WILD FERMENTATION | HOW TO MAKE A GINGER BUG FOR HEALTHY HOMEMADE SODAS đź‘ľ đź‘ľ đź‘ľ

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Fizzy, Healthy, Bubbly, & Fresh! If you are a soda lover, then read on as I am about the healthify your favorite drink!

If you are not a soda lover, well be ready to become one ;) Even your kids might go wild for it. Unlike store-bought fizzy drinks, this one is made with whole and healthy products and naturally fermented to add probiotic benefits and the fizz.

And what's more, even though you add sugar to your start product, the beneficial or friendly bacteria present on the ginger and turmeric will use almost if not all sugar to ferment your sugary drink into a healthy probiotic-rich, slightly tangy drink. Just wonderful on a hot tropical day as today!

Every day we have one glass of fizzy Kombucha tea and one glass my famous refreshing ginger-turmeric soda. Though it took me a while to get into Kombucha, brewing my own one did the trick, fermented turmeric soda was love at first sip.

Read my Kombucha instructions post HERE


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Food offers us many opportunities to resist the culture of mass marketing and commodification


“Resistence takes place on many planes. Occasionally it can be dramatic and public, but most of the decisions we are faced with are mundane and private. What to eat is a choice that we make several times a day, if we are lucky. The cumulative choices we make about food have profound implications. Food offers us many opportunities to resist the culture of mass marketing and commodification. Though consumer action can take many creative and powerful forms, we do not have to be reduced to the role of consumers selecting from seductive convenience items. We can merge appetite with activism and choose to involve ourselves in food as co-creators. (Page 27)”
― Sandor Ellix Katz, Wild Fermentation: The Flavor, Nutrition, and Craft of Live-Culture Foods

This book, among many others, has inspired me on my fermenting journey. It's fun and so good for you. Although fermentation has been around for ages, through the mass production of convenient foods most of us have forgotten about this age-old practice. Let's spread the word about fermented foods BECAUSE......

OUR HEALTH STARTS IN OUR GUT


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Though you will have to wait until tomorrow to make the actual ginger-turmeric soda I love so much (see pic above), today I'll show you how you can start to make this magic happen at your home.

A ginger bug is a culture of friendly bacteria who live from ginger and sugar. It is used as the base for ginger ale or other natural fizzy sodas or tonics. It is similar to the mother of raw apple cider vinegar, the scoby of kombucha or the sourdough starter for bread.

And what’s cool (or freaky), it lives its own life on your countertop or in the fridge. It can be kept “alive” for ages. As with any living thing just do not forget to give it some love and feed it every day!

Ingredients


  • 1-2 fresh ginger roots (you can also use a mix of ginger and turmeric. I love to experiment with my bugs, feel free to do so too. Other roots like galangal might work too)
  • ½ cup white or unrefined sugar (honey, stevia, agave, maple, molasses or other sweeteners will NOT work)
  • 2 cups filtered water (chlorine-free, chlorine can harm the culture)

FYI: the friendly bacteria feed on the sugar. So no worries about drinking heaps of sugar, all the sugar will be converted, and your drink will not be sugary at all.


DIRECTIONS


  1. Grate or finely chop 3 tablespoons of ginger and place in a quart size jar (you can add fresh turmeric root too).
  2. Add 3 tablespoons of sugar and 2 cups of water to the jar. Gently stir with a spoon and lightly cover with a coffee filter (or cheesecloth) and a rubber band.
  3. For the next 2 to 5 days (it may take 7 or 8 days depending on the temperature, but no longer), stir the mixture at least once a day and feed it 1 tablespoon fresh grated ginger and 1 tablespoon sugar.
  4. You know you bug is coming to life when it forms bubbles, becomes cloudy, smells yeasty, and fizzes when stirred. If mold appears on the surface, scrape it off. When too much mold appears or the process takes longer than 7 to 8 days, start over.
  5. When the culture is alive and bubbling, you could keep it on the countertop and feed it daily with one tsp of sugar and one tsp grated ginger. Or if you are planning to let it rest in the fridge. When resting in the fridge don’t forget to feed it every week, 1 tbsp sugar and one tablespoon grated ginger. To reactivate the culture, bring it back to room temperature and daily feed it again.

FYI: Depending on the temperature, more bubbles may appear when you stir the bug. The more it bubbles, the faster the soda-making process will go.

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Just one more day and the bug will be ready.

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This ginger bug can now be used to create fermented fizzy sodas or tonics. I'll show you tomorrow how to make my favorite ginger turmeric soda (see pic below)! Stay tuned and have a happy and healthy day!


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ALL CONTENT IS MINE AND ORIGINAL!
PICTURE(s) TAKEN WITH NIKON D5600


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FYI: For green smoothie tips, tricks, and recipes, download my FREE green smoothie eBook HERE!

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