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All about Kombucha

  1. 1 DAY AGO

    Profile: Lucas Montanari, Fermenta Com Ciência, Brazil

    I first interviewed Lucas in 2021, when he shared his opinion on why kombucha has become so popular in Brazil and the rapid growth of the industry from 2019 to 2021. He is the founder of Fermenta Com Ciência (Fermenting with Science), where he teaches courses, gives lectures, and provides consulting services. He is also the organizer of Conakom (Conferência Nacional de Produtores de Kombucha). His central role in promoting kombucha in Brazil is evidenced by his social media presence: 277,000 follow him on Instagram, 55,000 on Facebook, and 153,000 on his YouTube channel, which has 279 instructional videos. Fermenta Com Ciência’s Mission To work on cultivating the culture of fermenting probiotic beverages and functional fermented foods—bridging ancestral knowledge with the most current scientific foundations—and to teach, in a clear and practical manner, how to prepare these items safely and healthily, catering both to those who wish to produce them artisanally at home and to those looking to scale up and commercialize their products. History Lucas Montanari is a biologist specializing in fermentation, holding a postgraduate degree in Nutrigenomics and Functional Foods. He is also an Integrative Nutrition Health Coach certified by the IIN (NY, USA) and a faculty member in the Functional Gastronomy postgraduate program at FAMESP. In addition to Fermenta Com Ciência, and organizing Conakom, the Brazilian Kombucha Festival. He serves as the Technical Director of ABKOM (Brazilian Kombucha Association) and conducts research on the health benefits of kombucha and methods to optimize its large-scale production. He first encountered kombucha in Australia in 2013; after refining his expertise, he began his work with kombucha in Brazil in 2015. Since then, he has trained thousands of “Kombucheiros” through in-person courses, online programs, and consulting services for commercial production. He has played a key role in the development of numerous nationally successful brands, including Tchá Kombucha, Puro Verde, Aviv Kombucha, Mr. Bolt Kombucha, Kombucha Libre, and Lich Kombucha. Furthermore, he has collaborated with leading companies to develop specialized fermenters, equipment, and raw materials specifically designed for kombucha production. Consulting Services Their consulting service is designed for those who wish to delve deeper into the science of kombucha fermentation to gain greater control over their production process, develop market-friendly flavors, achieve better product standardization, and ensure more consistent carbonation—all while confidently scaling up production. Students learn how to serve kombucha “On Tap,” thereby increasing cost efficiency and sustainability in their business. Discover the equipment and methods utilized in various industrial kombucha production facilities worldwide, and identify the next steps needed to turn dreams into reality! The consultancy focuses on the production of kombucha for commercial sale—specifically: How to manufacture a high-quality, stable product with low alcohol content. Which equipment and techniques should be utilized to scale up and streamline commercial production. Which machinery and equipment should you employ to optimize manufacturing processes and flavoring techniques to give your product a competitive edge in the market. Recipes designed to maximize the efficient use of time, space, and investment. Techniques for achieving optimal levels of density and acidity, including the proper use of measurement instruments. How to serve kombucha on tap, including how to operate draft systems, kegs, post-mix units, CO2 cylinders, and other carbonation equipment. Courses Lucas teaches courses for both home brewers and commercial operations. Home Brewing This course is composed of seven modules: The Universe of Kombucha: Discover what kombucha truly is, and also learn about its origins—from ancient legends to the first scientific records—tracing its entire history right up to the modern market Transforming your Health: Learn how to take your health to the next level by optimizing the benefits of kombucha for your body. You will also learn how to consume the beverage correctly and discover an extensive