DIY Kombucha 101 (plus recipes!)

DIY Kombucha 101 - Eat Spin Run Repeat

Oh kombucha, how I love thee.

Homemade Ginger Orange Kombucha - Eat Spin Run Repeat

Your bubbles, your kinda-sweet, kinda vinegar-y taste, your endless flavours, and your gut-friendliness. I could drink you all day long. Your only fault?

How to make kombucha at home - Eat Spin Run Repeat

Your price in grocery stores. $4 a bottle? Really? That’s a little crazy – almost like Starbucks crazy. A girl’s gotta eat, and a kombucha-drinking habit can be a difficult and pocket-emptying one to keep. But I’ve figured out a secret…

cane sugar

It’s ridiculously easy to just make your own!

Homemade Ginger Orange Kombucha - Eat Spin Run Repeat

At the beginning of this year, my bestie Jess and I decided we would do some kitchen experiments, fermentation being the first. With both of us being kombucha addicts, this lovely little bevvy seemed like a great place to start. To do so however, we needed a scoby – also known more scientifically as a symbiotic culture of bacteria and yeast. It’s an ugly bugger, but a required ingredient for brewing up endless bottles of delicious kombucha.

Scoby for making kombucha at home

So where does one procure a scoby? I found one in a kit at a local health food store, but when I brought it home and saw the look on Jess’s face after telling her how much I paid for it ($40) she was appalled.

Apparently these things can be found on Kijiji for next to nothing, so I promptly returned the kit (which didn’t contain much other than the scoby, sugar and a bit of tea) and we hopped online to find a seller. Lucky for us, we found a guy who was willing to give us a HUGE scoby for $10. We cut it up into 4 pieces, bought some big mason jars, and off to the races we went.

Homemade Ginger Orange Kombucha - Eat Spin Run Repeat

The only other ingredients needed are white vinegar, green tea (we used decaf so we can drink kombucha ALL.DAY.LONG), cane sugar and whatever you want to use as a flavouring. There are so many combinations so you can get really creative, but our all-time favourite so far is a ginger-orange creation that we’ve made every single weekend for the past month. More about that in a second – you need the basic recipe first!

Fruit to flavour homemade kombucha - Eat Spin Run Repeat

DIY Kombucha

by Angela Simpson

Prep Time: 30 mins (not all active)

Cook Time: 5 mins

Ingredients (about 8 cups)

  • kombucha scoby/starter
  • 6 cups of water
  • glass jars large enough to hold about 8 cups of kombucha – 2 large mason jars should be fine
  • 4 green tea bags
  • 1/4 cup sugar per jar (don’t substitute this for alternative sweeteners – the purpose of the sugar is to feed the scoby – if you leave it out, it will die)
  • 1/2 cup white vinegar per jar

Instructions

Bring the water to a boil in a large pot on the stove. (Note: I haven’t used boiling water from my kettle in case calcium pieces happen to get transferred to the kombucha. Aim to make your water as pure as possible for best results.)

Pour the water into the jars along with the sugar. Stir until the sugar is dissolved, then add the tea bags.

Let the tea steep and cool until the jars feel warm (not hot) or lukewarm to the touch.

Pour in the scoby/active starter and the vinegar. Cover the top of the jar with a coffee filter and put a rubber band around it to keep it in place.

Scoby for making kombucha at home

Store the jars in a dark, dry place (like the inside of a cupboard) for between 1 and 4 weeks. The longer you leave it to ferment, the less sweet it will taste. (We typically just leave ours for 1 week.)

When ready, take the coffee filter ‘lid’ off the top of the jars. A new kombucha starter will have formed on the top, and you can use this for future batches (so don’t throw it away!)

new mother growing on kombucha surface

Take the scoby/active starter out of each jar and put them in a bowl to be used immediately again in your next batch.

Use a fine mesh strainer to pour the kombucha into clean jars, leaving any stringy bits of the starter behind.

Flavour and sweeten as you like with fruit, spices, fresh herbs, etc.

Store the kombucha sealed in the fridge for 7-10 days.

Click here to print the recipe.

Homemade Ginger Orange Kombucha - Eat Spin Run Repeat

As far as the flavourings go, these are some of the ones I’ve made so far. I don’t know the exact quantities for most – it’s a bit of a trial and error process but experimenting is fun!

Assorted DIY homemade kombucha flavours - Eat Spin Run Repeat

  • Ginger Orange: 1 orange squeezed equally between 2 jars + another orange sliced, divided between the jars + 2 inch piece of peeled ginger, sliced. Note: This one is ready right away, whereas the others taste better if you leave the flavourings to sit in them for at least a day before drinking.

Ginger Orange Homemade Kombucha - Eat Spin Run Repeat

  • Raspberry Lime: 1 cup fresh or frozen raspberries (frozen actually seem to create a stronger flavour) + juice of 1 lime, divided equally between 2 jars.

Raspberry Lime Homemade Kombucha - Eat Spin Run Repeat

  • Spiced Apple Cinnamon: Juice of 1 large Granny Smith apple + 1 sliced Granny Smith apple + 4 cinnamon sticks + 2 inch piece of peeled ginger, sliced

Spiced Apple Cinnamon Raspberry Lime Homemade Kombucha - Eat Spin Run Repeat

  • Blackberry Ginger: 1 cup fresh or frozen blackberries (frozen create a stronger flavour when left for a few days) + 3 inch piece of fresh ginger, divided equally between 2 jars.

Blackberry Ginger Homemade Kombucha - Eat Spin Run Repeat

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So tell me…

  • Have you ever tried making your own kombucha?
  • What are your favourite brands/flavours/homemade versions?

15 thoughts on “DIY Kombucha 101 (plus recipes!)

  1. Even though I’ve seen it over and over again at places like Whole Foods I have yet to try Kombucha! I know! I need to get on the train. Great addition to the post by giving so many options to try, I didn’t know there were so many flavors!

    1. Oh my gosh Heidi, you’ve gotta do it! If you like ginger, I recommend starting with a gingerade flavour – GT’s Kombucha, Rise, and Tonica all have a version and they’re my favourites by far when it comes to store-bought versions. I’d love to hear what you think if you give it a go! 🙂

  2. This was the best start to my Monday! I’ve seen/heard so much about people making homemade kombucha that I need to do it myself! That $4 is so hard to swallow!

  3. Yay for homemade kombucha!!! I make my own, and have bottles of it ready all the time. Much cheaper than buying it and so tasty. Plus so much healthy goodness!!

  4. How do you store a scoby….covered or uncovered….refrigerated or room temp.?
    You neef to use it rigjt away to make another batch??

  5. How do you store a scoby. Fo you have to make another batch right away or the scoby will die ? You must have millions of scobys hanging around lol. Do they get better at their jobs the more experienced they are?

    1. Hi Leisa! Great questions. For storage, I usually just reserve some of the kombucha batch and keep the new scoby submerged in that if I’m not brewing another batch immediately. I’ve gone as long as about a month keeping them stored this way without any problems. I’m not 100% solid on the science of it, but I’m pretty sure that as long as the scoby has some sugar to feed on (from that previous batch), it will stay alive. And yes, I’ve noticed that my thicker, slightly older ones do tend to produce more strongly-fermented batches in shorter amounts of time! As for the extras, every batch will produce a mini scoby, so as I brew more, I just toss them together and they kind of start to stick to each other. As for the extras, I’ve given some to friends so that they can start their own mini kombucha factories! 🙂

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