Guest guest Posted February 15, 2011 Report Share Posted February 15, 2011 What a brilliantly honest, lovely response, Pippa! I choose to throw my weight behind you, being a simple brewer who has to cut corners sometimes (I use WHITE lovely natural cane sugar!!!!) :-) The culture loves it and makes the most delicious KT. Neither has it ever stuck a fist out of the jar and threatened me because it sometimes gets tea bag nutrients - still viable tea nutrients. I advocate gratitude for the little things. As for bartering with other folks, this is completely unreasonable for folks with a busy work schedule. It would behove our Mr Yisrael to exercise a little wisdom and not to rub people up the wrong way with his omniscience. ;-) Shalom, Margret UK - of the inspirational creation brew - In message you wrote: > This thread is looking rather divisive. Here's my life - I work exclusively on call. And I don't get any guaranteed salary - if I don't get called in, I don't get any money. I work at a birth center - babies come when they want to, whether or not it's my day on call, whether or not I've made enough money that month. As such, there are months when I'm eating out of the food bank. So yes, I use plain white sugar (the stuff you get in the bulk bins at WinCo) and I use tea bags because THAT IS ALL THAT I I CAN AFFORD. I would love to use all the crazy fancy organic stuff you use, but it is NOT AN OPTION for me - I'm over 4 months behind on my student loans, I only pay my power every other month, things are bad. So it may be a " McBrew " , but you know what? A " McBrew " every day is STILL better than no kombucha at all. So making those of us who can't afford to do it " perfectly " feel horrible about our brewing ability is not going to be particularly useful. Those are my thoughts and opinions on this topic. > > > > > Subject: Better Brewing Skills? > To: original_kombucha > Date: Tuesday, February 15, 2011, 1:22 PM > > greetings to all again, > > if the foregoing recipe was " tried and true " , then people will never experience > a molded scoby, over-acidic brew, a scoby with a clear hole going right through > it or other peculiar anomalies. i have said so and will state without > hesitation in laying an affirmation to anyone | everyone within this forum to > demonstrate beyond debate any usage of isolated sugar(s) from any sourced > derived to be integral and indispensable for brewing now > > any person knowledgeable & genuine about tea leaves knows to always use loose > leaf tea | herbs | flowers, etc. rather than tea bags which are usually > bleached, flushed with hexane and other chemical diabolics unspoken of = > previously. are we here to brew quality or some McBrew (as in > Mc's) kind of KE | KT? i am asking the group about their uncensored > feelings and thoughts on this. the best ingredients & environment... > > evolutionary brew, > -Rezz -- +------------------ Minstrel@... --------------------+ http://www.therpc.f9.co.uk/family/scobygrow/home.html http://bavarianminstrel.wordpress.com http://www.hebrew4christians.com/index.html creation.com Rebellion against the Creator is the root of all suffering. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 15, 2011 Report Share Posted February 15, 2011 What a brilliantly honest, lovely response, Pippa! I choose to throw my weight behind you, being a simple brewer who has to cut corners sometimes (I use WHITE lovely natural cane sugar!!!!) :-) The culture loves it and makes the most delicious KT. Neither has it ever stuck a fist out of the jar and threatened me because it sometimes gets tea bag nutrients - still viable tea nutrients. I advocate gratitude for the little things. As for bartering with other folks, this is completely unreasonable for folks with a busy work schedule. It would behove our Mr Yisrael to exercise a little wisdom and not to rub people up the wrong way with his omniscience. ;-) Shalom, Margret UK - of the inspirational creation brew - In message you wrote: > This thread is looking rather divisive. Here's my life - I work exclusively on call. And I don't get any guaranteed salary - if I don't get called in, I don't get any money. I work at a birth center - babies come when they want to, whether or not it's my day on call, whether or not I've made enough money that month. As such, there are months when I'm eating out of the food bank. So yes, I use plain white sugar (the stuff you get in the bulk bins at WinCo) and I use tea bags because THAT IS ALL THAT I I CAN AFFORD. I would love to use all the crazy fancy organic stuff you use, but it is NOT AN OPTION for me - I'm over 4 months behind on my student loans, I only pay my power every other month, things are bad. So it may be a " McBrew " , but you know what? A " McBrew " every day is STILL better than no kombucha at all. So making those of us who can't afford to do it " perfectly " feel horrible about our brewing ability is not going to be particularly useful. Those are my thoughts and opinions