collection of books to further specialize in kombucha and gut health. Foundation: Learn—in detail—all the best ingredients to use in your production so that you never again have thin SCOBYs, mold, or other fermentation issues. I will also cover the essential utensils and ideal bottle types you need to make kombucha exactly the way you want it. Preparation and Harvesting: Discover the secrets to preparing the specific tea infusion used to make kombucha, and how to reduce the entire preparation time to just a few minutes on a single day of the week. You will learn how to identify the optimal time to harvest your finished fermentation. Flavoring and Carbonation: Master the art of naturally flavoring, infusing, and coloring your kombucha, and create endless recipes using the techniques in this module. You will also learn the principles of second fermentation to gain control over your beverage’s carbonation—even in glass bottles. SCOBY Hotel and Vinegar: Learn how to properly care for your colonies and prepare your own functional kombucha vinegar for cooking, cosmetics, cleaning, and more. Scaling up: Learn how to scale up your production—from 3-liter jars to fermenters of any volume you desire—using a simple method that can save you a significant amount of preparation time and help you achieve better standardization. Additional resources include downloadable instruction booklets, group mentoring sessions with over 1,000 experienced brewers, and much more. Commercial Brewing This course comprises nine modules: Professional Production Methods: Learn how to produce kombucha on a large scale with standardization and high quality. Also, learn the basics of the SAFE Method. Entrepreneurship: Learn how to turn your kombucha business idea into reality, organize your operations, and transform your production into a profitable venture. How to Register Your Kombucha Business with MAPA: Gain access to a detailed step-by-step guide on how to obtain your registration with MAPA and stand out from the majority of other brands. Developing Successful Flavors: Learn how to develop kombuchas with a precise sensory profile, creating flavor, aroma, and color combinations that elevate the quality of your production. Making Kombucha On Tap: Discover all the equipment and techniques you need to serve kombucha from draft systems, and sell it in restaurants and at events. Choosing the Right Equipment: Learn how to select the ideal fermenters, bottling machines, and other equipment to scale your production safely, productively, and efficiently. The Science of Fermentation: Explore in depth the microbiology behind kombucha and learn how to precisely control the results of your fermentation. Alcohol Control and Stability: Master techniques such as cold crashing, forced carbonation, and filtration, and learn essential industrial processes to standardize your kombucha with consistent quality. Aluminum Can Packaging: Discover the technologies and essential best practices for canning, guided by an expert who has mastered the process on a commercial scale. Bonus material includes lifetime access to a video library, an Advanced Study Group on Telegram, home to a community of over 700 commercial kombucha producers, and a course on registering your kombucha brewery with MAPA, taught by Stela Patrocínio — one of the experts I interviewed for the initial posting in my series on kombucha in Brazil. Networking Lucas has connected with leading members of the worldwide kombucha community, including several prominent international figures in the field of fermentation, such as Sandor Katz, author of The Art of Fermentation, Sébastien Bureau, the founder of Mannanova, and Nick Robertson from Rare Combinations. He has attended kombucha conferences in the United States and Europe. He’s also been featured in past editions of SYMBIOSIS Magazine (which I edited). I was pleased to see him prominently display a copy of the magazine in one of his instructional videos. Interview Readers who want to go deeper can listen to the podcast interview with Lucas, where we discuss his courses, the challenges and opportunities for commercial production in Brazil, and the future of the industry. Uma tradução da entrevista para o português está disponível para download. The post Profile: Lucas Montanari, Fermenta Com Ciência, Brazil appeared first on 'Booch News.

