Daniel is a really inspiring guy , who exposes his *kambhchian* passion without keeping any business secrets , and his smiling face reveals his enthusiasm in this small business. Keep it up Daniel ! Anand from Mauritius
Love this!! I’ve been home brewing for a while and was so curious how kombucha is made in large batches/commercially. Thanks for showing every part of the process, even the whole house water filter!
I've watched this video twice because it's one of the bast videos I've seen about starting a kombucha business. Thank you for the time and effort that went into making it!
Love this video! I started brewing kombucha at home this year and it's definitely my new favorite hobby. Thank you so much for showing the whole commercial brew process with detailed info! So happy I clicked! Inspired by Daniel and his passion!!!
Glad I saw this. I get kombucha from Wild Hare in longwood on tap and did not realize this is the brewer for it until I noticed the flavors and they are in the same area.
@@TheFarmacy Absolutely , we are setting up a Kombucha business here in Germany and we want are going the traditional way to preserve the health and nutritional value of Kombucha and not focus only on massive industrial output. So it's great to see others out there, successfully doing the same !! Thanks again and good luck with everything!
I'm so glad you've gotten to watch! Daniel is seriously the nicest, hard working yet laid back guy ever. Thanks so much for watching, and stay tuned we will soon have a kombucha "How To" from Daniel too!
Maybe I didn’t realize but I think you didn’t talk about temperature fermentation. How they keep temperature under control? I guess it’s important to fix a temperature over the fermentation long.
I like the cold brewing ideai - however here our tap water is at 4'C so we need to heat the water anyways... so we heat about 20% of the water to 80'C to infuse our tea, then we blend with 4'C water so we have the erfect temperature to pitch our starter culture. good to see some other companies making good stuff !
I love this video, big space and well organized, it was useful for me to do some changes in my process, i have a little one in south america but need more improvements to support more demand. Thanks for this video
Hi there I'd like to find out something. My self and my business partner have been using Glass to ferment our Kumbuchu. My question is doesn't the metal you use to ferment give off a different taste to the liquid?
The pellicle isn't the scoby! I'm happy to see this updated video, and fingers crossed I can join the ranks of professional kombucha brewers at some point in time!
You're teaching me something here! I've literally never heard the work pellicle before and I've been doing this a long time :) Please elaborate! Thanks so much for watching this new video, sounds like you are already well on your way to being a Kombucha Master.
@@TheFarmacy A pellicle is common in the brewing industry when using mixed cultures to ferment beer. Typically a collection of wild yeasts (Brettanomyces variants), brewing yeasts (Saccharomyces) and Bacteria (Pediococus/Lactobacillus etc). These ferments also create acidity but we want more lactic acid derived acidity rather than acetic although that does exist to a degree in various Flanders Red Ales.
@@TheFarmacy all the misinformation aside in this world, the pellicle is the cellulose biofilm made by the scoby (the symbiotic culture of bacteria and yeast). Now, the pellicle will have some bacteria and yeast in it, which is where the confusion arises. You can even start a brew with just the pellicle but as you know this is slow and inconsistent. A proper starter consists of the true Scoby, which is the kombucha itself. I’d be happy to share some of the science, you already know the art! ;-) let me know!
you said you cold brew .. do you mean you just dip the team bags in the water without any heat? how does it extract the tea flavor, oils, ...? just by sitting in the water?
Awesome video. I'm an engineer in georgia and have been home brewing for about a year. My wife and I have applied for an LLC and have started the process, but recently found out that you cannot sell from your house. How did you make that first step into commercial brewing? What were some pitfalls that you have come across?
To start you need to either rent or build a commercial kitchen. Then you usually have to go through GAPS training and have your local extension office come in and witness you make your product and they test here in Kentucky (and probably all places in US) that your alcohol content is below 1%. (If you are making hard booch it will need to go to the federal level and you will be looking at tons of hoops for liquor licence I believe.) Hope this helps! First place to start is to contact your local extension office or food safety branch. Get a list of commercial kitchens that are rent-able, then call around. You need a place that has storage for kombucha, since it has to ferment. Hope this helps.
Brian at Short Circuited Brewers has a video all about that flow meter and installation. th-cam.com/video/6-gJct83VoY/w-d-xo.html Cheers Bryan Jenkins!
Keg washing is a manual, but very detailed process. We got the process down efficiently! We use a DIGITEN flow meter and it was fantastically! Very accurate.
Hot water heaters and RO systems are very popular in my state not too expensive for a super nice water heater similar to this guys got is like 1200-1500 bucks
Hey, great video! I was just wondering, how do they stop the fermentation to keep the final alcohol percentage within legal limits? From brewery to shop it will still brew even when kept in fridge. Do they filter or pausterize?
They do not filter nor pasteurize. They developed a series of natural brewing techniques to favor the bacteria and control the yeast, both of which help to reduce alcohol production. Thanks so much for watching!
