Author Topic: Kombucha  (Read 191 times)

Ke-ke wan

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Kombucha
« on: December 13, 2015, 08:01:17 AM »
My new favourite drink.  Kombucha tea.  So delicious and good for you.  My personal flavour combo fave is minth and chlorophyl.  gives a nice refreshing lift, without any of the edginess caffeine can bring.  Coffee is hard on my anxiety sometime, but this is not. 



Ke-ke wan

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Re: Kombucha
« Reply #1 on: December 13, 2015, 08:03:10 AM »
Kombucha is a living health drink made by fermenting tea and sugar with the kombucha culture. The result can taste like something between sparkling apple cider and champagne, depending on what kind of tea you use. It's not what you'd imagine fermented tea to taste like.

green tea kombuchaThe origins of Kombucha have become lost in the mists of time. It is thought to have originated in the Far East, probably China, and has been consumed there for at least two thousand years. The first recorded use of kombucha comes from China in 221 BC during the Tsin Dynasty. It was known as "The Tea of Immortality".

It has been used in Eastern Europe, Russia and Japan for several centuries. It's from Japan in 415 AD that the name kombucha is said to have come. A Korean physician called Kombu or Kambu treated the Emperor Inyko with the tea and it took his name, "Kombu" and "cha" meaning tea. Russia has a long tradition of using a healing drink called "Tea Kvass" made from a "Japanese Mushroom".

From Russia it spread to Prussia, Poland, Germany and Denmark but it seems to have died out during World War Two. After the war Dr Rudolph Skelnar created renewed interest in kombucha in Germany when he used it in his practice to treat cancer patients, metabolic disorders, high blood pressure and diabetes.

The Kombucha Culture
The Kombucha culture looks like a beige or white rubbery pancake. It's often called a 'scoby' which stands for ' symbiotic culture of bacteria and yeasts.The culture is placed in sweetened black or green tea and turns a bowl full of sweet tea into a bowl full of vitamins, minerals, enzymes and health-giving organic acids.

Three  cultures or scobysAs the Kombucha culture digests the sugar it produces a range of organic acids like glucuronic acid, gluconic acid, lactic acid, acetic acid, butyric acid, malic acid and usnic acid; vitamins, particularly B vitamins and vitamin C; as well as amino acids, enzymes. And of course there are all the benefits of the probiotic microorganisms themselves. The Kombucha culture is a biochemical powerhouse in your kitchen.

You might wonder if fermenting tea with yeasts would produce an alcoholic beverage. It's a good question. The yeasts do produce alcohol but the bacteria in the culture turn the alcohol to organic acids. Only minute quantities of alcohol, typically 1% by volume remains in the kombucha brew.

With every brew you make the kombucha forms a new layer or scoby on the surface of the liquid. These can be left to thicken the scoby or can be divided, giving you spare cultures that you can store in some sweet tea in the fridge in case something should happen to your active culture. Or you might want to pass on spare Kombucha cultures to friends or use a new scoby to start another batch of kombucha.

Ke-ke wan

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Re: Kombucha
« Reply #2 on: December 13, 2015, 08:05:31 AM »
You all have probably been hearing in health news lately how good fermented foods and drinks are for us.

Just in case, though, here:
helps the body function well by supporting:

liver detoxification
improved pancreas function
increased energy
better digestion
improved mood (helps with anxiety/depression)
kills Candida (yeast)
helps nutrient assimilation

Try it!  So delicious!

Offline Nichi

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Re: Kombucha
« Reply #3 on: December 13, 2015, 11:54:54 AM »
Interesting stuff, Lori!  xo
Not here, not there, but everywhere - always right before your eyes.
~Hsin Hsin Ming

Offline Michael

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Re: Kombucha
« Reply #4 on: December 20, 2015, 10:29:09 PM »
Kombucha is one of a number of fashionable foods in the alternative health industry. We used to brew it ourselves about twenty years ago when it first appeared. The more responsible assessment on it, is that it is better if you brew your own, rather than buy it in retail form, as the pasteurisation process kills off the very thing it is good for - probiotic gut bacteria.

But you must be careful brewing your own, as there have been many cases of food-poisoning from carelessness. Follow the recipes carefully, and you get the benefits of fermented food.

Claims of kombucha's health benefits have not been backed up with solid research, but considering the importance of fermented foods, that should be enough to give it a go. Just know it's only belief in the value of ancient traditions, and some untested yet reasonable assessments on gut flora, that are making it fashionable.

Chlorophyll, btw, has not been substantiated as having health benefits as yet. Doesn't appear to be any bad effects from digesting it, so give it a go, but all the foundational theories are very questionable.


Ke-ke wan

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Re: Kombucha
« Reply #5 on: December 21, 2015, 04:54:00 AM »
I've used chlorophyll a lot in my herbal healing.
For dogs too. It's a good one.
I don't scientists to tell me it works.

 

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