    29 min
  2. 4 DAYS AGO

    Profile: LABKOM, Belo Horizonte, Brazil

    Thiago Cunha founded LABKOM in 2020, together with Ruan Gregório, after a technical support initiative during the COVID period helped regional beverage producers navigate process and regulatory challenges. Cunha is a chemical engineer, holds a master’s degree in biotechnology and a specialization in microbiology, and is currently a PhD candidate in chemistry at the Federal University of Minas Gerais (UFMG). What began with support for a handful of kombucha brands in Minas Gerais evolved into a specialized consultancy focused on process consistency, quality control, shelf stability, and regulatory readiness. Today, LABKOM works with producers in Brazil and has also supported over 100 companies in markets across the United States, Chile, Argentina, Portugal, Spain, and Italy. Their work typically begins before the factory visit, with online review and preparation. Then comes an in-person phase, often three to five days on site, focused on diagnosis, training, and implementation. After that, support continues remotely for weeks or months. The reason is simple: analysis alone does not solve process variation.  Teams also need help deciding what to do with the numbers they collect and how to use them to influence harvest timing, blending, fermentation management, and product release. LABKOM helps manufacturers structure their production, stabilization, shelf life, standardization, and real-world market quality without losing the most important thing: flavor, aroma, and character. Standardization with SUPERKOM LABKOM teaches a process for brewing kombucha in a sterile, clean-room environment without the need for a cellulose mat. They teach a volatile acid standardization method that starts with a super-fermented starter liquid to standardize the fermentation process. Their SUPERKOM is a SCOBY liquid kombucha, a fermented base rich in organic acids, developed for industrial use by kombucha producers seeking greater batch consistency, process predictability, and analytical control. It is positioned not as a replacement for kombucha itself, but as a structured way to support a more technically controlled start to fermentation. For example, if the standard calls for 2 grams of organic acids, the starter is fermented to a level of 4 grams of organic acids. A precise amount of starter is added to the infused tea equal to 2 grams. The same amount of organic acids between batches will produce the same taste. Likewise, they standardize the sugar and tea levels in each batch. After this mixture is created, they advise a short fermentation of approximately 72 hours in an anaerobic environment to avoid producing more acids, esters, and post-biotics, and to prevent a cellulose mat from forming. LABKOM recommends secondary fermentation in bright tanks, rather than in the bottle. This delivers a higher degree of standardization and longer shelf-life. The time for secondary fermentation varies. It depends on the culture and flavors. Some flavors only require a day or two, others need five, seven, or ten days. This method yields a kombucha with low alcohol content and high levels of organic acids. They recommend that kombucha companies invest in simple lab equipment costing under 1,000 euros to measure the chemistry of the starter and the final product. Beyond pH Kombucha producers often talk about pH, but LABKOM argues that pH alone is insufficient to explain process development or sensory outcomes. It remains useful as one control parameter, but it does not tell a producer enough about the path a fermentation took or about the flavor profile that will emerge in the glass. Rather than relying only on pH, LABKOM organizes acidity analysis into functional groups that help production teams understand flavor development and control fermentation behavior using accessible analytical routines. In the company’s view, this matters because producers need tools that are both technically meaningful and feasible to implement on a factory floor without resorting to highly specialized instrumentation for every batch. Interview Readers who want to go deeper can listen to the podcast interview about LABKOM, the growth of kombucha in Brazil, and their broader vision for the category’s future. Uma tradução da entrevista para o português está disponível para download. The post Profile: LABKOM, Belo Horizonte, Brazil appeared first on 'Booch News.