on this topic. > > > > > Subject: Better Brewing Skills? > To: original_kombucha > Date: Tuesday, February 15, 2011, 1:22 PM > > greetings to all again, > > if the foregoing recipe was " tried and true " , then people will never experience > a molded scoby, over-acidic brew, a scoby with a clear hole going right through > it or other peculiar anomalies. i have said so and will state without > hesitation in laying an affirmation to anyone | everyone within this forum to > demonstrate beyond debate any usage of isolated sugar(s) from any sourced > derived to be integral and indispensable for brewing now > > any person knowledgeable & genuine about tea leaves knows to always use loose > leaf tea | herbs | flowers, etc. rather than tea bags which are usually > bleached, flushed with hexane and other chemical diabolics unspoken of = > previously. are we here to brew quality or some McBrew (as in > Mc's) kind of KE | KT? i am asking the group about their uncensored > feelings and thoughts on this. the best ingredients & environment... > > evolutionary brew, > -Rezz -- +------------------ Minstrel@... --------------------+ http://www.therpc.f9.co.uk/family/scobygrow/home.html http://bavarianminstrel.wordpress.com http://www.hebrew4christians.com/index.html creation.com Rebellion against the Creator is the root of all suffering. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 15, 2011 Report Share Posted February 15, 2011 In message you wrote: > does stevia work for brewing kombucha?? No, Patti, not for the brewing, only for sweetening the brew after. kombuchaly, Margret UK :-) -- +------------------ Minstrel@... --------------------+ http://www.therpc.f9.co.uk/family/scobygrow/home.html http://bavarianminstrel.wordpress.com http://www.hebrew4christians.com/index.html creation.com God is my strong fortress. He makes my way perfect. (2 Sam 22:33) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 15, 2011 Report Share Posted February 15, 2011 In message you wrote: > does stevia work for brewing kombucha?? No, Patti, not for the brewing, only for sweetening the brew after. kombuchaly, Margret UK :-) -- +------------------ Minstrel@... --------------------+ http://www.therpc.f9.co.uk/family/scobygrow/home.html http://bavarianminstrel.wordpress.com http://www.hebrew4christians.com/index.html creation.com God is my strong fortress. He makes my way perfect. (2 Sam 22:33) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 15, 2011 Report Share Posted February 15, 2011 This thread is looking rather divisive. Here's my life - I work exclusively on call. And I don't get any guaranteed salary - if I don't get called in, I don't get any money. I work at a birth center - babies come when they want to, whether or not it's my day on call, whether or not I've made enough money that month. As such, there are months when I'm eating out of the food bank. So yes, I use plain white sugar (the stuff you get in the bulk bins at WinCo) and I use tea bags because THAT IS ALL THAT I I CAN AFFORD. I would love to use all the crazy fancy organic stuff you use, but it is NOT AN OPTION for me - I'm over 4 months behind on my student loans, I only pay my power every other month, things are bad. So it may be a " McBrew " , but you know what? A " McBrew " every day is STILL better than no kombucha at all. So making those of us who can't afford to do it " perfectly " feel horrible about our brewing ability is not going to be particularly useful. Those are my thoughts and opinions on this topic. Subject: Better Brewing Skills? To: original_kombucha Date: Tuesday, February 15, 2011, 1:22 PM greetings to all again, if the foregoing recipe was " tried and true " , then people will never experience a molded scoby, over-acidic brew, a scoby with a clear hole going right through it or other peculiar anomalies. i have said so and will state without hesitation in laying an affirmation to anyone | everyone within this forum to demonstrate beyond debate any usage of isolated sugar(s) from any sourced derived to be integral and indispensable for brewing now any person knowledgeable & genuine about tea leaves knows to always use loose leaf tea | herbs | flowers, etc. rather than tea bags which are usually bleached, flushed with hexane and other chemical diabolics unspoken of previously. are we here to brew quality or some McBrew (as in Mc's) kind of KE | KT? i am asking the group about their uncensored feelings and thoughts on this. the best ingredients & environment... evolutionary brew, -Rezz ________________________________ To: original_kombucha Sent: Tue, February 15, 2011 3:37:10 PM Subject: Re: Is it KT or has it become something else? To keep this from happening to you... Stick with the basic tried and true recipe. Per Gallon: 4 (max 6) bags of tea or equivilent of loose tea 1 to 1 1/2 cups sugars 13 oz very sour starter tea (10% of 128 oz/gal)oon top of scoby I got crazy and was adding more tea bags and way more starter and *boom* almost instant vinegar. Tea