Kombucha is a naturally fermented tea made with real tea, pure sugar, and a living culture known as a SCOBY. During fermentation, it develops probiotics, beneficial acids, antioxidants, and a light, refreshing fizz. Kombucha supports healthy digestion, boosts gut health, helps the body detox, strengthens the immune system, and provides natural energy — all from simple, real ingredients
Because our Kombucha is fermented in small batches, it retains powerful enzymes, antioxidants, and gut-supporting probiotics that boost digestion, increase natural energy, and help the body detox gently. With its crisp, fizzy taste and clean ingredients, homemade kombucha delivers all the benefits without the additives or high sugar found in store-bought versions.
Now we finally have a healthy option for the kids who are always asking for those sugary sodas all day long!
See Below for why we add sugar in Kombucha. Note: The sugar gets dissolved during fermentation, so the actual Kombucha doesn't have any added sugar.
Kombucha is a fermented food, so it lasts pretty long! It may just get slightly stronger after time.
I would say it keep the fresh taste for up to 3 months once opened.
To make homemade kombucha, you do need to add sugar — but not for the reason most people think. The sugar isn’t added to make the drink sweet, and it isn’t there to be consumed by you. It’s added to feed the SCOBY, the living culture that ferments the tea.
Here’s what actually happens:
When you add sugar to the tea, the SCOBY begins to eat it.
During fermentation, the SCOBY converts the sugar into probiotics, beneficial acids, enzymes, and natural carbonation.
As the days pass, the sugar level drops, and the kombucha becomes tangier and less sweet.
By the time it’s ready to drink, most of the sugar has been consumed by the culture, not your body.
So the sugar is simply fuel for fermentation — it’s transformed into healthy compounds, leaving you with a refreshing, low-sugar, probiotic-rich drink.
That’s the magic of real fermentation!