    26 min
  3. 7 FEB

    World Ferment Day – Debrief with Jo Webster

    World Ferment Day took place on February 1st this year. Billed as a global celebration that turns theory into practice, people were invited to taste a ferment, make a ferment, share a ferment or host a ferment event. Organizer Jo Webster was supported by The Fermentation School, Wildbrine, and The Fermentation School en español. Goodfellows Restaurant in Jo’s home town of Wells, Somerset, hosted two 15-person sold-out sittings of a ‘Cultured Lunch’ by chef Adam Fellows. Jo and her friend Caroline Gilmartin helped prepare the dishes. The Cultured Lunch constituted two back to back sell-out sittings in Adam’s delightful restaurant. The aim was to showcase how ferments meld deliciously as part of tasty meals, bringing complexity and diversity to the table. Whether it was in the form of my fermentceutical crackers, loaded with labneh and Jerusalem artichoke ferment, or the Fennel Blush ferment and Cultjar‘s Cooks Kowl sauerkraut tucked under the duo of organic salmon, the results were extremely popular. My Rosemary sourdough went down a storm and so did Caroline’s mango kefir ice cream, with Fermenti’s enlivening fermented fruit bites to augment it. Caroline showed attendees how to make milk kefir and explained how those first milk kefir grains were snaffled out of the Caucasus region by subterfuge for the benefit of so many nations thereafter. I waxed lyrical about my beloved vegetable ferments and forgot to roll the sleeves of my white shirt up before grating the beetroot. People went home inspired, excited and satiated. My favourite feedback was from a gentleman who candidly said that his wife had twisted his arm to get him to attend with her.  “I thought it was going to be shit”, he said. I assumed World Ferment Day was just aimed at making money rather than genuinely aiming to make lives better by encouraging more people to eat and drink more ferments. In fact, this has been an inspiring afternoon and I am so glad that I came”. Challenges Jo acknowledges that fermented foods and drinks are still a niche. This is part of the challenge. While there’s more producers coming into the market, I still think it’s a pretty hard market to be in. For many, it has been a pretty lonely and isolating market to be in for quite a long time for quite a few people. And that is gradually changing for sure. And there’s definitely more players coming into the market. Some are ramping up production and it seems like something is shifting. Statistics 17 countries 70+ events 400 people signed up to the ferment pledge 5000+ people viewing the global map 786 Instagram followers This marked a sizable increase from the first World Ferment Day where there were only 10 events. There was very little planning for 2025. I thought of the idea at the beginning of January and we held it at the beginning of February. It was very low key. This time we’ve had a year, but various things have happened to distract me. We had a good three month run up, but this time we’re going to have a full year run up. Global Response Tomorrow, some of us will step into a communal kitchen for a cooking session guided by Food Citizen’s regular volunteer and partner, Deepa. Among other foods, we’ll be making idli — a fermented dish common in many South Indian homes and available in Singapore at stalls and restaurants. Food Citizen, Singapore I created this ebook to celebrate World Ferment Day. Fermentation is an art, a way to connect with our ancestry and, at the same time, a contemporary path to create new possibilities in the kitchen. Inside this ebook, you will find 5 very special recipes, carefully tested and developed by me over the years. Nomad Food Lab, São Bernardino, Portugal Celebrating World Fermentation Day by making my granny’s favourite ferment: sauerkraut. My love of preserving stems from my granny, Ima Mae (in the photo, which lives in my kitchen) who always had homemade pickles (including k***t) on the table, all made with veg grown by my granddad. Rachel de Thample, London, England It’s @world.ferment.day!!! What are you doing to celebrate?! Today we’re going be doing a lot of fermentation processing and feeding a lot of cultures before we head to India this week on a fermentation journey with @rtb_kombucha. Contraband Ferments, Atlanta, USA World Ferment Day exists to honor one of the oldest human food practices — preservation through time, not technology. Fermentation isn’t fast. It isn’t flashy. It’s salt, patience, attention, and trust. That’s why it felt right to host my first workshop of the year on February 1. Golden State Pickle Works, Santa Rosa, California, USA Fermentation is a revolution. #doyouhavetheguts to say yes to living in collaboration with microbes and immigrants and residents from the air and soil? And say NO to fascism? Together as a community we can do this. Cultures Group, New York, USA Today, it’s worth taking a moment to recognise just how fundamental fermentation is to life itself and as the influential physicist, Richard Feynman put it – “All life is fermentation”. From the microbes that support our bodies to the recipes that have shaped food cultures across the world, fermentation has always been quietly at work. When it’s understood and given time, fermentation has the power to transform simple ingredients into something complex, nourishing and full of flavour. It’s how tea, sugar and SCOBY become kombucha and how entirely new taste experiences are created. Today we’re celebrating the magic behind fermentation and the incredible world of flavour it opens up when you let nature lead. Momo Kombucha, London, England Today is World Fermentation Day and it’s your chance to strike a blow for world gut health! Try something new – a new ferment you have not tried before and your body will love you for it! Give it a go! The fact is that by making fermented foods part of your daily routine you’ll be helping your gut diversity, improve nutrient availability, and build the resilience of your microbiome. Fermentation Tasmania, Legana, Tasmania, Australia Fermenting wasn’t just his gateway into the microbial world—soil, pets, cuddles—it also sparked his curiosity about new foods, to feed his microbial friends. Today, on the first ever #WorldFermentDay, I’m celebrating how fermented foods have the ability to spark curiosity, creativity, and connection—especially in young minds. Flora Montgomery, Gutsy for Life, Tokyo, Japan Potential Jo is excited by the multi-cultural potential of World Ferment Day. So I think the potential is very real in terms of more countries. What we want to show is different cultural approaches to this food technology, different products, that there’s something for everybody in terms of flavor profile, in terms of texture, in terms of curiosity and adventure. And the more the more we can represent ferment habits globally, the happier I will be, because at the moment, obviously, I’m a middle-class white person promoting it. And largely it’s been America, UK. It would be really great to get a truly representative global support and therefore representation of different ferment cultures and styles and methods and approaches. What we’re also seeking is to get these foods and drinks embedded in the cultures in which they’re not familiar and re-celebrated in the cultures where Western food is becoming increasingly appealing and people are moving further away from these food, food technologies and foods and drinks. Funding The key thing is finding funding. In an ideal world, we would get a really solid funding to be able to properly take this forward. We’ve shown this year that there is real appetite for it, that thousands of people ate and drank ferments because of those 70 events. Our aim is that ferments are not just for World Ferment Day. Interview Jo discusses the achievements of the 2026 World Ferment Day and her hopes for the future in this exclusive interview. The post World Ferment Day – Debrief with Jo Webster appeared first on 'Booch News.

