Kombucha is a fermented beverage made from tea and sugar, where the addition of inoculum and subsequent fermentation is thought to produce unique health bioactives.[1] This inoculum is commonly referred to as 'tea fungus' and contains a mixture of bacteria and fungi which act during the fermentation process. A pellicle which forms during this process is referred to as the 'fungus', and the fungus produces alcohol which helps the bacteria produce the aforementioned bioactives.[2]
The tea used is from the Camellia sinensis plant and usually refers to the black tea, although green tea is sometimes used. When black tea is used (as black tea itself requires fermentation to be produced) the final kombucha product is sometimes referred to as being doubly fermented.
Kombucha is produced by making a tea from the plant Camellia sinensis (basic extraction being called 'green tea'), fermenting it initially to make black tea, and then fermenting it again with a mixture of bacteria and fungi and sugars to produce kombucha; in this sense, it is doubly fermented.
The essential organisms that make up the tea "fungus" are an acetic-acid producing strain of bacteria (usually the Acetobacter genus, both and being identified) and yeast.[1] Strains of lactic acid-producting (Lactobacillus) and gluconic acid-producing (Gluconobacter oxydans being identified) bacteria can also be present.[1]
There are various yeast fungi that are seen, including Brettanomyces/Dekkera, Candida, Kloeckera, Pichia, Saccharomyces, Saccharomycoides, Shizosaccharomyces, Torulospora and Zygosaccharomyces.[1][3] Although most have been unidentified, up to 163 strains of yeast have been detected,[1] with four major yeasts being Zygosaccharomyces bailii, T.delbrueckii, C.stellata, and S.pombe.[1]
Although kombucha contains a variety of bacteria and fungi, it appears to be safe for human consumption when properly processed and consumed in moderation (details in the safety and toxicology section).
The strains of bacteria used in kombucha fermentation are those that are acid-resistant and produce acids upon metabolizing ethanol and sugars, and while there are no standard yeast fungi used during this process, the ones that are most-often found also tend to also be acid-resistant and acid-producing.
Components of kombucha that are preexisting in the tea (Camellia sinensis) prior to fermentation include:
- Green tea catechins, which experience variable degradation rates (18-48%) with less degradation seen with green tea relative to black tea and less with EGCG relative to other catechins;[2] epigallocatechin (EGC) and epicatechin (EC) were noted to be markedly (30-50%) elevated after 12 days fermentation, thought to be due to the degragation or their gallated forms (EGCG and ECG, respectively).[2]
- Theaflavins found in black teas, where 5% is lost during 18 days fermentation[2]
- Thearubigins found in black tea, where 11% is lost during 18 days fermentation[2]
The standard tea polyphenols found in the Camellia sinensis plant and those produced during the intitial fermentation to get black tea (theaflavins and thearubigins) persist in kombucha, with the losses during the second fermentation being fairly minimal.
Components of kombucha tea produced during the fermentation process include:
- Alcohol (produced from added sugars via yeast) reaching 0.6g/100mL after 10 days[4]
- Acetic acid (produced from the alcohol via bacteria)[5] reaching 1.6g/100mL after 10 days;[4] this may be a high estimate, as other studies have noticed a plateau at 0.95g/100mL after 15 days followed by a decline[2]
- D-Saccharic acid 1,4-lactone (saccharolactone)[6]
- Succinic acid reaching 0.65g/100mL after 10 days[4]
- Lactic acid[5] peaking after three days of fermentation (when other acids required 15 days)[2] resulting in around 0.01g/100mL after 12 days[2]
- Gluconic acid[5] reaching 0.20g/100mL after 10 days[4]
- Glucuronic acid produced from glucose in the medium[7] reaching 0.38g/100mL after 10 days[4] although elsewhere a plateau of 0.23g/100mL has been noted around 7-12 days[2][7]
- Usnic acid[8][5]
- Citric acid has been noted to transiently occur after three days fermentation (less than 0.01g/100mL) although it's undetectable after 12 days[2]
- Carbon dioxide (produced from the acetic acid via bacteria), produced which separates the pellicle from the broth and creates an anaerobic/serum-starved environment[2]
Studies comparing the fermentation of green tea and black tea by the same fungal and bacterial colonies have failed to find any significant differences in the production of acids, aside from possibly more acetic acid with green tea relative to black tea.[2]
The fungal fermentation that produces kombucha creates a large variety of small acidic compounds, with the most notable one (thought to mediate the 'detoxification' effects) being D-Saccharic acid 1,4-lactone (Saccharolactone)