By Alana 10 Comments
Do you remember when I mentioned the ginger kombucha I had on tap in Hawaii?
It was SO delicious. Not too gingery, not too sweet, and just the perfect amount of fizz! Matt loved it as well, so I really wanted to try and recreate it at home.
Ginger can be tricky to work with in kombucha. Use too much and it almost burns your throat. Use too little and it tastes like watered down ginger ale. After testingseveral different ginger kombucha recipe ideas, I have finally nailed it! I seriously lined up a blind ginger kombucha taste test for Matt the other night and we picked the same favorite as the winner. This ginger kombucha recipe can be made with either store bought plain kombucha or home brewed kombucha.
To make homemade ginger kombucha, you’ll need:
16 oz plain kombucha (store bought or homemade)
1 tsp grated ginger
1/8 tsp organic cane sugar
16 oz glass bottle with lid
Add 1 tsp freshly grated ginger and 1/8 tsp organic cane sugar to 16oz glass bottle. Pour in kombucha and cap. Let sit at room temperature for seven days.Be sure you are using glass bottles that are designed to hold pressure and considerburping periodically throughout the week. After seven days, transfer to the refrigerator until you are ready to drink.I recommend straining out the ginger before drinking as well.
Now, pour that stuff in a glass and enjoy!
Homemade Ginger Kombucha
CourseDrinks
Keywordginger, ginger kombucha, kombucha
Servings 16 ounces
Author TheWildGut.com
Ingredients
- 16ozplain kombucha
- 1tspgrated ginger
- 1/8tsporganic cane sugar
Instructions
Add 1 tsp grated ginger and 1/8 tsp organic cane sugar to glass bottle designed to hold pressure
Fill with plain kombucha
Cap and store at room temperature for seven days
Burp the bottle periodically by quickly opening and closing the bottle top
After seven days, move to the refrigerator for storage
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Reader Interactions
Comments
El
Can you use an airlock on a second ferment like this, in lieu of thick glass and occasional burping?
Reply
Alana
Yes, you could. However, you won’t get a fizzy final product as the airlock will prevent any build up from occurring.
Reply
Pauline Springer
Can you use a sugar substitute and apoxmitely how much. O and whst is kombucha. And how do you make it?
Reply
Matt
Hi Pauline –
First, kombucha is fermented tea which uses a SCOBY for the fermentation process and has been around for thousands of years. The SCOBY (Symbiotic Colony Of Bacteria and Yeast) feeds on the sugar during the ferment and the process actually turns the sugar into healthy acids, resulting in a probiotic rich fermented drink. There are trace amounts of alcohol because of the process, but usually less than 0.5%.As far as making it, there are different ways to do so using different brewing methods. Here is a link to our continuous brewing method which explains the set-up and how-to: http://thewildgut.com/continuous-brew-kombucha-setup/
And regarding the sugar substitutes; there are different options such as molasses, agave, syrup and honey, but we highly recommend using organic cane sugar for brewing. Again, the sugar is used as food or fuel for the SCOBY, so it is important to use a quality sugar. You may be referring specifically to sugar substitutes like splenda or stevia, but these are not fermentable with the SCOBY (yeast specifically), so molding may occur.
I hope this helps and feel free to let us know how your first brew goes!
Reply
Nicks
Hi there, thanks for this! I’ve tried it and other recipes for ginger kombucha because I tasted it once and absolutely LOVED it, but each time I try, the ginger is strong enough, but the flavour isn’t that of that familiar gingerbeer flavour at all. I’m assuming it has something to do with my plain kombucha that I make? I use ceylon tea or green tea sometimes the citrus variations and I leave it for about 7 days, because I read that the scoby can get harmed with “weak starters”. Any ideas as to what I’m doing wrong? My kombucha is a much darker colour compared to yours…
Thanks so much!
Reply
Alana
Hello! Ginger kombucha will taste different from ginger beer due to the tea base. I would suggest looking for a ginger bug recipe and going that route to achieve more of the ginger beer taste.
Reply
Kim
What kind of tea do you use for your base & what is a ginger bug recipe?
Reply
Alana
Hi Kim – We use a 50/50 mix of black and green tea. A ginger bug is what you use as your starter for naturally fermented “ginger soda” We don’t have a recipe on our blog but I am search you can google for one! Happy fermenting!
Reply
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