supplies nitrogen which is food for the beasties. I guess when they get too much food they go a bit crazy! As a side note, I was able to bottle and drink a lot of it. I watered it down and put it away for months in large gallon bottles with some ginger and *voila* drinkable KT. Cheers, > > > Hi all! > To all KT nerds! [:-B] !! I am having a new experience and am looking > for answers if they are to be had > All of my KT brewed a bit too long and got acidic to the point of a sip > giving me heartburn. > I went ahead and started new batches with 1/4 of the mix being the acid > stuff and scobys and 3/4 sweet tea. Even after mixing in the sweet tea > the mixture registered below 2 on the pH scale! I have read that KT is > to be around 2.5 pH. Now I know that starter KT should be sour. I am > only wondering if it ever gets to a point that it isn't KT anymore, > where it doesn't have the DNA (to quote Margaret!), that makes KT KT > and not vinegar. > (It is still forming the infamous scoby...) > Thanks to anyone that has maybe done this before or has knowledge of > this! > > Cheers! > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 15, 2011 Report Share Posted February 15, 2011 This thread is looking rather divisive. Here's my life - I work exclusively on call. And I don't get any guaranteed salary - if I don't get called in, I don't get any money. I work at a birth center - babies come when they want to, whether or not it's my day on call, whether or not I've made enough money that month. As such, there are months when I'm eating out of the food bank. So yes, I use plain white sugar (the stuff you get in the bulk bins at WinCo) and I use tea bags because THAT IS ALL THAT I I CAN AFFORD. I would love to use all the crazy fancy organic stuff you use, but it is NOT AN OPTION for me - I'm over 4 months behind on my student loans, I only pay my power every other month, things are bad. So it may be a " McBrew " , but you know what? A " McBrew " every day is STILL better than no kombucha at all. So making those of us who can't afford to do it " perfectly " feel horrible about our brewing ability is not going to be particularly useful. Those are my thoughts and opinions on this topic. Subject: Better Brewing Skills? To: original_kombucha Date: Tuesday, February 15, 2011, 1:22 PM greetings to all again, if the foregoing recipe was " tried and true " , then people will never experience a molded scoby, over-acidic brew, a scoby with a clear hole going right through it or other peculiar anomalies. i have said so and will state without hesitation in laying an affirmation to anyone | everyone within this forum to demonstrate beyond debate any usage of isolated sugar(s) from any sourced derived to be integral and indispensable for brewing now any person knowledgeable & genuine about tea leaves knows to always use loose leaf tea | herbs | flowers, etc. rather than tea bags which are usually bleached, flushed with hexane and other chemical diabolics unspoken of previously. are we here to brew quality or some McBrew (as in Mc's) kind of KE | KT? i am asking the group about their uncensored feelings and thoughts on this. the best ingredients & environment... evolutionary brew, -Rezz ________________________________ To: original_kombucha Sent: Tue, February 15, 2011 3:37:10 PM Subject: Re: Is it KT or has it become something else? To keep this from happening to you... Stick with the basic tried and true recipe. Per Gallon: 4 (max 6) bags of tea or equivilent of loose tea 1 to 1 1/2 cups sugars 13 oz very sour starter tea (10% of 128 oz/gal)oon top of scoby I got crazy and was adding more tea bags and way more starter and *boom* almost instant vinegar. Tea supplies nitrogen which is food for the beasties. I guess when they get too much food they go a bit crazy! As a side note, I was able to bottle and drink a lot of it. I watered it down and put it away for months in large gallon bottles with some ginger and *voila* drinkable KT. Cheers, > > > Hi all! > To all KT nerds! [:-B] !! I am having a new experience and am looking > for answers if they are to be had > All of my KT brewed a bit too long and got acidic to the point of a sip > giving me heartburn. > I went ahead and started new batches with 1/4 of the mix being the acid > stuff and scobys and 3/4 sweet tea. Even after mixing in the sweet tea > the mixture registered below 2 on the pH scale! I have read that KT is > to be around 2.5 pH. Now I know that starter KT should be sour. I am > only wondering if it ever gets to a point that it isn't KT anymore, > where it doesn't have the DNA (to quote Margaret!), that makes KT KT > and not vinegar. > (It is still forming the infamous scoby...) > Thanks to anyone that has maybe done this before or has knowledge of > this! > > Cheers! > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 15, 2011 Report Share Posted February 15, 2011 Hi Epiphany, Yes, I do not know what happened to this thread! Anyway, I am in total agreement with you! We