How to Make Kombucha in Canada (SCOBY Method)

Kombucha is fermented sweet tea, made with a culture called a SCOBY — a symbiotic colony of bacteria and yeast. Brew 4 litres of black or green tea, dissolve 1 cup of cane sugar, cool to room temperature, add 1 to 2 cups of starter kombucha plus a SCOBY, and cover with a breathable cloth for 7 to 14 days at 18 to 22 degrees Celsius. Taste at day 7 — finished kombucha is tart with light fizz. Bottle in swing-tops with fruit juice for a 24 to 48 hour second ferment to carbonate, then refrigerate. Source SCOBYs from Cultures for Health or local fermenting groups. Health Canada considers home kombucha safe at pH below 3.5 — verify with pH strips.

Commercial kombucha in Canada runs $4 to $6 per 500 mL bottle at Whole Foods, Loblaws, or Sobeys. The same volume from a home brew costs roughly $0.30 in tea and sugar — a 90 percent savings, plus full control over flavour and sweetness. The catch is the 10-day production cycle and the SCOBY-maintenance ritual. Once you’re set up, the rhythm is easy.

This guide covers the standard 4 L continuous-brew method with black tea, the swing-top second ferment for soda-level carbonation, and the safety pH verification Health Canada recommends.

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What a SCOBY is

SCOBY stands for “symbiotic colony of bacteria and yeast.” It’s a thick, rubbery, cream-coloured disc that grows on the surface of fermenting sweet tea. The bacteria (mostly Acetobacter) consume the alcohol that the yeast produces and turn it into acetic acid (vinegar). The yeasts consume sugar and produce alcohol and CO2.

The result is sweet tea fermented into tangy, mildly fizzy, mildly alcoholic (0.5 to 2 percent) probiotic beverage. The SCOBY itself isn’t eaten — it’s the workhorse that you keep through batch after batch.

A healthy SCOBY:

  • Floats or sinks; both are normal
  • Forms a new white layer (the “baby”) on top with each batch
  • Smells slightly vinegary
  • Looks cream-coloured with some brown streaks (yeast strings)

An unhealthy SCOBY:

  • Has fuzzy, coloured mould (green, black, pink, blue) on the surface — discard the batch
  • Smells rotten or sulphurous — discard
  • Has dissolved into the brew — not necessarily ruined, but compromised

Where to get a SCOBY in Canada

  • Cultures for Health (culturesforhealth.com) — ships dehydrated SCOBYs. About $20 CAD.
  • Local fermenting communities — every major Canadian city has Facebook groups where extras are shared free.
  • Grow your own from raw store-bought kombucha (GT’s Synergy, Health-Ade — must be raw/unpasteurized). Mix 1 cup raw kombucha + 1 cup cooled sweet tea, cover with breathable cloth, wait 2 to 4 weeks for a SCOBY to form.
  • Don’t buy from anonymous Amazon listings — quality unpredictable.

What you need

For one 4 L batch:

  • SCOBY (4 to 8 cm diameter)
  • 1 to 2 cups starter kombucha (comes with the SCOBY, or reserve from previous batches)
  • 8 black tea bags OR 4 tbsp loose-leaf black tea
  • 1 cup organic cane sugar — raw, brown, or white
  • 4 L filtered water — chlorine kills the SCOBY
  • 4 L glass jar (gallon-size pickle jar or large Mason jar)
  • Breathable cloth and rubber band
  • Plastic strainer (avoid metal, which corrodes SCOBY over time)
  • Swing-top bottles for second ferment (Grolsch-style)
  • pH test strips — confirm pH below 3.5 for safety

The first ferment (7 to 14 days)

  1. Brew strong sweet tea. Bring 2 L water to a boil. Steep 8 tea bags for 10 minutes. Remove bags. Dissolve 1 cup sugar.
  2. Cool to room temperature. Add 2 L cold filtered water. Verify under 30 °C — hot tea kills the SCOBY.
  3. Pour into glass jar. Add starter kombucha (1 to 2 cups).
  4. Add SCOBY. May sink, float, or sit sideways. All normal.
  5. Cover with breathable cloth and secure with rubber band. Never seal during first ferment — air access required.
  6. Ferment at 18 to 22 °C for 7 to 14 days. Don’t disturb the SCOBY. A new white baby SCOBY forms on top.
  7. Taste at day 7 with a straw (don’t dip anything). Should be tart, slightly sweet, mildly fizzy.
  8. Verify pH with a test strip — below 3.5 is safe.
  9. Remove SCOBY to a clean jar with 2 cups reserved kombucha for the next batch.

The second ferment (for fizz)

  1. Pour first-ferment kombucha into swing-top bottles, leaving 3 to 5 cm headspace.
  2. Add flavour: 1/4 cup fresh juice per 1 L OR 2 tbsp dried fruit.
  3. Seal tightly and ferment 24 to 72 hours at room temperature.
  4. Burp daily to release excess pressure.
  5. Refrigerate when desired fizz is reached.

