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12 Steps to Whole Foods

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Preserving Raw <strong>Foods</strong> with Natural Probiotics<br />

There are trace amounts of alcohol in this fermented tea, but not enough <strong>to</strong> cause anything anywhere close <strong>to</strong><br />

in<strong>to</strong>xication or impairment. Beer has 4.5% <strong>to</strong> 7% alcohol, and the most that kombucha will have is about 0.5%.<br />

You can buy live kombucha scobys online or find a raw foodist who makes kombucha in your community; they<br />

are often willing <strong>to</strong> share.<br />

2 half-gallon jars or 1 large glass bowl/dish<br />

3 qt. filtered water<br />

5-6 black, white, or green tea bags (not herbal teas)<br />

3 Tbsp. raw apple cider vinegar<br />

1 C agave (raw, organic)<br />

2 kombucha scobys or 1 C of raw kombucha from the health food s<strong>to</strong>re<br />

optional: ¼ C raspberry or mango puree or 1 Tbsp. Ormus Greens<br />

Boil 1 qt. filtered water and steep the tea bags in it for 20 minutes or longer. Throw the tea bags away and add<br />

2 qt. filtered water plus the apple cider vinegar <strong>to</strong> the mixture. Pour the mixture in<strong>to</strong> the bowl/dish or jars. (Jars<br />

allow less surface area exposed <strong>to</strong> oxygen, so fermentation will take 10-20 days instead of 7-10 days in a bowl/<br />

dish. The best are dark-colored glass bowls or jars <strong>to</strong> protect from light.) When the mixture has cooled <strong>to</strong> room<br />

temperature (70°-80°), add <strong>to</strong> the jars one of the following:<br />

• Dried (purchased) kombucha scoby (1 in each jar or 2 in bowl/dish)<br />

• Room-temperature, raw bottled kombucha (½ C in each jar or 1 C in bowl/dish)<br />

Cover the bowl or jars with a clean tea <strong>to</strong>wel or paper <strong>to</strong>wel (put a rubber band around the neck of the jar) <strong>to</strong><br />

keep debris from getting in<strong>to</strong> the tea but allow air in. Leave on the counter, at room temperature and away from<br />

light and sun, for 7-10 days (if using dish/bowl) or 10-20 days (if using jars). After 7 (bowl/dish) or 10 (jars)<br />

days, taste the kombucha <strong>to</strong> see if the taste is tart and acidic. (You will have <strong>to</strong> gently move aside the thin<br />

kombucha scoby forming on the surface <strong>to</strong> taste the liquid below it.) Leave it <strong>to</strong> ferment longer, if desired. The<br />

scoby may float or sink (this doesn’t matter).<br />

When it has reached the desired level of fermentation, gently scoop the scoby from the bottle and use it <strong>to</strong> begin<br />

a new batch. Or you can use 1 C of finished kombucha <strong>to</strong> start a new batch. (You can do this several times, but<br />

the microorganisms will decrease, so after four batches, use a new start or scoby.)<br />

NOTE: If you find mold on <strong>to</strong>p of your kombucha, you must discard it. It happens occasionally when lactic acid does<br />

not do its work before the mold, or bad microorganisms, get a foothold.<br />

At this point, you can add the optional fruit puree or Ormus Greens (see the GreenSmoothieGirl.com s<strong>to</strong>re for<br />

this) for 24 hours before refrigerating, adding a bit more fermentation as well as a lovely flavor for variety.<br />

If you made the kombucha in a bowl/dish, transfer it <strong>to</strong> glass jars or bottles with some head room. Sometimes<br />

kombucha is very fizzy, so the best type of bottle is pop bottles with rubber gaskets on them, but any glass jar<br />

will do.<br />

Keep finished kombucha in the fridge. It will keep for a long time and gets even better after a month or two.<br />

Finished kombucha will grow little scobys on <strong>to</strong>p, and there’s nothing wrong with them. For the first<br />

subsequent batch, putting the original “mother” in with one of the “babies” is best for efficient culture growth.<br />

© Copyright Robyn Openshaw <strong>12</strong> <strong>Steps</strong> <strong>to</strong> <strong>Whole</strong> <strong>Foods</strong> 239

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