Kombucha (basic)
Sweetened tea fermented by a symbiotic colony of acetic and yeast organisms (SCOBY)
Profile
Kombucha is sweetened tea fermented by a complex symbiotic community popularly called a SCOBY — symbiotic culture of bacteria and yeast. The visible disc that grows on the surface is a cellulose pellicle produced primarily by Acetobacter and Komagataeibacter bacteria; embedded within and circulating in the liquid below are Saccharomyces and other yeasts. The yeasts convert sugar to ethanol and CO₂; the bacteria oxidize the ethanol to acetic acid; both processes generate small quantities of other organic acids (gluconic, glucuronic, lactic) that give kombucha its characteristic complexity beyond simple vinegar.
The basic protocol is straightforward enough that kombucha has become the canonical entry-level ferment for the modern home fermenter: brew strong tea, dissolve sugar, cool, pour into a vessel with starter liquid and a SCOBY, cover with a cloth, wait. The complexity lives in how the result varies with tea variety, sugar source, temperature, starter ratio, and duration. A 7-day batch at 24°C tastes meaningfully different from a 14-day batch at 19°C, and the secondary fermentation (F2) in sealed bottles — typically with added fruit purée, ginger, or herbs — develops the carbonation and flavor most commercial kombucha is sold for.
The SCOBY itself is editorially interesting: it is a living object that propagates with each batch (a new pellicle forms at the surface every fermentation) and can be passed between fermenters indefinitely. There is no commercial starter strain — the wild diversity of a given SCOBY is part of what gives that fermenter's kombucha its character. Sandor Katz's framing of fermentation as a relationship with a community of organisms applies cleanly here: a kombucha SCOBY is genuinely a community, and the home fermenter is effectively curating it.
The safety case for kombucha is well-established: the low pH (typically 2.5-3.5 by the end of F1) suppresses pathogens, and the acidic, alcohol-trace environment is hostile to almost all spoilage organisms. The most common visible failure is kahm yeast (a white film on the surface, often wrinkled) which is benign but indicates the culture is stressed; black, green, or fuzzy mold is the rare actual failure and requires discarding the batch and starting over with a fresh SCOBY.
Key techniques
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Common mistakes
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