I just made an awesomely win-ful, eye-poppingly tart Cranberry Kombucha. You should too. This is how it goes:
Ingredients:

Cranberry Kombucha!
1 bottle store-bought Kombucha, any flavor (buy it at whole foods or your local health-food store).
1 cup sugar (cane, beet, corn, maple, whatever)
4 tea bags (your choice) or equivalent amount of loose tea
1 gallon-size crock pot (or scale up)
5 fluid ounces cranberry cocktail concentrate (with real sugar, not HFCS. You could use straight up cranberry juice to similar effect)
Protocol:
Brew tea. Very strong. In crock pot.
Add sugar
Cool to room temperature
Add half bottle of store-bought Kombucha. Drink the rest. If you drink too much, add whatever’s left.
Cover your crock pot with a towel (NOT the lid–this is supposed to be an aerobic fermentation!), and set aside in a place where it won’t be disturbed for a few weeks.
Let sit completely undisturbed for at least a month. I mean don’t even move it across your counter. If you do move it, it’s not the end of the world, but it will screw up the structural integrity of your Symbiotic Colony of Bacteria and Yeast (SCOBY).
After your month is up there should be a mushroomy-looking film on top of your Kombucha. This is the SCOBY. It is good. Take a teaspoon (well-washed) and taste the product. If it is sour and tasty, you did it right. If it smells repulsive or otherwise “off,” do not taste it–either throw it out or at least get a second opinion from somebody who knows Kombucha. If there are bits of mold growing on top of the SCOBY your Kombucha may be fine, but you will not be able to use that SCOBY again. If everything is shiny on top of the SCOBY, then gently lift it onto a plate, bottle your Kombucha (mason jars work fine), leaving a cup or two in the crockpot. This is where I add the cranberry. I used a cranberry cocktail concentrate with added cane sugar to cut the tartness and make it fizzy. Make a new batch of tea and start again, putting your new SCOBY on top. Just be sure to cool the tea before you mix it with the old batch or put the SCOBY on, lest you kill your culture.
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