do what we can with what we have! I know that the KT I drink is better by far for me than all the beer and 7up I used to consume, even made with table sugar and generic tea bags!! Sometimes I find good deals on things that are " higher end " and I use them. When I don't I use Safeway brand! I have heard that you can buy loose tea very cheaply at " International Markets " particularly Middle Eastern or Asian. Like most things that are healthy people will go to the outer extremes to make it " the healthiest " ...for me it is just alot better than what I used to do! Cheers, > > > > > > Hi all! > > To all KT nerds! [:-B] !! I am having a new experience and am looking > > for answers if they are to be had > > All of my KT brewed a bit too long and got acidic to the point of a sip > > giving me heartburn. > > I went ahead and started new batches with 1/4 of the mix being the acid > > stuff and scobys and 3/4 sweet tea. Even after mixing in the sweet tea > > the mixture registered below 2 on the pH scale! I have read that KT is > > to be around 2.5 pH. Now I know that starter KT should be sour. I am > > only wondering if it ever gets to a point that it isn't KT anymore, > > where it doesn't have the DNA (to quote Margaret!), that makes KT KT > > and not vinegar. > > (It is still forming the infamous scoby...) > > Thanks to anyone that has maybe done this before or has knowledge of > > this! > > > > Cheers! > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 15, 2011 Report Share Posted February 15, 2011 That involves having something to barter with, which is still out of my reach. It would be one thing to say " this is the ideal way to do it " - but saying that what we are doing is BAD is a whole other thing, and frankly this thread is making me very angry and I'm hoping that the list mod will bring an end to it. this message have been removed] ------------------------------------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 15, 2011 Report Share Posted February 15, 2011 That involves having something to barter with, which is still out of my reach. It would be one thing to say " this is the ideal way to do it " - but saying that what we are doing is BAD is a whole other thing, and frankly this thread is making me very angry and I'm hoping that the list mod will bring an end to it. this message have been removed] ------------------------------------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 15, 2011 Report Share Posted February 15, 2011 amen to that sista! Do what you gotta do! Patti ________________________________ To: original_kombucha Sent: Tue, February 15, 2011 3:41:20 PM Subject: Re: Better Brewing Skills? This thread is looking rather divisive. Here's my life - I work exclusively on call. And I don't get any guaranteed salary - if I don't get called in, I don't get any money. I work at a birth center - babies come when they want to, whether or not it's my day on call, whether or not I've made enough money that month. As such, there are months when I'm eating out of the food bank. So yes, I use plain white sugar (the stuff you get in the bulk bins at WinCo) and I use tea bags because THAT IS ALL THAT I I CAN AFFORD. I would love to use all the crazy fancy organic stuff you use, but it is NOT AN OPTION for me - I'm over 4 months behind on my student loans, I only pay my power every other month, things are bad. So it may be a " McBrew " , but you know what? A " McBrew " every day is STILL better than no kombucha at all. So making those of us who can't afford to do it " perfectly " feel horrible about our brewing ability is not going to be particularly useful. Those are my thoughts and opinions on this topic. Subject: Better Brewing Skills? To: original_kombucha Date: Tuesday, February 15, 2011, 1:22 PM greetings to all again, if the foregoing recipe was " tried and true " , then people will never experience a molded scoby, over-acidic brew, a scoby with a clear hole going right through it or other peculiar anomalies. i have said so and will state without hesitation in laying an affirmation to anyone | everyone within this forum to demonstrate beyond debate any usage of isolated sugar(s) from any sourced derived to be integral and indispensable for brewing now any person knowledgeable & genuine about tea leaves knows to always use loose leaf tea | herbs | flowers, etc. rather than tea bags which are usually bleached, flushed with hexane and other chemical diabolics unspoken of previously. are we here to brew quality or some McBrew (as in Mc's) kind of KE | KT? i am asking the group about their uncensored feelings and thoughts on this. the best ingredients & environment... evolutionary brew, -Rezz ________________________________ To: original_kombucha Sent: Tue, February 15, 2011 3:37:10 PM Subject: Re: Is it KT or has it become something else? To keep this from happening to you... Stick with the basic tried and true recipe. Per Gallon: 4 (max 6) bags of tea or equivilent of loose tea 1 to 1 1/2 cups