Hi Gadescu, we keep the alcohol down by favoring the bacteria growth (vs yeast). We clean out the container between every batch and start with very strong, clear starter. This helps keep alcohol down and promotes a clean, crisp flavor!
Hey there! Love the video. Keep it up :) One question. He said, that he second ferments the Kombucha in the kegs and puts them into the refrigerator... But on low temperature there won't be any fermentation at all, or am I wrong? Greetings :)
Sauerkraut does not require a starter, i make 3 qts a month. neither does Kombucha, it takes longer to ferment the 1st batch but you dont need a starter.
Wait I thought you where only allowed to ferment Kombucha in glass and yet I see big stainless steal tanks. What's up with that? I also was told not to use frozen fruit in the second fermentation yet this guy does. So all these rule I hear may not be true.
Remember being a teenager with new shoes and you had to scuff them up because everybody made fun of you? That's what this guy needs to do with his teeth.
carbonating the kombucha is like carbonated soft drinks... creates acidity.. not good.. best to leave it naturally carbonated by the fermentation process... but it's a commercial product so that's the downside
Well, I'm definitely not a pro, but will keep that in mind next time and try to keep the "likes" to a minimum ;). Thanks for watching, glad you liked the video! We just posted a tutorial by the same guy on how to make your own if you wanna give it a watch too!
Daniel is a really inspiring guy , who exposes his *kambhchian* passion without keeping any business secrets , and his smiling face reveals his enthusiasm in this small business. Keep it up Daniel !
Anand from Mauritius
Love this!! I’ve been home brewing for a while and was so curious how kombucha is made in large batches/commercially. Thanks for showing every part of the process, even the whole house water filter!
Thanks so much for watching and happy brewing!
I've watched this video twice because it's one of the bast videos I've seen about starting a kombucha business. Thank you for the time and effort that went into making it!
@The Farmacy Thank you for taking the time to do this tour. Love the enthusiasm and passion that Daniel has. I have to check out your place now 🙂
Wow amazing. Daniel is a great man, passionate, and a low key genius. Love this Kombucha!
I just ordered my first scoby. I’ll have it in a couple days. Next I’ll be getting kefir grains.
Love this video! I started brewing kombucha at home this year and it's definitely my new favorite hobby. Thank you so much for showing the whole commercial brew process with detailed info! So happy I clicked! Inspired by Daniel and his passion!!!
Thank you for tuning in!
What are your favorite home brew flavors? I like pineapple, grape and peach.
Love this guy. His passion, enthusiasm, drive to make better Kombucha and his smile is priceless. Good luck to him!
Thanks so much! And you've hit the nail on the head, he is the nicest guy, and genuinely loves what he does. SO glad that comes through on the video!
"it is the same carbon dioxide molecule".......... really that was smooth and flew over most peoples heads. He is truly a salesman.
Is it different?
@@josephmoonjely5729nope
Do you have some video how brewing and falvoring process going at home ?
Very cool facility and business. Thanks for giving us an inside look, well done! Been a home brewer now for about 4 years.
Glad I saw this. I get kombucha from Wild Hare in longwood on tap and did not realize this is the brewer for it until I noticed the flavors and they are in the same area.
Yes! Lots of local shops source his booch around here. It's the best! Glad you got some ;)
Yes! Wild Hare is one of our favorite and longest customers!
what a fascinating video. Daniel seems like a great entrepreneur. Love his passion, innovation and business mindset!
How do you avoid the formation of a scoby inside the bottle? with the plate filter press?
Thanks for this Video, fantastic work, great vibe and I love that you brew the traditional way! Greetings from Berlin and all the best!
Thank you so much! And yes, Living Vitalitea does this the right way!
@@TheFarmacy Absolutely , we are setting up a Kombucha business here in Germany and we want are going the traditional way to preserve the health and nutritional value of Kombucha and not focus only on massive industrial output. So it's great to see others out there, successfully doing the same !! Thanks again and good luck with everything!
Thank you!
Love this video. Very insightful and absolutely love it!
Thanks so much for watching and glad you love it!
How does Daniel measure the Alcohol content in his Kombucha?
Waawwww... My dream! To have my Kombucha factory!!! Congratulation guys!
Lovely tour.
Thanks for watching!!
@@TheFarmacy need support on making kombucha, what pH to be maintained before fermentation and after fermentation.
Very cool to see! Thanks for sharing this!
Thanks so much for watching!
So glad i bumped into this video, thanks! So cool knowing Daniel is Brazilian like me. (Brazilian flag at the end + drums)
I'm so glad you've gotten to watch! Daniel is seriously the nicest, hard working yet laid back guy ever. Thanks so much for watching, and stay tuned we will soon have a kombucha "How To" from Daniel too!
Love this video. Thank you
Thank you for watching and happy brewing!!
