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How to Make a Ginger Bug

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How to Make a Ginger Bug for Natural Soda
Wellness Mama » Blog » Recipes » Drink Recipes » How to Make a Ginger Bug

If you aren’t familiar with naturally fermented beverages, you might be asking what the heck a ginger bug is and why you should make one…

A ginger bug is a culture of beneficial bacteria made from fresh ginger root and sugar. It is similar to a sourdough starter for bread or a kombucha SCOBY. The ginger imparts its flavor and as it naturally ferments, creates a mixture of beneficial bacteria.

Though not overly tasty by itself, the ginger bug is the base for many homemade sodas and tonics. We use it to make root beer, ginger ale, fruit “sodas”, and more.

The recipe we use is an adaption of the recipe in Nourishing Traditions (p. 591) and is the culture we use for all homemade sodas. There is also an easier way to make soda that doesn’t require a ginger bug if you prefer to skip this step, but to make an authentic soda, the bug is needed.

Ginger Bug Recipe

Once this ginger bug is made, it can be kept alive and used continuously to make healthy soda at any time.

How to Make a Ginger Bug for Natural Soda

Ginger Bug Recipe

How to create a ginger bug to use as the beneficial culture to make healthy fermented homemade sodas like old fashioned ginger ale or root beer.
Prep Time 5 minutes
Fermentation Time 5 days
Total Time 5 days 5 minutes
Author Katie Wells

Servings

Ingredients

  • 1-2 fresh organic ginger roots
  • ½ cup white sugar
  • 2 cups filtered water

Instructions

  • Cut a piece of ginger root about 1.5 inches long and grate to make 2-3 Tablespoons of grated ginger. You can also finely chop instead of grating. There is some debate about if it is better to peel the root or not. My general rule is that non-organic ginger gets peeled and organic just gets rinsed before grating.
  • Place the ginger in a quart size mason jar and add an equal amount of white sugar (2-3 Tablespoons). Nourishing Traditions insists that white sugar is needed to create the bug and I’ve had the best success with this, but a local friend claims that unrefined sugar or sugar with 1 tsp of molasses added works better. Try what you have and adapt as needed.
  • Add 2 cups of filtered water to the mason jar. Make sure that the water has been filtered so that it does not contain chlorine which can affect the culturing process.
  • Stir with a non-metal spoon and lightly cover. I cover with a coffee filter and rubber band.
  • Each day for the next five days, stir the mixture at least once and add 1 Tablespoon of grated ginger root and 1 Tablespoon of sugar. Depending on temperature, it may take up to eight days of adding sugar and ginger to create the desired culture.
  • You can tell if the culture is active if there are bubbles forming around the top of the mixture, it “fizzes” when stirred, and it takes on a sweet and mildly yeasty smell. It will also become somewhat cloudy and opaque. If mold appears on the top, scrape it off if it can be removed. It this happens more than once, you will need to start again. If the mixture hasn’t taken on these characteristics by the 7-8th day, you need to discard it and start again.
  • Keep the culture away from other cultures like sauerkraut and kombucha or it can cross-culture.
  • Once the ginger bug has cultured, it can be used to create fermented sodas and drinks at the ratio of ¼ cup ginger bug starter per quart of sweetened herbal mixtures for ginger ale or root beer or diluted fruit juice for fruit flavored sodas.

Notes

To keep the bug alive and continue growing it, you will need to feed it regularly. Add 1 teaspoon minced ginger and 1 teaspoon sugar per day if kept at room temperature. You can also “rest” it in the fridge and feed it 1 Tablespoon each of ginger and sugar once a week. To reactivate it, remove and let it reach room temperature and begin feeding it again.

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Do you have a pet ginger “bug” sitting on your counter? Will you make one?

A ginger bug is a culture of beneficial bacteria made from ginger root and is the starter culture for many homemade fermented sodas and drinks.

Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Wellness Mama and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of six, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. WellnessMama.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Wellness Mama research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Wellness Mama Cookbook and The Wellness Mama 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

431 responses to “How to Make a Ginger Bug”

  1. Gail Lipton Avatar
    Gail Lipton

    Katie,

    I will try this. Thank you for founding Wellness Mama. I haven’t made a lot of things but your site makes me more mindful in life. Mindful about what goes into my body, the world & people. Keep up the great love of what you do. G

  2. Mary Avatar

    I’ve made the ginger bug and it seems great! My question is this – when I keep it alive in the refrigerator, adding ginger and sugar once a week, do I need to add more water at some point? Or does it eventually get all used up and I start again?

  3. Usama Avatar

    Hi
    Is ginger bug contains alcohol or not? If it contains alcohol what is proportion?

  4. Judy Avatar

    4 stars
    Ginger bugs have changed our drinking habits! Oh my! My husband finally is drinking fermented sodas…grape, dark cherry so far. He doesn’t mind but won’t drink your amazing coffee kombucha, which I have to really be temperate with! I make 3 cups of bug at a time, as this will service roughly 3 gallons of soda. I store it in the fridge between soda batches, each batch roughly a week and a half apart. I’ve never read about feeding it nor have I ever fed it will it rested and there have been no issues with it going bad nor failing to make outstanding foamy bubbles carbonated soda in 3 days! Only once did it take 4 days, when the house temp dropped suddenly one nite .
    Curious why the feeding? Is it because the recipe calls for double the amount that I make? Thanks!

