What is Kombucha?

Kombucha is fermented tea! Just like yogurt is fermented milk and sauerkraut is fermented cabbage, Though the Kombucha commercial industry is new, the drink is much older as it has been consumed for hundreds of years in every country on the planet.

Kombucha Ingredients

Tea [Camelia sinensis], Sugar [sucrose], SCOBY [fermentation culture], flavorings [juice, fruit, herbs, etc]

Kombucha Chemical Characteristics

pH = 2.5-3.8

Acetic acid ferment: ~1%

By comparison, vinegar is diluted to 4-8% acetic acid

ABV = 0-2% for traditional, non-alcoholic ferments

Materials Acceptable for Use with Kombucha

Stainless Steel 304 & 3161 Neoprene Vinyl

Draft Kombucha Components

In a draft Kombucha set up, here are the components that come into contact with product.

  • Keg Coupler – Probe – 304 StainlessSteel
  • Product Washer, between the metal contacts of Tailpiece and Coupler -Neoprene
  • Product line Tailpiece for Coupler connection – 304 StainlessSteel
  • Product line -Vinyl
  • Tower Shank – 304 StainlessSteel

1 British Stainless Steel Association – 304 types are used for most applications, including handling and storage.

  • Faucet – 304 Stainless Steel

Antimicrobial Properties of Kombucha

Kombucha is naturally antimicrobial. It’s low pH and mix of organic acids have been shown to kill known pathogens on contact.

The antimicrobial activity of Kombucha was investigated against a number of pathogenic microorganisms. According to the literature on Kombucha, acetic acid is considered to    be responsible for the inhibitory effect toward a number of microbes tested, and this is also valid in the present study. However, in this study, Kombucha proved to exert antimicrobial activities against E. coli, Sh. sonnei, Sal. typhimurium, Sal. enteritidis, and Cm. jejuni, even at neutral pH and after thermal denaturation. This finding suggests the presence of antimicrobial compounds other than acetic acid and large proteins in Kombucha.234

Pathogens Sensitive to Kombucha

  • Staphylococcus aureus
  • Shigella sonnei
  • Escherichia coli
  • Aeromonashydrophila
  • Yersinia enterolitica
  • Pseudomonas aeruginosa
  • Enterobactercloacae
  • Staphylococcus epidermis
  • Campylobacter jejuni
  • Salmonella enteritidis
  • Salmonella typhimurium
  • Bacillus cereus
  • Listeria monocytogenes
  • Helicobacterpylori

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2 Sreeramulu, Guttapadu, Yang Zhu, and Wieger Knol. “Kombucha fermentation and its antimicrobial activity.” Journal of agricultural and food chemistry 48.6 (2000): 2589-2594.

3 Sreeramulu, G., Y. Zhu, and W. Knol. “Characterization of antimicrobial activity in Kombucha fermentation.” Acta Biotechnologica 21.1 (2001): 49-56.

4 Cetojevic-Simin, D. D., et al. “Antiproliferative and antimicrobial activity of traditional Kombucha and Satureja montana L. Kombucha.” J BUON 13.3 (2008): 395-401.