sugars 13 oz very sour starter tea (10% of 128 oz/gal)oon top of scoby I got crazy and was adding more tea bags and way more starter and *boom* almost instant vinegar. Tea supplies nitrogen which is food for the beasties. I guess when they get too much food they go a bit crazy! As a side note, I was able to bottle and drink a lot of it. I watered it down and put it away for months in large gallon bottles with some ginger and *voila* drinkable KT. Cheers, > > > Hi all! > To all KT nerds! [:-B] !! I am having a new experience and am looking > for answers if they are to be had > All of my KT brewed a bit too long and got acidic to the point of a sip > giving me heartburn. > I went ahead and started new batches with 1/4 of the mix being the acid > stuff and scobys and 3/4 sweet tea. Even after mixing in the sweet tea > the mixture registered below 2 on the pH scale! I have read that KT is > to be around 2.5 pH. Now I know that starter KT should be sour. I am > only wondering if it ever gets to a point that it isn't KT anymore, > where it doesn't have the DNA (to quote Margaret!), that makes KT KT > and not vinegar. > (It is still forming the infamous scoby...) > Thanks to anyone that has maybe done this before or has knowledge of > this! > > Cheers! > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 15, 2011 Report Share Posted February 15, 2011 amen to that sista! Do what you gotta do! Patti ________________________________ To: original_kombucha Sent: Tue, February 15, 2011 3:41:20 PM Subject: Re: Better Brewing Skills? This thread is looking rather divisive. Here's my life - I work exclusively on call. And I don't get any guaranteed salary - if I don't get called in, I don't get any money. I work at a birth center - babies come when they want to, whether or not it's my day on call, whether or not I've made enough money that month. As such, there are months when I'm eating out of the food bank. So yes, I use plain white sugar (the stuff you get in the bulk bins at WinCo) and I use tea bags because THAT IS ALL THAT I I CAN AFFORD. I would love to use all the crazy fancy organic stuff you use, but it is NOT AN OPTION for me - I'm over 4 months behind on my student loans, I only pay my power every other month, things are bad. So it may be a " McBrew " , but you know what? A " McBrew " every day is STILL better than no kombucha at all. So making those of us who can't afford to do it " perfectly " feel horrible about our brewing ability is not going to be particularly useful. Those are my thoughts and opinions on this topic. Subject: Better Brewing Skills? To: original_kombucha Date: Tuesday, February 15, 2011, 1:22 PM greetings to all again, if the foregoing recipe was " tried and true " , then people will never experience a molded scoby, over-acidic brew, a scoby with a clear hole going right through it or other peculiar anomalies. i have said so and will state without hesitation in laying an affirmation to anyone | everyone within this forum to demonstrate beyond debate any usage of isolated sugar(s) from any sourced derived to be integral and indispensable for brewing now any person knowledgeable & genuine about tea leaves knows to always use loose leaf tea | herbs | flowers, etc. rather than tea bags which are usually bleached, flushed with hexane and other chemical diabolics unspoken of previously. are we here to brew quality or some McBrew (as in Mc's) kind of KE | KT? i am asking the group about their uncensored feelings and thoughts on this. the best ingredients & environment... evolutionary brew, -Rezz ________________________________ To: original_kombucha Sent: Tue, February 15, 2011 3:37:10 PM Subject: Re: Is it KT or has it become something else? To keep this from happening to you... Stick with the basic tried and true recipe. Per Gallon: 4 (max 6) bags of tea or equivilent of loose tea 1 to 1 1/2 cups sugars 13 oz very sour starter tea (10% of 128 oz/gal)oon top of scoby I got crazy and was adding more tea bags and way more starter and *boom* almost instant vinegar. Tea supplies nitrogen which is food for the beasties. I guess when they get too much food they go a bit crazy! As a side note, I was able to bottle and drink a lot of it. I watered it down and put it away for months in large gallon bottles with some ginger and *voila* drinkable KT. Cheers, > > > Hi all! > To all KT nerds! [:-B] !! I am having a new experience and am looking > for answers if they are to be had > All of my KT brewed a bit too long and got acidic to the point of a sip > giving me heartburn. > I went ahead and started new batches with 1/4 of the mix being the acid > stuff and scobys and 3/4 sweet tea. Even after mixing in the sweet tea > the mixture registered below 2 on the pH scale! I have read that KT is > to be around 2.5 pH. Now I know that starter KT should be sour. I am > only wondering if it ever gets to a point that it isn't KT anymore, > where it doesn't have the DNA (to quote Margaret!), that makes KT KT > and not vinegar. > (It