    27 min
  4. 29 JAN

    Grief and Growth: Exploring the Alchemy of Kombucha Leather

    Shajia Meraj’s thesis at Karachi University, Pakistan, was a groundbreaking exploration of kombucha “leather” (dried cellulose SCOBYs) in the context of sustainable textile design. Rather than viewing this material merely as an industrial substitute for animal leather, Meraj’s research, conducted over 11 months in 2025, treats it as a living, time-based medium that responds to its environment and the care it receives. This project balances technical material experimentation and mastery with a profound conceptual inquiry into grief, memory, and circularity. Sustainability Shajia was first inspired by a TED Talk by prominent Italian fashion designer Marina Spadafora, which introduced her to the possibility of using kombucha leather for garments. What drew her to the material was its accessibility; it can be grown using simple ingredients: water, sugar, tea, and starter. Choosing to work outside a traditional laboratory, she transformed a spare room into a domestic studio, using household fermentation tools and shallow trays to harvest the cellulose. Navigating Challenges in Pakistan Executing this project in Pakistan presented significant hurdles. Not only was kombucha unfamiliar to her academic advisors, but the local climate also posed constant threats to the material. During the monsoon season, high humidity caused mold growth, while drier months rendered the leather brittle and paper-like. Shajia spent eleven months in a trial-and-error process, eventually determining that a thickness of half an inch was ideal for drying without the material becoming too fragile. She was supported by Shahzaib Arif of ProB the only kombucha brand in Pakistan, which provided the starter necessary to maintain her continuous brewing process. A Material Reflection on Grief The heart of Shajia’s work lies in the parallels between kombucha leather and the experience of grief. Kombucha leather grows slowly over time, and every sheet is unique, imperfect, and evolving. I think that mirrors how grief works. Grief does not happen all at once; it unfolds gradually, and the memories and emotions surface in cycles. Likewise, the circular nature of kombucha leather growth very much reflects the circular life cycle of grief and memory. These two things fit together very nicely, because both processes involve patience, layering, and ever-changing memory. To ground this concept, she incorporated photographs taken by her late father, who passed away 16 years ago when she was a young girl, into her material outcomes. Her artistic installations include: The Memory-Twisting Lamp: A sculptural piece where light interacts with translucent leather and her father’s photographs to emphasize the fragility and impermanence of memory. Every image is embedded and sandwiched between two layers of kombucha leather, holding the photograph in place like a preserved moment in time. These slides represent how memories exist as fragments, separate yet connected. The Circular Installation: A gradient of 200 dyed circles moving from deep red to warm yellow, representing the evolution of grief from intense loss to a state of acceptance. The circular forms reference the cyclical nature of grief, how it returns, overlaps, and continues rather than ending. Deeper reds at the center represent emotional intensity and loss, while the warmer ambers and yellows moving outward suggest memory, warmth, and moments of acceptance. The Mosaic Portrait: A large-scale tribute composed of thousands of small photographs taken by her father, layered with organic kombucha squares to create a cohesive image that reflects how we perceive the essence of a person through fragments. The kombucha leather adds an organic, textured quality that mirrors the slow, layered nature of memory, making the piece both a visual tribute and a reflection on how we perceive and preserve the essence of a person, through both the whole and the sum of its parts. The Future of Bio-Textiles Despite initial skepticism from her peers and faculty, Shajia successfully defended her thesis and earned an A-. While she also produced functional items, such as a hand-sewn cardholder, her primary focus remained on the material’s emotional potential. Now a graduate, she’s interested in collaborating with other researchers to push the boundaries of what sustainable textiles can represent. She can be reached at merajshajia56@gmail.com. Source: NotebookLM Interview Shajia discusses her project in this exclusive interview. The post Grief and Growth: Exploring the Alchemy of Kombucha Leather appeared first on 'Booch News.

