae

can utilize either sugar or alcohol, but production (time) is compromised if

alcohol is not present. When alcohol is not present Acetobacteraceae may

cannibalize acetic acid (turns to carbon dioxide and water).

Acetobacteraceae is present in the air. But the specific species of

Acetobacteraceae, as in vinegar or kombucha which strain is most important.

reference: http://tinyurl.com/2nn87n

Peace

Ed Kasper LAc. & family

www.HappyHerbalist.com

................................................

Re: apple cider vs KT OT

Posted by: " jim " jim@... jm_chng

Sun Sep 16, 2007 9:48 am (PST)

Hi ,

I make all my own vinegar, but the mother that I tried so hard to get

in the beginning is totally unnecessary for making vinegar, in fact

it will at best inhibit the growth of the acetobacters and at worst

become a falling mother, rot and cause off flavours in your vinegar.

Throw the mother in the bin. To make good vinegar is very easy but

you need a good stock with the right amount of alcohol, a live

vinegar starter which you obviously have and enough oxygen for

fermentation. It's important to monitor the progress of your vinegar

and stop the fermentation at the right time by bottling it or it will

ferment to water and go bad.

Write off list if you would like to know more.

Jim

Take care,

Jim

Ignorance is the root of all suffering.

P SAVE A TREE... PLEASE DON'T PRINT THIS E-MAIL UNLESS YOU REALLY NEED TO…

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Jim, I am referring to the formation of the mushroom. In modern vinegar

making it is discouraged because it gums up the mechanical components of a

vinegar generator or of a vinegar captivator, used in commercial production.

In the older methods: As in the Orleans method (French) vinegar is made the

same as one would make Continuous Brewing method for Kombucha, albeit more

elaborate with wood and a in place funnel to enable adding fresh diluted

alcohol without disturbing the forming mushroom. The belief there is that

the acetic acid (vinegar) was being processed within the mushroom. The

Italians Method uses similar casks without the funnel but go through a

series of different wood casks (for tannins and flavors) that decrease in

size to accommodate the loss of volume.

Vinegar, as you say, is a separate distinct stage. First alcohol (yeasts)

then bacteria.

Kombucha is a simultaneous process.

Peace

Ed Kasper LAc. & family

www.HappyHerbalist.com

..............................................................

Re: apple cider vs KT OT

Posted by: " Jim " jim@... jm_chng

Tue Sep 18, 2007 3:22 am (PST)

Ed I don't think you understood what was being asked or what I replied to. I

wasn't making any comments about kombucha. Acetobacteraceae is a family of

bacteria to lump all species in one family together like that is like saying

that strawberries, apples and plums are all the same. I was answering a

question about cider vinegar and the 'mother' that had formed on the top of

it. The acetobacter responsible for vinegar production is Acetobacter aceti

it needs alcohol to make good vinegar you don't want yeast in there

fermenting sugar while you're trying to ferment the alcohol. Even if you

wanted to eventually make vinegar from grape juice you would avoid

contamination with A. aceti at all costs. It is not the same as kombucha

there is no SCOBY in vinegar production, there's no yeast involved in

vinegar production after the alcohol is fermented from sugars. A pure

culture of A. aceti will make a cellulose mass if fed pure -OH diluted

enough in H20 with enough nutrients added to feed their metabolism. I have

no opinion on this I'm just quoting facts. Again I'm not comparing or

commenting on kombuch just answering an OT question about cider vinegar

making.

Jim

========================================

Message Received: Sep 17 2007, 07:41 PM

From: " Happy Herbalist "

kombucha tea

Cc:

Subject: Re: apple cider vs KT OT

Jim, from what I understand the major difference between Vinegar and

Kombucha is that kombucha has gluconic acid and vinegar does not. This is

due to the different strain of Acetobacteraceae used. The Acetobacteraceae

bacteria first produce acetic acid and then gluconic acid which initially

lags behind. IMO, gluconic acid has something to do with the formation of

the cellulose mushroom (SCOBY). Since vinegar producers are primary

interested in the acetic acid and not the gluconic acid (which reduces the

sharpness of the vinegar, making it appear weaker) the SCOBY formation is

discouraged.

In either vinegar or kombucha the yeasts are relatively unimportant. Their

role is to produce alcohol. (they contribute to taste even the dead yeasts

cells have a flavoring role but not a major role here) The Acetobacteraceae

can utilize either sugar or alcohol, but production (time) is compromised if

alcohol is not present. When alcohol is not present Acetobacteraceae may

cannibalize acetic acid (turns to carbon dioxide and water).

Acetobacteraceae is present in the air. But the specific species of

Acetobacteraceae, as in vinegar or kombucha which strain is most important.

reference: http://tinyurl.com/2nn87n

Peace

Ed Kasper LAc. & family

www.HappyHerbalist.com

................................................