is still forming the infamous scoby...) > Thanks to anyone that has maybe done this before or has knowledge of > this! > > Cheers! > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 15, 2011 Report Share Posted February 15, 2011 Wow, I don't know where u live that u can barter for these things? And to even know the kind of people that share your interests or the time to find these friends.... Some of us don't have the time,money,or friends to do the barter thing, so you come off more than a little arrogant. Sent from my BlackBerry® smartphone, powered by CREDO Mobile. Re: Better Brewing Skills? This thread is looking rather divisive. Here's my life - I work exclusively on call. And I don't get any guaranteed salary - if I don't get called in, I don't get any money. I work at a birth center - babies come when they want to, whether or not it's my day on call, whether or not I've made enough money that month. As such, there are months when I'm eating out of the food bank. So yes, I use plain white sugar (the stuff you get in the bulk bins at WinCo) and I use tea bags because THAT IS ALL THAT I I CAN AFFORD. I would love to use all the crazy fancy organic stuff you use, but it is NOT AN OPTION for me - I'm over 4 months behind on my student loans, I only pay my power every other month, things are bad. So it may be a " McBrew " , but you know what? A " McBrew " every day is STILL better than no kombucha at all. So making those of us who can't afford to do it " perfectly " feel horrible about our brewing ability is not going to be particularly useful. Those are my thoughts and opinions on this topic. this message have been removed] Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 15, 2011 Report Share Posted February 15, 2011 Wow, I don't know where u live that u can barter for these things? And to even know the kind of people that share your interests or the time to find these friends.... Some of us don't have the time,money,or friends to do the barter thing, so you come off more than a little arrogant. Sent from my BlackBerry® smartphone, powered by CREDO Mobile. Re: Better Brewing Skills? This thread is looking rather divisive. Here's my life - I work exclusively on call. And I don't get any guaranteed salary - if I don't get called in, I don't get any money. I work at a birth center - babies come when they want to, whether or not it's my day on call, whether or not I've made enough money that month. As such, there are months when I'm eating out of the food bank. So yes, I use plain white sugar (the stuff you get in the bulk bins at WinCo) and I use tea bags because THAT IS ALL THAT I I CAN AFFORD. I would love to use all the crazy fancy organic stuff you use, but it is NOT AN OPTION for me - I'm over 4 months behind on my student loans, I only pay my power every other month, things are bad. So it may be a " McBrew " , but you know what? A " McBrew " every day is STILL better than no kombucha at all. So making those of us who can't afford to do it " perfectly " feel horrible about our brewing ability is not going to be particularly useful. Those are my thoughts and opinions on this topic. this message have been removed] Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 15, 2011 Report Share Posted February 15, 2011 i dont have access to freebies or bartering where i live. I have to have actual $$... ________________________________ To: original_kombucha Sent: Tue, February 15, 2011 4:17:55 PM Subject: Re: Better Brewing Skills? Wow, I don't know where u live that u can barter for these things? And to even know the kind of people that share your interests or the time to find these friends.... Some of us don't have the time,money,or friends to do the barter thing, so you come off more than a little arrogant. Sent from my BlackBerry® smartphone, powered by CREDO Mobile. Re: Better Brewing Skills? This thread is looking rather divisive. Here's my life - I work exclusively on call. And I don't get any guaranteed salary - if I don't get called in, I don't get any money. I work at a birth center - babies come when they want to, whether or not it's my day on call, whether or not I've made enough money that month. As such, there are months when I'm eating out of the food bank. So yes, I use plain white sugar (the stuff you get in the bulk bins at WinCo) and I use tea bags because THAT IS ALL THAT I I CAN AFFORD. I would love to use all the crazy fancy organic stuff you use, but it is NOT AN OPTION for me - I'm over 4 months behind on my student loans, I only pay my power every other month, things are bad. So it may be a " McBrew " , but you know what? A " McBrew " every day is STILL better than no kombucha at all. So making those of us who can't afford to do it " perfectly " feel horrible about our brewing ability is not going to be particularly useful. Those are my thoughts and opinions on this topic. this message have been removed] Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 15, 2011 Report Share Posted