WATER KEFIR BOTTLING & CARBONATION (2024)

Carbon dioxide is a natural byproduct of fermentation. Since fermentation is most active at warmer temperatures, the way to build up carbon dioxide (ie: carbonation) is to allow the water kefir to keep fermenting in a sealed bottle at room temperature.

Transfer your flavored water kefir into bottles using a funnel. Be sure to use bottles that are made to handle carbonation (both the glass and cap must be designed to seal and handle high pressure. They can be found at brewing supply stores like Preserved). Leave about an inch of head space from the top of each bottle. Let the bottles continue to ferment in a warm place, out of direct sunlight for anywhere from 12-72 hours, checking for carbonation (the “tssssss” sound) often; kefir ferments (and therefore carbonates) VERY quickly. Once carbonated, transfer to the refrigerator and consume within 1 month. Cold temperatures slow down, but do not stop fermentation. Even after refrigeration, always open bottles slowly over a sink in case of geyser-like carbonation.

WATER KEFIR BOTTLING & CARBONATION (1)
WATER KEFIR BOTTLING & CARBONATION (2024)

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Geoffrey Lueilwitz

Last Updated:

Views: 5883

Rating: 5 / 5 (80 voted)

Reviews: 87% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Geoffrey Lueilwitz

Birthday: 1997-03-23

Address: 74183 Thomas Course, Port Micheal, OK 55446-1529

Phone: +13408645881558

Job: Global Representative

Hobby: Sailing, Vehicle restoration, Rowing, Ghost hunting, Scrapbooking, Rugby, Board sports

Introduction: My name is Geoffrey Lueilwitz, I am a zealous, encouraging, sparkling, enchanting, graceful, faithful, nice person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.