    31 min
  5. 26/12/2025

    Our Fermented Future, Episode 12: The World of 2100

    This is the last in a series about possible futures, published in Booch News each week, starting with a Preview on October 3rd. Episode 11 appeared last week. Overview By 2100, the Earth hums with quiet vitality. Cities are green, breathable, and alive—literally. After the Climate Reckoning of the 2050s and the Fermentation Reformation that followed, humanity abandoned synthetic consumerism and rediscovered the wisdom of the microbial world. Artificial beverages—cola, beer, wine—became relics of the Carbon Age. People sought drinks that delivered tangible benefits: nourishing the microbiome, stabilizing mood, and sharpening cognition. Enter kombucha—the “living beverage,” a cornerstone of living systems. The Reformation’s legacy isn’t merely biological transformation—it’s cultural maturation: learning to work cooperatively with living systems, valuing local knowledge, building community infrastructure, maintaining honest assessment of capabilities, and recognizing that sustainable human thriving requires biological partnership rather than attempted domination. Humanity still faces continuing challenges: climate adaptation, resource management, social equity, political conflict, and planetary boundaries. Fermentation provides useful tools but not complete solutions. Humanity’s Partnership with Living Systems By 2100, humanity had learned crucial lessons about partnership with living systems. Fermentation taught that: Working with biology is often more effective than fighting it: Bacterial bioremediation, probiotic therapies, and closed-loop life support—all leverage natural processes rather than opposing them. Local diversity produces resilience: Decentralized fermentation cooperatives proved more adaptable than consolidated industrial food systems. Traditional knowledge contains valuable insights: Indigenous and traditional fermentation practices offered solutions that industrial approaches missed. Community infrastructure matters: Spaces for gathering and productive cooperation strengthen communities beyond what the consumption culture provides. Multiple approaches are necessary: Fermentation didn’t solve everything because no single practice can. Success required combining fermentation with policy reform, technological innovation, social justice work, and environmental restoration. Fermentation delivered measurable benefits: Improved public health through better nutrition Stronger communities through cooperative infrastructure Environmental benefits through local food production Cultural preservation through traditional knowledge Economic alternatives through cooperative ownership Educational frameworks through hands-on biology There are remaining challenges: Scaling benefits without losing local character Maintaining safety while enabling accessibility Supporting displaced industrial workers Balancing innovation with tradition Limiting commercial exploitation of the grassroots movement Addressing inequities in access and outcomes As the century closed, kombucha stood as both metaphor and method: proof that small, symbiotic systems could heal a planet pushed to the brink. Humanity had moved from extraction to participation, from ego-systems to ecosystems. The last generation of leaders—those raised during the chaos of the early 2000s—reflected on a hard-won truth: sustainability was not a policy but a practice of humility. The Great Rebalancing (2090–2100) The final decade before 2100 brought a reckoning—a rebalancing between people, planet, and profit. The kombucha industry, now deeply intertwined with global food, health, and climate systems, found itself both humbled and empowered. What began as a niche craft drink half a century earlier had become a symbol of regenerative commerce, microbial stewardship, and planetary renewal. The Century’s End By the 2090s, humanity had learned to live within limits. The population stabilized below nine billion. Carbon neutrality—once an abstract goal—was enforced globally through trade-linked carbon credits. Artificial intelligence governed not only production and logistics but also ecological thresholds: AI-run “planetary dashboards” warned when resources neared the threshold of overshooting. Kombucha—once merely a beverage—was now part of a symbiotic food network. Its microbial base served as a living substrate for nutritional pastes, medicinal tonics, and even biodegradable materials. SCOBY farms, floating on the world’s rewilded seas, generated both food and oxygen while sequestering carbon. The Kombucha Konfederation The seeds that were planted in 2025 with KBI’s Verified Seal Program had by 2095, evolved into the Global Kombucha Konfederation. What was once a struggling network of small brewers had grown into a transnational cooperative representing