Daniel is a great success story and his set up is awesome and aspiring ... thanks bro
We agree, he’s an awesome guy and awesome business!
Also this channel is SO COOL I'm so glad I found it!
Thanks so much for watching and so glad you found us too!
What water flow meter is that?
whoa.great tour
thanks so much for watching!
Maybe I didn’t realize but I think you didn’t talk about temperature fermentation. How they keep temperature under control? I guess it’s important to fix a temperature over the fermentation long.
Hi, we control the temperature using the AC and heater system inside the warehouse. We keep it between 65F and 88F.
Looks good. Awesome video
Thank you for watching!
Thank you. This is good.
Wish you all the best from Dubai
Thanks for watching!
Thank you for sharing. Lovely success story and good luck to Daniel going into the future with his Kombucha brewing. Greetings from South Africa.
What a cool dude. I want a freaking kegerator in my home. How dope
I like the cold brewing ideai - however here our tap water is at 4'C so we need to heat the water anyways... so we heat about 20% of the water to 80'C to infuse our tea, then we blend with 4'C water so we have the erfect temperature to pitch our starter culture.
good to see some other companies making good stuff !
is it good for health
Yes it is!
No, it's not good for health. I drank it once and I died.
Thanks for this video!
Love this ❤best wishes
I love this video, big space and well organized, it was useful for me to do some changes in my process, i have a little one in south america but need more improvements to support more demand. Thanks for this video
Thanks a lot I have a question how do you preserve your kombucha when packed ?
I have a question: since they are cold brewing all their tea, they only need the hot water supply for cleaning purposes, right?
Do they pasturize before they bottle it off?
The kombucha is not pasteurized, which preserves all of the live beneficial bacteria!
We sell his Kombucha at our kava bar! I absolutely love his product! Very clean and always fresh taste! We are in Tampa, FL Indica Cafe ❤️
So glad you’ve got the good stuff! We love it too!
fine as a wine
agreed!
He owned that interview.
Hi there I'd like to find out something. My self and my business partner have been using Glass to ferment our Kumbuchu. My question is doesn't the metal you use to ferment give off a different taste to the liquid?
Hi, not at all. Stainless Steel we use is food grade and does not react to the kombucha. It's high quality! Cheers
Thank you for the answer Daniel! You’re amazing
Very good tour
But we have not seen the flavoring stage
The pellicle isn't the scoby!
I'm happy to see this updated video, and fingers crossed I can join the ranks of professional kombucha brewers at some point in time!
You're teaching me something here! I've literally never heard the work pellicle before and I've been doing this a long time :) Please elaborate!
Thanks so much for watching this new video, sounds like you are already well on your way to being a Kombucha Master.
@@TheFarmacy A pellicle is common in the brewing industry when using mixed cultures to ferment beer. Typically a collection of wild yeasts (Brettanomyces variants), brewing yeasts (Saccharomyces) and Bacteria (Pediococus/Lactobacillus etc). These ferments also create acidity but we want more lactic acid derived acidity rather than acetic although that does exist to a degree in various Flanders Red Ales.
@@TheFarmacy all the misinformation aside in this world, the pellicle is the cellulose biofilm made by the scoby (the symbiotic culture of bacteria and yeast). Now, the pellicle will have some bacteria and yeast in it, which is where the confusion arises. You can even start a brew with just the pellicle but as you know this is slow and inconsistent. A proper starter consists of the true Scoby, which is the kombucha itself. I’d be happy to share some of the science, you already know the art! ;-) let me know!
Great, love it !
Is it safe to use metal tanks?
Yes it is safe to use food grade stainless steel :)
What brewing system does he use to brew? Electric, gas?
Hello, I know this is random but do you know how to package kombucha for longer shelf life without refrigeration? Thank you
Only way would be to pasteurize but that would also kill the probiotics
When they add starter do they also add a SCOBY?
Yes, the SCOBY is in with the starter! And the fresh tea.
We no longer add scoby to our new batches, only the starter!
i do it in glass jar,can i make kombucha in stainless steel vessel???
you said you cold brew .. do you mean you just dip the team bags in the water without any heat? how does it extract the tea flavor, oils, ...? just by sitting in the water?
Awesome video. I'm an engineer in georgia and have been home brewing for about a year. My wife and I have applied for an LLC and have started the process, but recently found out that you cannot sell from your house. How did you make that first step into commercial brewing? What were some pitfalls that you have come across?
To start you need to either rent or build a commercial kitchen. Then you usually have to go through GAPS training and have your local extension office come in and witness you make your product and they test here in Kentucky (and probably all places in US) that your alcohol content is below 1%. (If you are making hard booch it will need to go to the federal level and you will be looking at tons of hoops for liquor licence I believe.) Hope this helps! First place to start is to contact your local extension office or food safety branch. Get a list of commercial kitchens that are rent-able, then call around. You need a place that has storage for kombucha, since it has to ferment. Hope this helps.
