Are you sure you are buying raw
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1 | vinegar ???? pickles7 - 2018-03-23 12:05:00 |
2 | Tell me why you just don't use a kombucha mother? I would have thought it was the same thing. buzzy110 - 2018-03-23 14:09:00 |
3 | buzzy110 wrote: pickles7 - 2018-03-23 14:29:00 |
4 | pickles7 wrote: I suppose so pickles but I'm not convinced that they are not the same thing. Have you thought about getting a tiny scoby from a commercial bottle of unpasteurised kombucha and growing your vinegar mother from that? The difference would by non-existent by the time your kombucha scoby transmuted into a vinegar mother? buzzy110 - 2018-03-23 15:13:00 |
5 | I'm pretty sure that a vinegar mother and a kombucha scoby are not the same. A vinegar mother contains acetobacter bacteria (that create acetic acid when fermenting), a kombucha scoby contains [from Wiki] "Gluconacetobacter kombuchae [2] is an anaerobic bacteria that is unique to kombucha. It feeds on nitrogen that is found in tea and produces acetic acid and gluconic acid, as well as building the scoby. Zygosaccharomyces kombuchaensis [3] is a yeast strain that is unique to kombucha. " Edited by davidt4 at 3:22 pm, Fri 23 Mar davidt4 - 2018-03-23 15:22:00 |
6 | Thanks...davidt4... I was looking for something on the net to help me out. It is just not what I was set about doing...buzzy110....I can get a vinegar mother to turn the brown sugar alcohol into a very nice light malt flavoured vinegar by just leaving it uncovered where I have had vinegar before. pickles7 - 2018-03-23 17:24:00 |
7 | At long last I have a nice healthy vinegar mother growing. Not from the bought bottles of raw vinegars but from using my own ''raw cider vinegar''. pickles7 - 2018-04-27 17:11:00 |
8 | pickles7 wrote: It is interesting that you found difficulty growing a mother from raw commercial vinegar. You could be right. Maybe the vinegar sold as raw, is not 'raw' as you asked in the thread heading. buzzy110 - 2018-04-28 15:14:00 |
9 | davidt4 wrote: Thanks for the information. My rationale was that the mother present in a bottle of kombucha is very small indeed and when used to grow a vinegar mother it would adapt. I have also read this from Sandor Katz's book, The Art Of Fermentation : "Many people have observed that the kombucha SCOBY is identical, or virtually so, to the mother-of-vinegar- that forms on the surface of fermenting vinegar. Some have even described kombucha as immature vinegar..." Katz has a lot of interesting information in his book for any interested in all types of fermentation, including vinegar. He has a paragraph about why 'live' vinegar goes off and offers up advice on how to prevent this from happening. He also has instructions for pasteurising. buzzy110 - 2018-04-28 15:40:00 |
10 | I am rather sure my findings are correct....buzzy...After my own raw vinegar was added it took just 3 days to cover the entire top with a film of ''mother of vinegar''. I may look into Sandor Katz's book, The Art Of Fermentation. I will try our library this week for it. pickles7 - 2018-04-28 22:37:00 |
11 | pickles7 wrote: He says it is usual to add a small amount of raw vinegar to the new brew to get it going. But that aside, I am pretty convinced that you know what you are doing and like to do experiments on the side to see what reaction you get. Which is a mark of someone who wants to be the best and in the process you keep adding to your knowledge. buzzy110 - 2018-04-29 12:12:00 |
12 | yes ....buzzy. You do add raw vinegar to get a new lot to develop. That is why the raw vinegar that is being sold these days is very questionable. I used to get my other vinegars to develop using ''Braggs Raw Cider Vinegar''. The Healtheries apple cider vinegar label suggests it be taken as a tonic, I would expect it to be a raw product, for that reason. I tried both Vinegars to get things moving. I may just send an e-mail to both companies, and ask for an explanation as to why my new brew just would not get started using there products. Like I think I have already said I am not the only maker of Vinegars, that has had the same problems. pickles7 - 2018-04-29 16:55:00 |
13 | buy some organic cider vinegar from Chantals and you will find a "mother" after a few weeks. uli - 2018-05-05 13:13:00 |
14 | I didn't have to go buy a raw vinegar after all....uli..., I found a bottle of my own cider vinegar right at the back of my pantry. It was on a lower shelf so not in my face. I had a taste this morning and found it tasted rather nice, not finished but still very nice. I will test it later on to see how much longer it will need to finish. I intend to get another lot started, so I wont run out .19 litters of nice light malt vinegar from 3.500 kg of brown sugar. pickles7 - 2018-05-15 09:46:00 |
15 | Well what a pest, I have been unsuccessful in buying what I require to test my vinegar. I didn't test the alcohol this time as I was going to test the acidity. pickles7 - 2018-06-10 09:54:00 |
16 | pickles7 wrote: Sounds very nerdy to me but are kits not available from a shop that sells brewing supplies? buzzy110 - 2018-06-11 17:34:00 |
17 | buzzy110 wrote: pickles7 - 2018-06-11 22:43:00 |
18 | ** bump ** autumnwinds - 2019-06-10 22:33:00 |
19 | I am just finishing off 17 litres of Apple vinegar made from a can of Apple cider concentrate. I may even get around to testing this lot. I made it for my Son who is right into drinking Apple cider vinegar every day. pickles7 - 2019-06-11 10:04:00 |
20 | This is so interesting. korbo - 2019-06-11 21:01:00 |