Flavour combinations

Ginger-lemon (classic)

1 tbsp grated fresh ginger + juice of half a lemon per 1 L.

Berry blast

1/4 cup mixed fresh berries (strawberry, raspberry, blueberry) per 1 L.

Pomegranate-rose

1/4 cup pomegranate juice + 1 tsp dried rose petals per 1 L.

Mint-cucumber

1 sprig fresh mint + 4 thin slices cucumber per 1 L.

Maple-ginger (Canadian)

1 tbsp pure maple syrup + 1 tbsp grated ginger per 1 L.

Hibiscus-lime

1 tbsp dried hibiscus + 2 lime slices per 1 L.

Apple-cinnamon

1/4 cup apple juice + 1 cinnamon stick per 1 L.

Continuous-brew method

Once you’ve done 2 to 3 batch brews, switch to continuous brewing:

  1. Use a 4 L glass dispenser with a spigot.
  2. Maintain a constant 2 L of brewing kombucha + SCOBY.
  3. Draw off 1 to 2 cups at a time from the spigot.
  4. Top up with fresh sweet tea (cooled) to replace.
  5. The pH stays stable; the SCOBY stays healthy; you have kombucha ready any day.

Continuous brew is the standard for households drinking kombucha regularly.

Safety: the pH rule

Health Canada considers home kombucha safe at pH below 3.5. Verify with test strips at the end of each first ferment. If pH is above 3.5:

  • Ferment longer (3 to 5 more days) and re-test
  • Possible SCOBY issue — culture may be sluggish from cold or chlorine

Never drink kombucha that hasn’t reached safe pH.

Common problems

  • SCOBY sinks and stays at bottom. Normal for a new SCOBY in fresh tea. It’ll rise eventually as fermentation produces CO2.
  • Brown stringy strands in the brew. Yeast cells — harmless. Strain before second ferment if desired.
  • Mould on the SCOBY surface. Fuzzy, coloured patches mean discard the entire batch and the SCOBY. Start over with a fresh SCOBY.
  • Kombucha is too sweet after 14 days. SCOBY weak or temperature too cold. Add more starter; warm to 22 °C.
  • Kombucha is too sour / vinegary. Over-fermented. Use this batch as salad-dressing kombucha vinegar.
  • Bottles exploded during second ferment. Pressure too high. Burp daily. Use swing-tops rated for carbonation.
  • No fizz after second ferment. Not enough sugar source. Add more fruit juice; ferment longer.
  • Kombucha smells off (sulphur, rotten). Discard the entire batch and the SCOBY.

When to make this

Year-round. Kombucha is climate-independent. Many Canadians keep continuous-brew vessels going year-round on a kitchen counter rotation.

Next steps

Frequently asked questions

Where do I get a SCOBY in Canada?

Three options. First, Cultures for Health (culturesforhealth.com) ships dehydrated SCOBYs to Canada for about $20 CAD plus shipping. Second, local fermenting communities — every major Canadian city has Facebook groups where home brewers share extra SCOBYs for free (a healthy mother SCOBY produces a new 'baby' SCOBY every brew cycle, and brewers accumulate them fast). Third, grow your own from a bottle of raw unflavoured store-bought kombucha — GT's Synergy or Health-Ade work. Mix 1 cup of the raw kombucha with 1 cup of cooled sweet tea, cover with breathable cloth, and wait 2 to 4 weeks for a SCOBY to form on the surface.

Is home kombucha safe?

Yes, when properly fermented. Health Canada considers home kombucha safe at pH below 3.5 — the acid level that inhibits dangerous pathogens. Verify with pH strips at the end of each batch. Use only glass or food-safe plastic vessels — metal corrodes and contaminates the brew. The most common safety issue isn't the kombucha itself but mould on the SCOBY surface, which is visible (fuzzy, coloured) and means discard the batch. White or beige layers on the SCOBY are normal new culture; coloured fuzz is mould. When in doubt, discard.

Black tea or green tea?

Black tea is the traditional base and what most beginners should use — it produces the cleanest fermentation and the SCOBY stays healthiest on it long-term. Green tea makes a lighter, more delicate kombucha but the SCOBY can weaken over multiple batches. Most experienced home brewers alternate: 4 to 6 black-tea batches, then 1 to 2 green-tea batches, then back to black. Avoid Earl Grey and herbal teas for the first ferment — bergamot oil and many herbs harm the SCOBY. Oolong and pu-erh work but are pricier than black tea.

How long does kombucha keep?

Refrigerated and sealed, 2 to 3 months. The kombucha continues to slowly ferment in the fridge, getting more sour over time. After about 3 months it becomes too tart to drink (use it for salad dressing instead — kombucha vinegar). Unrefrigerated and sealed, fermentation continues at room temperature and bottles can over-carbonate or explode within 1 to 2 weeks — refrigerate immediately after the second ferment reaches your desired fizz level.

Sources

  • University of Guelph — Department of Food Science
  • Health Canada — Food safety guidance for fermented foods
  • Bernardin Complete Book of Home Preserving (latest edition)