over a billion daily consumers. Its “Code of Fermentation Ethics” guided microbial stewardship and regenerative practices across all continents. Economics of Regeneration By 2100, the measure of “growth” had changed. GDP had been replaced by the Regenerative Index—a metric that tracked ecosystem recovery, microbial diversity, and human well-being. Kombucha companies were central players: their microbial exports replenished soils, stabilized local economies, and improved nutrition without depleting resources. A kombucha SCOBY grown in Kenya could now be shipped digitally—its DNA code transmitted to a local bio-printer and activated with local nutrients. Trade was no longer about moving goods but sharing life itself. The Cosmic Ferment: Space, the Final Frontier Fermentation played a pivotal role in the colonization of extraterrestrial bodies, helping shape new planetary ecosystems and extending the themes of life, consciousness, and microbial cooperation out beyond Earth. By 2100, humanity’s reach extended into the solar system. Permanent research colonies existed on the Moon, thriving settlements dotted the Martian canyons, and orbiting bio-stations circled the gas giants. Yet amid all this technological triumph, one humble process—fermentation—had become indispensable to survival and meaning alike. Microbes had preceded humans into space. Now they accompanied them as partners, teachers, and planetary architects. The cosmonauts who stood at the threshold of the 22nd century included a terraformer, a kombucha-savvy starship captain, and an interplanetary ecologist. Terraforming Dr. Rafael Kimura, born in São Paulo in 2056, was a microbiologist with a poet’s soul. Half-Japanese, half-Brazilian, he grew up watching his parents brew miso and cachaça—two ancient ferments from opposite sides of the world. To him, fermentation was “the original terraforming technology.” In 2080, Rafael was appointed Director of the GaiaMars Project, a multinational effort to create self-sustaining microbial ecologies on Mars. Earlier missions had failed because they treated microbes as tools—simple agents of decomposition or nutrient cycling. Rafael saw them differently: as co-creators. Under his leadership, the project seeded Martian soil with adaptive, AI-guided microbial colonies derived from Earth’s most resilient ferments—kombucha SCOBYs, kimchi lactobacilli, kefir grains, and desert cyanobacteria. He cultivated resilient cyanobacterial genera such as Chroococcidiopsis (globally abundant in hot and cold deserts) and Phormidium (dominant in polar deserts), along with others including Scytonema, Nostoc, Gloeocapsa, and Oscillatoria. These microorganisms thrive in extreme heat, cold, and dryness, often living hypolithically (under quartz rocks) for UV protection or forming soil crusts that create the base of desert food webs. In other words, they were ideal for hostile environments like the Martian surface. He called them “symbiotic pioneers.” Rafael managed the project with pioneering intensity: “People imagine our bacterial systems are autonomous and intelligent. They’re not. We have post-doc microbiologists monitoring fermentation processes around the clock. When bacterial communities drift from optimal composition, we intervene. When contamination occurs, we troubleshoot. Biology is powerful but needs constant human management.” Within 20 years, these microecosystems transformed vast regions of Valles Marineris into breathable biomes. Thin, rust-colored soils turned to green moss beds; subterranean water ice became microbial broths teeming with oxygenic life. His motivation was both scientific and philosophical: “To make another planet live,” he said, “we must teach it to ferment.” By his death in 2109, Mars was no longer a sterile rock. It was alive—humming with microbial symphonies. Starship Systems Leila Zhang, born in Chengdu in 2064, was commander of Odyssey Station, an orbital habitat circling Titan, Saturn’s largest moon. Originally trained as an aerospace engineer, she had also studied culinary biology, convinced that morale and meaning in deep space depended as much on taste as on technology. Under her leadership, Odyssey became the first off-Earth facility to maintain a closed-loop fermentation system—a living cycle where every human exhalation, waste product, and organic residue was metabolized by microbial partners into food, oxygen, and energy. At the heart of the system was Luna, a centuries-old kombucha mother descended from cultures brought aboard the International Space Station in the 2030s. Luna had been genetically and spiritually tended by generations of brewers. Leila called her “the ship’s soul.” Investigation into the value of fermentation in long-term space missions began in 2024 with the successful cultivation of miso on the International Space Station. They noted: Obser

