Hello, I am starting a small kombucha business and am working on ensuring the alcohol content stays below .5%. This has been difficult as it is not possible to measure alcohol content in kombucha without rather special equipment. This is because the bacteria present in kombucha eat the alcohol the yeast produce.
My plan so far is to limit the yeast populations by
A) brewing at a lower temperature (70-75 F) where yeast are less active
B) adding more oxygen to bottles to continue bacterial production that eat alcohol once bottled.
C) giving bacteria a jump start in tea by adding a grain syrup (almost pure glucose)
D) filtering large strains of yeast out of brewing batches
E) using a more vinegary starter
F) Refrigerate after secondary fementation
These ideas come from http://users.bestweb.net/~om/kombucha_balance/ under "DECREASING THE RATIO OF YEAST TO ACETOBACTER POPULATIONS."
However, reading http://www.happyherbalist.com/kombuchaandalcohol.aspx seems to indicate that pure kombucha does not actually produce alcohol, but it is the introduction/infection by lactobacillus or other bacterial/yeast strain that produces alcohol.
So I am thinking of different sugars and techniques to use that would inhibit one culture over another. So here are my questions:
1) What conditions do lactobacillus grow best in?
2) What is the most affordable source of organic glucose I could feed the kombucha bacteria (acetobacteria)?
3) What are the best ways of adding more oxygen to the kombucha prior to bottling?
4) What type of sugar does alcohol producing yeast enjoy? Fructose or glucose or?
5) I am considering using honey in my kombucha. The bacteria would eat the glucose, but does the yeast eat fructose?
6) What would happen if I almost entirely used glucose to feed the kombucha?
7) What will oxygen do to the flavor?
8) Out of all of this, would it just be better to get a 'pure' strain of kombucha and keep it in a very sterile environment?
Thank you so much for your help : )
My plan so far is to limit the yeast populations by
A) brewing at a lower temperature (70-75 F) where yeast are less active
B) adding more oxygen to bottles to continue bacterial production that eat alcohol once bottled.
C) giving bacteria a jump start in tea by adding a grain syrup (almost pure glucose)
D) filtering large strains of yeast out of brewing batches
E) using a more vinegary starter
F) Refrigerate after secondary fementation
These ideas come from http://users.bestweb.net/~om/kombucha_balance/ under "DECREASING THE RATIO OF YEAST TO ACETOBACTER POPULATIONS."
However, reading http://www.happyherbalist.com/kombuchaandalcohol.aspx seems to indicate that pure kombucha does not actually produce alcohol, but it is the introduction/infection by lactobacillus or other bacterial/yeast strain that produces alcohol.
So I am thinking of different sugars and techniques to use that would inhibit one culture over another. So here are my questions:
1) What conditions do lactobacillus grow best in?
2) What is the most affordable source of organic glucose I could feed the kombucha bacteria (acetobacteria)?
3) What are the best ways of adding more oxygen to the kombucha prior to bottling?
4) What type of sugar does alcohol producing yeast enjoy? Fructose or glucose or?
5) I am considering using honey in my kombucha. The bacteria would eat the glucose, but does the yeast eat fructose?
6) What would happen if I almost entirely used glucose to feed the kombucha?
7) What will oxygen do to the flavor?
8) Out of all of this, would it just be better to get a 'pure' strain of kombucha and keep it in a very sterile environment?
Thank you so much for your help : )