• @SuperIce
    link
    English
    109 months ago

    I think the alcohol removal process increases the price quite a bit. Still very marked up though.

      • @SuperIce
        link
        English
        69 months ago

        But then you have to restrict your userbase to over 21s and can’t sell it in many supermarkets. Without alcohol it can be sold as a soft drink.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          119 months ago

          It’s not a lot of alcohol, it’s like 1% by volume or something last I checked. You can make it higher, but I think it caps out around 3%.

          • @SuperIce
            link
            English
            99 months ago

            That’s accurate, but anything above 0.5% is considered alcoholic in the US. There have been some small pushes to get the limit increased to 1.25%, which would make the usual levels of alcohol in normal kombucha legal, but I don’t think that’ll actually ever happen.

            • Rob Bos
              link
              fedilink
              49 months ago

              0.5% in the States? Yuck. Paranoid. Anyway not too expensive. Filtering out the yeast. Bubbling oxygen through the mix. Increased nucleation might do it too.

              Regardless: huge markup.

    • Rob Bos
      link
      fedilink
      9
      edit-2
      9 months ago

      At least here it can have 1.1% ABV without triggering regulations. Most of the sugars get metabolized by yeast into alcohol, then bacteria into vinegars. The better it’s oxygenated, the more vinegars are made. You don’t remove the alcohol, you convert it.

      So 40g of sugar in a litre would become about 20g of alcohol, most of which becomes vinegar. The exact amount depends on time, temp, oxygen.