The cliff notes, 3 steps to fizzy Kombucha
First, make the unflavored kombucha base. Allow the bucha to breathe by using a cloth cover over the container with a rubber band around the top, stop the fermentation when the liquid is still slightly sweet and the new culture has fully formed. This usually takes about 7 to 14 days at room temperature.
Second, bottle the liquid in an air-tight bottle with 1/4” of empty air space at the top. Cutting off access to air creates an environment where yeasts can multiply and carbonate your beverage! Cutting off access to air, you’re trapping the carbon dioxide (bubbles). If you want the butcha to be a crowd pleaser add something to make it taste awesome such as fruit juice, dried fruit, fresh fruit, ginger, honey, frozen fruit, vanilla extract etc.
Third, leave the bottles on the counter for 2-6 days check your bottles every day, open and re-seal, until you hear a loud pop when you open the bottle. Then, transfer to the refrigerator and keep cold until consumed. Flavor is stable for about two weeks and then it’ll begin getting more tart.
INGREDIENTS & EQUIPMENT
- 1 Kombucha S.C.O.B.Y / Mother Culture. Get one from a friend or you can buy one here
- 3 Quarts of water
- 1 Cup of Organic Evaporated Cane Sugar
- 2 TBS Loose leaf (or 4 tea bags) of organic black tea (such as Ceylon, Darjeeling, Oolong) available here
- 1/2 Cup of finished Kombucha or 1/4 cup of apple cider vinegar
- Ceramic stoneware led free crock available here
or a 1 or 2 gallon glass jar, available here
- Glass bottles for your finished kombucha. Flip top bottles or small mason jars
- Funnel with a detachable strainer. My favorite is this Norpro Stainless Steel Funnel
- A mini strainer here’s my favorite mini 3-inch strainer by OXO
. To use when pouring your glass of finished bucha
DIRECTIONS
- Bring one quart of the water to a boil. Remove from heat and add sugar and black tea. Let steep for at least 15 minutes then strain out tea leaves or remove tea bags.
- Pour liquid into a 1 or 2 gallon glass jar, available here
, or a ceramic stoneware led free crock available here
, add the remaining 2 quarts of water.
- Add 1/2 Cup of finished Kombucha or 1/4 cup of apple cider vinegar
- Put mother culture on top of the tea. Smooth side up. If you have several S.C.O.B.Y.’s, the lightest in color is the top.
- Cover with a cloth towel and a rubber band around the top to prevent flying pests to lay eggs in there! Fruit flys love bucha.
- Ferment for 7 to 14 days (for fizzy bucha) or for 3 weeks for a strong vinegary tasting bucha.
- For unflavored bucha, bottle using flip top
or mason jars (with jars with metal lids, use wax paper under the lid to prevent air escaping and lid corrosion). For extra fizzys and the best tasting bucha EVER, flavor your brew just before bottling. Here are some of our favorites..
Fresh pressed or store bought juice: Concord grapes, orange juice, peaches, apples, lemon with honey, ginger and honey. Whatever floats your boat. Just by adding a about 1 cup of juice to 3 quarts of bucha, you’ll get a fizzy wonder drink!
Whole fruit: Cranberry’s and sugar, blueberry’s ginger and sugar, strawberries and sugar (Let these sit over night in a bit of sugar or honey and then lightly warm on the stove to release the juice, strain out the extract for the flavored butcha).
Other whole fruit options to add directly to the final bottling are, frozen or fresh cherry’s with vanilla, blueberrys, strawberries, raspberries. Be creative, this extra step of flavoring your bucha will be rewarded. It’ll soooo good!
Leave at room temperature for 2-6 days, or until you hear a pop when you open the bottle. Once you get a good loud pop, immediately put the bottles in the refrigerator. Your trapping the bubbles, so if you let it ferment too long on the counter, you might burst your bottle
Enjoy! The flavor is stable for about 3 weeks, but get’s more tart with time.
Several kombucha cultures brewed in a crock. Kombucha really loves a dark environment like this.
A fully formed brand new bucha culture. Notice it’s opaque and cloudy. The color is light because it’s only gone through one brew.
Organic concord grapes make, THE BEST BUCHA EVER! It’s a ton of work, but worth it. I pressed the grapes and then strained through a fine cheese cloth. I froze the finished juice in mason jars.
If you don’t want to press your own juice. This is a great brand, it’s organic and not from concentrate.
