Tepache
Fermento mexicano de cáscara de piña — piña, piloncillo, canela, tiempo
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Perfil
Tepache is the canonical Mexican peel-ferment beverage: pineapple skins and core (the parts usually thrown away after peeling a fresh pineapple) combined with piloncillo (unrefined cane sugar), cinnamon, sometimes cloves, covered with water, and fermented for 2-4 days. The result is a lightly fizzy, sweet-tart drink that captures the floral intensity of pineapple in a way fresh juice cannot — the ferment releases aromatic compounds bound in the peel, and the sugar reduction produces a balance the original pineapple can't deliver.
The practical economy of tepache is part of what makes it editorially compelling: it's a zero-waste preparation that turns scraps into a drink, fermenting in days at room temperature with no specialized equipment. Most Mexican households that drink tepache make it on demand from peels saved while preparing fresh pineapple for other purposes. Commercial bottled tepache has emerged in Mexico and the US in the 2020s but the homemade version is materially different — fresher, more lightly carbonated, and meant to be consumed within a week.
The microbiology relies on wild yeasts and lactic acid bacteria native to fresh pineapple skin — Saccharomyces, Hanseniaspora, Lactobacillus, and others. No starter is needed; the pineapple brings its own. This makes tepache pedagogically useful for understanding wild fermentation: success requires trusting the substrate to bring the culture rather than introducing one.
Técnicas clave
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Errores comunes
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