    24 min
  6. 24/12/2025

    Profile: Kombucha Na Dálaigh, Gortahork, Co. Donegal, Ireland

    I recently talked with Marianne O’Donnell, the founder of Kombucha Na Dálaigh, based in Donegal in the north-west of Ireland. I began by wishing her a Happy Christmas in her native tongue, which is the limit of my Irish language skills. This was an appropriate greeting since Kombucha Na Dálaigh is located in a Gaeltacht region of the Republic, where Irish is the everyday language and a cornerstone of local culture, traditions, and identity. Origins Having taught Food and Nutrition and Communications for 24 years, and also being a Certified Nutrition Coach, Marianne has always had a curiosity for learning, wellness, and cooking. “I never set out to start a kombucha business, but sometimes the best things in life happen by accident.” “It all started during COVID, when I was struggling with gut health issues. A friend gave me a SCOBY—this strange, alien-looking thing—and I started brewing kombucha in my kitchen in Gortahork.” She felt immediate benefits, and friends encouraged her to sell commercially. Marianne attended the International Kombucha summit in Berlin in November 2023, which reinforced her to look at flavor trends. Production After starting in her kitchen and moving to the home garage, Marianne has now outsourced production, bottling, and canning to another facility under her supervision. She concentrates on marketing and growing the business. Her kombucha uses 60% organic Sencha green tea and 40% Assam black tea. Irish Identity The brand uses Irish on its labels and website. This isn’t just a matter of translation; it’s a statement of identity. Marianne believes Irish belongs in the everyday, in our food culture, and in our future. She benefits from government support through Údarás na Gaeltachta, the regional state agency responsible for the economic, social, and cultural development of Ireland’s Irish-speaking regions. Her company is listed in their directory, along with Ireland’s largest brand, Synerchi, also in Donegal, and Claregalway’s All About Kombucha. Glacadh lenár ndúchas áitiúla Gaeltachta Táimid lonnaithe i nGort a’Choirce agus táimid brodúil as a bheith ag déanamh beorach go háitiúil, ag cinntiú caighdeán d’ardcháiliócht. Mar sin de, cén fáth go mbeifeá sásta le deochanna boga atá déanta go saorga nuair a thig leat sásamh fionnuar a fháil as kombucha? Agus nuair nach bhfuil fonn ort beor, leann úll nó fíon a ól, is kombucha an deoch malartach is fearr. Embracing Our Local Gaeltacht Roots Based in Gortahork, we take pride in brewing locally, ensuring high-quality standards.So, why settle for artificially produced soft drinks when you can indulge in the refreshing satisfaction of kombucha? And for those times when you’re not in the mood for beer, cider, or wine, kombucha makes for the perfect alternative. Awards The company has been recognized multiple times at the annual Blas na hEireann (Taste of Ireland) awards, and this year was honored as the ‘Best Wellness Drink’ at the EVOKE Awards. Growing awareness Marianne is witnessing an increasing acceptance and awareness of kombucha in Ireland. The popularity of kombucha in Ireland is catching up with places like California. There are some strong kombucha companies in Ireland. Sixty percent of shops will have kombucha now. And it’s growing. It is really, really growing. And the whole no and low alcohol movement, it’s really increasing. You know, kombucha is perfect for that. People who want that adult complex flavor without the booze. There’s a real mixture of customers. Younger people have nearly all sampled kombucha before. Maybe older generations haven’t. But then once they taste it, they’re hooked. They love it. So lots of my local customers would be people in their 70s and 80s because they understand the health benefits. So, it’s a mixture of people that drink it in Ireland, but people are definitely more aware of kombucha and the benefits of fermented drinks. Distribution Kombucha Na Dálaigh is mainly sold through retail channels, with some direct-to-consumer online sales. Following her Blas na hEireann awards, premier retailer Avoca contacted her, and she’s now in their 13 stores across Ireland. She also sells in Ulster, where she has made personal contact with retail outlets. Flavors She sells both 750-milliliter bottles and slimline 250-milliliter cans. Her three flavors have Irish language names. Grá: (Love): Hibiscus, raspberry, rosehip, and herbal infusion. Anam (Soul): Ginger juice, botanical infusion (including citrus peels, ginger, lemon myrtle, and spices), natural hops. Sláinte (Health): Turmeric juice, ginger juice, herbal infusion (including apple, lemongrass, ginger, and botanical petals). Marianne also produces limited editions, such as a carrageen moss and dulse seaweed mix named ‘Mara’ for the Ballymaloe House Cookery School in Cork. In the summer, she also makes an elderflower and gooseberry brew. Podcast Click on the podcast to hear Marianne tell the story of Kombucha Na Dálaigh. The post Profile: Kombucha Na Dálaigh, Gortahork, Co. Donegal, Ireland appeared first on 'Booch News.

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