February 15, 2011 i dont have access to freebies or bartering where i live. I have to have actual $$... ________________________________ To: original_kombucha Sent: Tue, February 15, 2011 4:17:55 PM Subject: Re: Better Brewing Skills? Wow, I don't know where u live that u can barter for these things? And to even know the kind of people that share your interests or the time to find these friends.... Some of us don't have the time,money,or friends to do the barter thing, so you come off more than a little arrogant. Sent from my BlackBerry® smartphone, powered by CREDO Mobile. Re: Better Brewing Skills? This thread is looking rather divisive. Here's my life - I work exclusively on call. And I don't get any guaranteed salary - if I don't get called in, I don't get any money. I work at a birth center - babies come when they want to, whether or not it's my day on call, whether or not I've made enough money that month. As such, there are months when I'm eating out of the food bank. So yes, I use plain white sugar (the stuff you get in the bulk bins at WinCo) and I use tea bags because THAT IS ALL THAT I I CAN AFFORD. I would love to use all the crazy fancy organic stuff you use, but it is NOT AN OPTION for me - I'm over 4 months behind on my student loans, I only pay my power every other month, things are bad. So it may be a " McBrew " , but you know what? A " McBrew " every day is STILL better than no kombucha at all. So making those of us who can't afford to do it " perfectly " feel horrible about our brewing ability is not going to be particularly useful. Those are my thoughts and opinions on this topic. this message have been removed] Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 15, 2011 Report Share Posted February 15, 2011 There are concerns about Agave............ Kathe Sender: original_kombucha Date: Tue, 15 Feb 2011 13:56:10 barter with other people for blackstrap molasses, brown rice syrup, maple syrup, agave nectar, stevia in powder or liquid form, yacon nectar, lucuma syrup and Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 15, 2011 Report Share Posted February 15, 2011 does stevia work for brewing kombucha?? Patti ________________________________ To: original_kombucha Sent: Tue, February 15, 2011 4:26:30 PM Subject: Re: Better Brewing Skills? There are concerns about Agave............ Kathe Sender: original_kombucha Date: Tue, 15 Feb 2011 13:56:10 barter with other people for blackstrap molasses, brown rice syrup, maple syrup, agave nectar, stevia in powder or liquid form, yacon nectar, lucuma syrup and Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 15, 2011 Report Share Posted February 15, 2011 does stevia work for brewing kombucha?? Patti ________________________________ To: original_kombucha Sent: Tue, February 15, 2011 4:26:30 PM Subject: Re: Better Brewing Skills? There are concerns about Agave............ Kathe Sender: original_kombucha Date: Tue, 15 Feb 2011 13:56:10 barter with other people for blackstrap molasses, brown rice syrup, maple syrup, agave nectar, stevia in powder or liquid form, yacon nectar, lucuma syrup and Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 15, 2011 Report Share Posted February 15, 2011 Rezz, you should not use isolated fructose syrups such as agave, ever. Agave is no different than high fructose corn syrup. It is a highly processed product that has had an amazing marketing campaign to bring it into the forfront as a healthy sweetener which it is most definetly not. Google it, ask around, there is research. We even talked about it here on this list I think a while back. Stevia WILL NOT work as the bacteria and yeast require glucose which is not present in stevia (or agave for that matter-all processed fructose)Only things that provide sucrose (glucose+ sucrose)are usable long term. I think you can use pure glucose as well, but pure fructose is not recommended. Sucrose aka table sugar may not be nutritive for humans, but it is in it's simplest form, energy. The bacteria and yeast don't care what form it comes in, expensive versions of sugar or plain old table sugar,they just require sugar to reproduce. They " eat " or consume the sugar and in that process they provide us with the beneficial acids as bi-products. If you allow your brew to ferment long enough there is minimal sugar remaining. There are benefits to using coconut sugar. There are scientific articles on it stating that it may provide the best source of sugar, but it is very expensive. There is also reason to use organic over conventional table sugar, due to the processing that conventional goes through leaving behind unwanted things. Same goes for tea. BUT many people cannot afford alternatives and given the option of homemade KT over other alternatives, it is better by far regardless of the ingredients it started from. Remember also that not everyone is coming from the same perspective as you are. Happy Brewing All!! > > this message have been removed] > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 