Anyone here drink kombucha?

i was thinking about making some kombucha myself but i don't have the money to buy a starter culture, can i make one my self?

You could probably make something that approximates it, but it wouldn't be the same. That cake culture they use is basically a controlled infection of the media (in this case, a tea and sugar solution). Normally, yeast will ferment this mixture, using the sugar and turning it into CO2 and EtOH (ethanol). however, different bacteria and fungi will work faster than the yeast, and have all sorts of funky byproducts (all the acids the website talks about). You could accomplish the same style of beverage by mixing up about 7 lbs of sugar and 5 gallons of tea, and leave the top off the bucket and let it sit outside with some cheesecloth over it to keep bugs out. the problem with this is that there are all sorts of regional variants to airborne yeast, bacteria and fungal cells, so the ones you end up with may or may not ferment out something drinkable. more than likely you'd end up with something about the consistency and taste of week old baby vomit (which is what happens when you screw up brewing beer and the wash gets infected....gross. With wine its not so bad, you usually just end up with vinegar - acetic acid). But, if you decide to try it, let us know how it goes.
 
You could probably make something that approximates it, but it wouldn't be the same. That cake culture they use is basically a controlled infection of the media (in this case, a tea and sugar solution). Normally, yeast will ferment this mixture, using the sugar and turning it into CO2 and EtOH (ethanol). however, different bacteria and fungi will work faster than the yeast, and have all sorts of funky byproducts (all the acids the website talks about). You could accomplish the same style of beverage by mixing up about 7 lbs of sugar and 5 gallons of tea, and leave the top off the bucket and let it sit outside with some cheesecloth over it to keep bugs out. the problem with this is that there are all sorts of regional variants to airborne yeast, bacteria and fungal cells, so the ones you end up with may or may not ferment out something drinkable. more than likely you'd end up with something about the consistency and taste of week old baby vomit (which is what happens when you screw up brewing beer and the wash gets infected....gross. With wine its not so bad, you usually just end up with vinegar - acetic acid). But, if you decide to try it, let us know how it goes.

so i leave the sugary tea outside with the cheese cloth and wait for the bacteria from outside to ferment it, could it handle high temperatures and how long should i leave it out for? how would i know if the bacteria i get is safe to drink?
 
almo75, you've been viewing this thread for awhile, did you want to say anything?
 
If its not safe to drink, it will probably taste terrible, and give you stomach cramps if you drink it. Most yeast/bacteria do best in 70-80 degrees, a little higher than that and you start getting some funky byproducts from too much stress, and up above 100 or so they will probably start shutting down. If you leave it outside on a porch or in the shade or something it should be fine.
 
IS THAT LIKE SAMBUCA;)
 
Heres mine.. I started with just one small 4" pancake and after a month it quadrupled in size. Once i stopped making it I left the mother culture in the big jug and about every 2 weeks was adding more of the already made kombucha to it so it can live and grow more daughter pancakes.
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