Fall Recipe: <em>Apple Cider Kombucha</em> (2024)

Fall Recipe: <em>Apple Cider Kombucha</em> (1)

The time has come for cider. Warm cider on chilly afternoons. Big gulps of cold cider after a long jog through the falling leaves. A splash of cider in a tumbler of bourbon. I don't really need to convince you on this subject, right?

Because I am a) still fiendish for cider right now and b) still loving my homebrewed kombucha like nobody's business, it seemed only natural to make a cider-riffic version of my favorite fizzy drink. I really can't think of a more perfect match than tart kombucha and sweet-sour apples. Throw in a few sticks of cinnamon and a hearty glug of maple syrup, and this is officially something special.

Fall Recipe: <em>Apple Cider Kombucha</em> (2)

You could definitely make a shortcut version by mixing some cider into a glass of plain kombucha, but I really love using fresh apples. Play around with different varieties — tart and juicy Macintosh apples have been my personal favorite so far. This is also a good way to use up those last few bruised and battered fruits that have been lingering in the back of the fridge for too long.

And because I know you were wondering: yes, try this with a shot of bourbon. Fall-time whiskey sour, anyone? Yes, please.

Need a Scoby? You can find them online atCultures for Health

Fall Recipe: <em>Apple Cider Kombucha</em> (3)

Apple Cider Kombucha

Makes about a gallon (can be halved, as pictured)

14 cups water

1 cup white granulated sugar

4 bags black tea (or 1 tablespoons loose tea)

4 bags green tea (or 1 tablespoon loose tea)

2 cups starter tea from last batch of kombucha orstore-bought (unpasteurized, neutral-flavored) kombucha

1 scoby

2 apples (pick ones that you like to eat)

2 cinnamon sticks

4 whole cloves

4 tablespoons maple syrup or honey

Bring the water to a boil. Remove from the heat and stir inthe sugar to dissolve. Drop in the tea and allow it to steep until the waterhas cooled. Depending on the size of your pot, this will take a few hours. Youcan speed up the cooling process by placing the pot in an ice bath.

Remove the tea bags or strain out the loose tea. Stir in thestarter tea. Pour the mixture into a 1-gallon glass jar and gently place the scoby on topwith clean hands. Cover the mouth of the jar with a few layers of cheeseclothor paper towels secured with a rubber band.


Keep the jar at room temperature, out of direct sunlight, and where it won’tget jostled. Ferment for 7 to 10 days, checking the kombucha and the scobyperiodically. It’s not unusual for the scoby to float at the top, bottom, oreven sideways. A new cream-colored layer of scoby should start forming on thesurface of the kombucha within a few days.

After 7 days, begin tasting the kombucha daily by pouring alittle out of the jar and into a cup. When it reaches a balance of sweetnessand tartness that is pleasant to you, the kombucha is ready to bottle.

With clean hands, gently lift the scoby out of the kombuchaand set it on a clean plate.Measure out 2 cups of starter tea from this batch ofkombucha and set it aside for your next batch.

Dice the apples into small bits and add them to a clean 1-gallon jar along with the cinnamon, cloves, and maple syrup (or divide these ingredients evenly between smaller jars if you don't have a second 1-gallon jar). Pour the fermented kombucha over top. Cover the mouth of the jar with several layers of cheesecloth or paper towels secured with a rubber band. Keep the jar at room temperature out of direct sunlight for 2 days.

Strain and discard the apples and spices. Bottle the infused kombucha into two clean 2-liter soda bottles (or several smaller bottles). Leave at least 1 inch of headspace in the bottles.

Store the bottled kombucha at room temperature out of directsunlight until carbonated, typically 1 to 3 days, depending on thetemperature of the room.When the bottlesfeel rock-solid with very little give, they’re ready. Refrigerate tostop carbonation and then consume within a month.

Prepare your next batch of kombucha right after bottling theprevious batch. Combine the reserved starter tea with a fresh batch of sugarytea, and pour it into the cleaned fermentation jar. Slide the scoby on top,cover, and proceed with fermentation.

Fall Recipe: <em>Apple Cider Kombucha</em> (4)

Fall Recipe: <em>Apple Cider Kombucha</em> (2024)

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