My favorite flip top bottles, because they lock in the fizzys, they’re the perfect size 16 oz, and there not as tall as most 16 oz flip tops. These fit in several places in the refrigerator and they fit on the top and bottle shelf of my dishwasher… an important point! You can view my favorite bottles available here. You’re welcome
***WARNING***: Sometimes you may get a really good fermentation going and when you open the bottle it’ll “blow your wig off”, it may spray all over the place or just start ooozing out. Have your glass read to pour the liquid into so you don’t loose too much!
This is just fine, it might make a bit of a mess. Pat yourself on the back, you got great bubblies! To combat mess, just put a dish towel on top when you’re opening it. I’m in the habit of always opening a new bottle with a dish cloth on top… just incase!
Also, if your glass bottle has any imperfections in it and you have got a really bubbly ferment going… and you’re liquid level isn’t right at the top… pressure builds up and it can explode the jar. This has only happened to me once with one of those Italy made clear flip top bottles… it’s never happened with the dark beer flip tops… well, yet!









Is there any way to preserve the new bucha culture it do you typically need to be constantly making fresh batches of butch
I keep a back up bucha culture in the refrigerator with some fresh tea and 1/2 a cup of the finished batch for up to two months… and it has still cultured fine for me when I used it again. G
et some friends and family in to make it… incase yours stops working for some reason, you can always get one back
Excited to try out your favorite flip-top bottles! I clicked thru your Amazon link to purchase them, and while reading reviews, several people were mentioning that the seals are only good for several (maybe 8?) uses. From your experience, has this been an issue? And if so, where do you get the replacement seals?
Thanks for your excellent article! Can’t wait to try your method for that lovely fizzy kombucha!
I’ve used my bottles over 10 times now and the seals are still good. The replacement seals are available in bulk on Amazon for very inexpensive. I haven’t had to replace mine yet.
Great! I know you’ll like them, I like them so much I gave several cases at Christmas to all my family filled with bucha
Just read the article written about you in the January Moosletter. You have inspired me to not only to get cracking on making more cheese, but to try some of these flavored Kombucha’s. Sally Fallon of the Weston Price Foundation has been at the top of my favorites list for many years. I have pinned you in several areas to my Pintrest, hoping that others will Pin, See, Read, and Learn of the many health benefits that come from Nourishing themselves and their families properly. You Go Girl.
Rashel, I just started a new batch using your recipe. I’ll let you know how it turns out. Thanks for sharing! Regina
Regina,
I’m pretty sure you’ll love it. If I say the word “Bucha” around here I have two little toddler feet that run into the kitchen as fast as they can 
Awesome! I’m glad you’re trying it! I make this recipe every two weeks… it’s always turned out great
It’s everyones favorite drink around here… even over wine & beer!
I have been making kombucha for years in gallon jars and you got me to thinking while washing dishes, about making it in larger containers. How do you heft those large crocks of kombucha around? Do you just prep them on a dedicated space of counter and keep them there until you bottle?
Carolyn,
Yup, I just keep them on my counter. Each crock holds 2 gallons. I find that bucha really likes to brew in led free stoneware. They help keep a steady temperature, they keep a dark environment, and the cultures grow really well in them. I wouldn’t want to get any bigger than 2 gallons though… because they’d be too heavy if I got over the 2 gallon pt.
That is probably very true. I have bottom heat for my jars right now as our kitchen is cold this time of year. I am going to order 2 of those puppies and use the jars for other things if I can remember where I put the lids. We’ve moved so who knows.
Isabella will have all your recipes to choose from rather than digging out the hand written ones that our grandmother’s wrote back in 1900. Janis made copies of some of Ella’s grandmother’s recipe’s that described using butter in a recipe about as big as a hen egg as a christmas gift.
Grandaddy,
Thanks for your comments and reading the blog
I wish I could go back to your great grandmother’s time. Sounds like we’d get along really well. A Christmas gift of a homemade butter sounds like solid gold to us!
What a great tutorial! Thank you!
LOL….I’m still not sure what it is, but I know how to make it! Really looks good!
Hey Vivian, it’s a probiotic drink
If you find yourself in a health food store… take a look in the refrigerated section… you’ll find several brands of kombucha. Try out a GT’s Kombucha strawberry or grape flavor… I think you’ll like it!