  5. Laurie Avatar

    I have mushrooms or toadstools growing quit near my ginger. Would it still be safe to use or should I dig the ginger up?

  6. joanne Avatar

    I’ve had the ginger, sugar and water on my counter for days but nothing is happening. no fizz. it’s been at least 7 days. is it possible that some ginger won’t work?

  7. Edye D. Avatar

    5 stars
    Can’t wait to try this, heading to store now! I’m an avid bread maker & homemade wines, (plus LOVE ginger ale – drink it every day!), so this seems the perfect next step for me.. homemade ginger ale, yum! Thanks for the recipe ?

  8. reta Avatar

    So after the bug is ready to use, and you use it all say in a day or so. When and do you start adding water to it again. Thanks for the recipe.

  9. Kyre D. Avatar
    Kyre D.

    5 stars
    hi
    I have my bug culture ready now and am making the ginger ale…. I have a question about the bug… when I let it rest in the fridge and feed it one a week, do I keep the coffee filter lid on it OR do I put an air tight lid on it?

    Thank you 🙂

  10. Ginny Avatar

    Loving this! I’ve made the bug and your gingerale 2x now! I have a question about keeping the bug going. After I use 1/2 cup for the gingerale, should I add 1/2 c water to my bug? Do I let it sit? How do I use my bug and keep growing it, exactly? Thanks!

  11. Cheryl Avatar

    Hi, and yes, I plan on making this tomorrow. I have all the ingredients!
    I also have a question…Could you tell
    us how much of the sugar content is
    fermented out, say if we use 1/3 fruit
    juice and 2/3 filtered water for the final phase and ferment.? We’re watching
    our sugar intake. Thank you.
    CW

  12. Cassie Avatar
    Cassie

    When using the bug, do you add water to maintain the amount of liquid? Or do you use it up and start over with new bug?

    1. David A Avatar
      David A

      I add ginger, water and sugar almost daily as I make a batch about every three days and keep it going for about a month then make a new batch of bug. I will remove some of the spent ginger as necessary when the jar starts to get full.

  13. Lesley Avatar

    Hello! I am Lesley. I was diagnosed with Chrones in 2009. It almost killed me. Recovering from it physically was going to be the tough part. I Was Wrong! Learning what to eat or not to eat was, and still is, difficult at times. Only, just recently, have started researching different ways to keep my belly calm without breaking the bank or difficult finding ingredients. When I heard that the Kimchi I had been eating for years was a type of super food do to natural fermentation, I had to learn more. With all that said, here I am wanting to thank you and others like you, for having made fermentation information a godsend. My first time will be the ginger bug. Ginger ale is the only carbonated beverage I drink. With this ginger bug, I can finally enjoy other fizzy, good for my belly, beverages. Wish me luck and thanks again!

    1. David A Avatar

      Good for you taking the first steps. Fermentation is great and their are many places to find information. Making this is the start to making healthy soda the way it was made before we carbonated drinks. Making the but is not the drink but the fermenting agent. Once you have that you can make what ever flavor you want. the batch I have going now (tea) has ginger, cinnamon stick, Fenugreek seed and star anise. I use a little less than a quarter cup for 36 Oz. I have even use frozen pineapple and orange peel in the tee when I boil and steep it. Don’t hold yourself back but use your imagination. Good luck.

    2. Laurence Avatar
      Laurence

      5 stars
      Good Luck. Fermented foods have been a blessing for me and my family. I have a friend with Chrones and was always in and out of hospitals until he started reading the research the Israels have done on Chrones and medical marijuana. He has had a much improved quality of life since he started using CBD and/or THC oils. Just something else to consider if you haven’t already.

  14. Heather Avatar

    Have you heard of a ginger bug turning pink? I have 2 that are about 8 months old & after this last round of rebuilding them post making ale, they’re now a light pink color. I peeled & shredded the same brand of ginger from the grocery. They smell correct. They they are bubbling nicely, but the liquid is cloudy & pink.

  15. Melissa Avatar
    Melissa

    In Costa Rica they use brown sugar .. tapa de dulce to make it.

  16. Navleen Avatar

    If I keep the jar in the sun, like we do with the Indian kombucha called ‘Kanji’ similar to kvaas, will that be okay for the bug or will it kill it ? Please let me know.

  17. Barbara Avatar

    I have made ginger ale for several years, then due to “life issues” stopped for about three years. During the time I made it was very successful and don’t remember any big issues. However, this time my bug was/is fine . . . gets bubbly. But EVERY time I then transfer it to other jars to make the ginger ale it gets gelatinous – like egg white. I have done three batches from the same bug. The bug continues to be fine, but after 2-3 days the ginger ale gets thick. I have no idea why this is happening. Suggestions?? PLEASE HELP!! Thank you.

  18. Sheila Avatar

    HI! I love ginger brew and I am going to try and make some ginger bug. I was wondering if I need to still filter my water if it comes from out well and is not treated. Thanks Sheila

  19. Christina Avatar
    Christina

    When making the ginger bug, would it work to add a capsule of probiotic to introduce additional strains?

    Thanks for this recipe!

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