15, 2011 Report Share Posted February 15, 2011 Rezz, you should not use isolated fructose syrups such as agave, ever. Agave is no different than high fructose corn syrup. It is a highly processed product that has had an amazing marketing campaign to bring it into the forfront as a healthy sweetener which it is most definetly not. Google it, ask around, there is research. We even talked about it here on this list I think a while back. Stevia WILL NOT work as the bacteria and yeast require glucose which is not present in stevia (or agave for that matter-all processed fructose)Only things that provide sucrose (glucose+ sucrose)are usable long term. I think you can use pure glucose as well, but pure fructose is not recommended. Sucrose aka table sugar may not be nutritive for humans, but it is in it's simplest form, energy. The bacteria and yeast don't care what form it comes in, expensive versions of sugar or plain old table sugar,they just require sugar to reproduce. They " eat " or consume the sugar and in that process they provide us with the beneficial acids as bi-products. If you allow your brew to ferment long enough there is minimal sugar remaining. There are benefits to using coconut sugar. There are scientific articles on it stating that it may provide the best source of sugar, but it is very expensive. There is also reason to use organic over conventional table sugar, due to the processing that conventional goes through leaving behind unwanted things. Same goes for tea. BUT many people cannot afford alternatives and given the option of homemade KT over other alternatives, it is better by far regardless of the ingredients it started from. Remember also that not everyone is coming from the same perspective as you are. Happy Brewing All!! > > this message have been removed] > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 15, 2011 Report Share Posted February 15, 2011 NO > > does stevia work for brewing kombucha?? > > > > Patti > > > > > ________________________________ > > To: original_kombucha > Sent: Tue, February 15, 2011 4:26:30 PM > Subject: Re: Better Brewing Skills? > > > There are concerns about Agave............ > > Kathe > > > Sender: original_kombucha > Date: Tue, 15 Feb 2011 13:56:10 > > barter with other people for blackstrap molasses, brown rice syrup, maple syrup, > > > agave nectar, stevia in powder or liquid form, yacon nectar, lucuma syrup and > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 15, 2011 Report Share Posted February 15, 2011 NO > > does stevia work for brewing kombucha?? > > > > Patti > > > > > ________________________________ > > To: original_kombucha > Sent: Tue, February 15, 2011 4:26:30 PM > Subject: Re: Better Brewing Skills? > > > There are concerns about Agave............ > > Kathe > > > Sender: original_kombucha > Date: Tue, 15 Feb 2011 13:56:10 > > barter with other people for blackstrap molasses, brown rice syrup, maple syrup, > > > agave nectar, stevia in powder or liquid form, yacon nectar, lucuma syrup and > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 15, 2011 Report Share Posted February 15, 2011 Kathe, Yes there are. Agave is just hyped up marketing ploy for a high fructose syrup made from cactus instead of corn. No Bueno. > > There are concerns about Agave............ > > Kathe > > > Sender: original_kombucha > Date: Tue, 15 Feb 2011 13:56:10 > > > > barter with other people for blackstrap molasses, brown rice syrup, maple syrup, > > > agave nectar, stevia in powder or liquid form, yacon nectar, lucuma syrup and > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 15, 2011 Report Share Posted February 15, 2011 Kathe, Yes there are. Agave is just hyped up marketing ploy for a high fructose syrup made from cactus instead of corn. No Bueno. > > There are concerns about Agave............ > > Kathe > > > Sender: original_kombucha > Date: Tue, 15 Feb 2011 13:56:10 > > > > barter with other people for blackstrap molasses, brown rice syrup, maple syrup, > > > agave nectar, stevia in powder or liquid form, yacon nectar, lucuma syrup and > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 15, 2011 Report Share Posted February 15, 2011 yeah didnt think so but since rezz mentioned it thought id ask thanks ________________________________ To: original_kombucha Sent: Tue, February 15, 2011 4:34:25 PM Subject: Re: Better Brewing Skills? NO > > does stevia work for brewing kombucha?? > > > > Patti > > > > > ________________________________ > > To: original_kombucha > Sent: Tue, February 15, 2011 4:26:30 PM > Subject: Re: Better Brewing Skills? > > > There are concerns about Agave............ > > Kathe > > > Sender: original_kombucha > Date: Tue, 15 Feb 2011 13:56:10 > > barter with other people for blackstrap molasses, brown rice syrup, maple >syrup, > > > > agave nectar, stevia in powder or liquid form, yacon nectar, lucuma syrup and > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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