This video was amazing! Two questions: what is that awesome water flow meter called and how does he clean all those kegs efficiently?
Brian at Short Circuited Brewers has a video all about that flow meter and installation.
th-cam.com/video/6-gJct83VoY/w-d-xo.html
Cheers Bryan Jenkins!
Keg washing is a manual, but very detailed process. We got the process down efficiently! We use a DIGITEN flow meter and it was fantastically! Very accurate.
My Kombucha is way too carbonated. I have adjusted the co2 with no results.?
Hot water heaters and RO systems are very popular in my state not too expensive for a super nice water heater similar to this guys got is like 1200-1500 bucks
thanks for the info! That sounds like a great way to go.
Are these metal drums? I believe one should use only glass or food grade plastic ! Isn’t it?
Food grade stainless steel are perfectly safe for kombucha brewing. We use open top "wine fermenters"... very good quality.
Place of Great Osho
🙏💜beautiful people
Amazing 🎉
wait so are they just cold-brewing green jun tea?
And how is stainless steel doesn't kill scoby?
Hey, great video! I was just wondering, how do they stop the fermentation to keep the final alcohol percentage within legal limits? From brewery to shop it will still brew even when kept in fridge. Do they filter or pausterize?
They do not filter nor pasteurize. They developed a series of natural brewing techniques to favor the bacteria and control the yeast, both of which help to reduce alcohol production. Thanks so much for watching!
good question. Never pasteurize as it kills the bacteria. Filter or keep in a cool temperature. That is the way i do
Hi Gadescu, we keep the alcohol down by favoring the bacteria growth (vs yeast). We clean out the container between every batch and start with very strong, clear starter. This helps keep alcohol down and promotes a clean, crisp flavor!
I keep my alcohol level down by not adding more sugar than I need, but then I got my intro to brewing by making wine.
‘One of our trade secrets’… proceeds to tell the trade secrets 😂
Hey there!
Love the video. Keep it up :)
One question. He said, that he second ferments the Kombucha in the kegs and puts them into the refrigerator... But on low temperature there won't be any fermentation at all, or am I wrong?
Greetings :)
no fermentation at all, its not for secondary fermentation, its just for flavouring
or maybe it ferments a little, but just a little because of temperature..
Thank you for the reply, and yes it’s just for flavor!
Thanks!
@@TheFarmacy thanks a lot for this video. I have one question. how does he ferments f2 process, can't understand :(
adaptogens are the key to long term health
say hi from indonesia,, oh damn after watching this i wanna make my own kombucha
"Is very high vibration" xd
Daniel is really really handsome ♥️
As a plumber I can tell u that’s not enough filtration for something that big
Sauerkraut does not require a starter, i make 3 qts a month. neither does Kombucha, it takes longer to ferment the 1st batch but you dont need a starter.
The secret sauce is the high vibration filter
Could you use a 10% savings on your next apparel order? T-shirts, polos hats, etc. We can make it possible for you.
BTW, I love your products!
Forced carbonation?
Is Kombucha allowed to touch the metal? As far as I knew ... such a thing is not allowed. Thank you !
food grade stainless steel is fine
@@4seenJourney Thank you 🙂
thanks for the answer!
You're most welcome :) @@TheFarmacy
play at 1.25 speed
That’s probably a great idea!
Wait I thought you where only allowed to ferment Kombucha in glass and yet I see big stainless steal tanks. What's up with that? I also was told not to use frozen fruit in the second fermentation yet this guy does. So all these rule I hear may not be true.
I love smart CEO's. He has done the research. So inspiring. 🥰
I’m confused as to why this dude thinks his flax fibers are vibrating
Does Kombucha whiten your teeth? 😂
Daniel does have amazingly white teeth! LOL
Only if it's a dentist.
"Crazy virus junk" lmao
That pretty much sums it up 😂
Wow, este cara é brasileiro? 🤣
Remember being a teenager with new shoes and you had to scuff them up because everybody made fun of you? That's what this guy needs to do with his teeth.
carbonating the kombucha is like carbonated soft drinks... creates acidity.. not good.. best to leave it naturally carbonated by the fermentation process... but it's a commercial product so that's the downside
veery white teeth..
Actually the C stands for culture, not community
Also, those kind of filters don’t remove chlorine.
You have that bad habit of saying "like" constantly. Not good for an interviewer. But nice video with good information.
Well, I'm definitely not a pro, but will keep that in mind next time and try to keep the "likes" to a minimum ;). Thanks for watching, glad you liked the video! We just posted a tutorial by the same guy on how to make your own if you wanna give it a watch too!
can you not wear such informal clothing when doing tours etc? looks like complete amateur.
Wtf?
@@xdoveinthedark?
lol no one cares :)