Re: apple cider vs KT OT

Posted by: " jim " jim@... jm_chng

Sun Sep 16, 2007 9:48 am (PST)

Hi ,

I make all my own vinegar, but the mother that I tried so hard to get

in the beginning is totally unnecessary for making vinegar, in fact

it will at best inhibit the growth of the acetobacters and at worst

become a falling mother, rot and cause off flavours in your vinegar.

Throw the mother in the bin. To make good vinegar is very easy but

you need a good stock with the right amount of alcohol, a live

vinegar starter which you obviously have and enough oxygen for

fermentation. It's important to monitor the progress of your vinegar

and stop the fermentation at the right time by bottling it or it will

ferment to water and go bad.

Write off list if you would like to know more.

Jim

Take care,

Jim

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Jim, I am referring to the formation of the mushroom. In modern vinegar

making it is discouraged because it gums up the mechanical components of a

vinegar generator or of a vinegar captivator, used in commercial production.

In the older methods: As in the Orleans method (French) vinegar is made the

same as one would make Continuous Brewing method for Kombucha, albeit more

elaborate with wood and a in place funnel to enable adding fresh diluted

alcohol without disturbing the forming mushroom. The belief there is that

the acetic acid (vinegar) was being processed within the mushroom. The

Italians Method uses similar casks without the funnel but go through a

series of different wood casks (for tannins and flavors) that decrease in

size to accommodate the loss of volume.

Vinegar, as you say, is a separate distinct stage. First alcohol (yeasts)

then bacteria.

Kombucha is a simultaneous process.

Peace

Ed Kasper LAc. & family

www.HappyHerbalist.com

..............................................................

Re: apple cider vs KT OT

Posted by: " Jim " jim@... jm_chng

Tue Sep 18, 2007 3:22 am (PST)

Ed I don't think you understood what was being asked or what I replied to. I

wasn't making any comments about kombucha. Acetobacteraceae is a family of

bacteria to lump all species in one family together like that is like saying

that strawberries, apples and plums are all the same. I was answering a

question about cider vinegar and the 'mother' that had formed on the top of

it. The acetobacter responsible for vinegar production is Acetobacter aceti

it needs alcohol to make good vinegar you don't want yeast in there

fermenting sugar while you're trying to ferment the alcohol. Even if you

wanted to eventually make vinegar from grape juice you would avoid

contamination with A. aceti at all costs. It is not the same as kombucha

there is no SCOBY in vinegar production, there's no yeast involved in

vinegar production after the alcohol is fermented from sugars. A pure

culture of A. aceti will make a cellulose mass if fed pure -OH diluted

enough in H20 with enough nutrients added to feed their metabolism. I have

no opinion on this I'm just quoting facts. Again I'm not comparing or

commenting on kombuch just answering an OT question about cider vinegar

making.

Jim

========================================

Message Received: Sep 17 2007, 07:41 PM

From: " Happy Herbalist "

kombucha tea

Cc:

Subject: Re: apple cider vs KT OT

Jim, from what I understand the major difference between Vinegar and

Kombucha is that kombucha has gluconic acid and vinegar does not. This is

due to the different strain of Acetobacteraceae used. The Acetobacteraceae

bacteria first produce acetic acid and then gluconic acid which initially

lags behind. IMO, gluconic acid has something to do with the formation of

the cellulose mushroom (SCOBY). Since vinegar producers are primary

interested in the acetic acid and not the gluconic acid (which reduces the

sharpness of the vinegar, making it appear weaker) the SCOBY formation is

discouraged.

In either vinegar or kombucha the yeasts are relatively unimportant. Their

role is to produce alcohol. (they contribute to taste even the dead yeasts

cells have a flavoring role but not a major role here) The Acetobacteraceae

can utilize either sugar or alcohol, but production (time) is compromised if

alcohol is not present. When alcohol is not present Acetobacteraceae may

cannibalize acetic acid (turns to carbon dioxide and water).

Acetobacteraceae is present in the air. But the specific species of

Acetobacteraceae, as in vinegar or kombucha which strain is most important.

reference: http://tinyurl.com/2nn87n

Peace

Ed Kasper LAc. & family

www.HappyHerbalist.com

................................................

Re: apple cider vs KT OT

Posted by: " jim " jim@... jm_chng

Sun Sep 16, 2007 9:48 am (PST)

Hi ,

I make all my own vinegar, but the mother that I tried so hard to get

in the beginning is totally unnecessary for making vinegar, in fact

it will at best inhibit the growth of the acetobacters and at worst

become a falling mother, rot and cause off flavours in your vinegar.

Throw the mother in the bin. To make good vinegar is very easy but

you need a good stock with the right amount of alcohol, a live

vinegar starter which you obviously have and enough oxygen for

fermentation. It's important to monitor the progress of your vinegar

and stop the fermentation at the right time by bottling it or it will

ferment to water and go bad.

Write off list if you would like to know more.

Jim

Take care,

Jim

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