:QUOTE [quotetype:personal] Kvass is what Russian grandmothers made from bread they could not waste. It is still the best version of that idea. :INFO What Kvass Is Kvass is a traditional Eastern European fermented beverage made from rye bread. Toasted rye provides color, malt flavor, and fermentable sugars. A small amount of yeast — wild or commercial — ferments those sugars into alcohol and CO2. The result is lightly effervescent, malty, tangy, and refreshing with roughly 0.5 to 1.5% ABV. The entire process takes 48 hours and costs almost nothing. :COUNTER.half 48 Hours | :COUNTER.half 0.5 to 1.5 Percent :PATH Toast and Steep the Rye Bread Toast rye bread slices until dark, then steep in boiling water. | :INFO Toast and Steep the Rye Bread Slice 500g of stale rye or dark sourdough bread. Toast in a 400°F oven until dark brown — almost burnt edges are fine. Darker toast gives deeper color and more complex malt character. Place the toasted bread in a large pot and pour 3 liters of boiling water over it. Cover and steep for 3 to 4 hours, then strain through a fine mesh sieve, pressing the bread firmly to extract all liquid. :PATH Add Sugar and Cool to Pitch Temperature Stir in sugar and cool the wort to 70 to 75 F before adding yeast. | :INFO Add Sugar and Cool to Pitch Temperature Stir 3 tablespoons of sugar into the warm strained liquid until dissolved. This adds fermentable material beyond the bread sugars. Cool the liquid to 70 to 75°F — use a cold water bath. Adding yeast to liquid above 80°F stresses or kills it. :PATH Pitch Yeast and Ferment Add a pinch of bread yeast, cover loosely, and ferment 24 to 36 hours. | :INFO Pitch Yeast and Ferment Add 1/4 teaspoon of active dry bread yeast or 1/8 teaspoon of instant yeast to the cooled liquid. Stir. Cover with a cloth — not an airtight lid — and ferment at room temperature for 24 to 36 hours. The kvass will bubble actively within a few hours. Taste at 24 hours — it should be lightly sour and pleasantly malty. :PATH Bottle and Refrigerate Strain into bottles, seal, and refrigerate to halt fermentation. | :INFO Bottle and Refrigerate Strain through a fine sieve or cheesecloth into clean bottles. Leave 1 inch of headspace. Seal and refrigerate immediately. The cold halts active fermentation. Kvass develops a light natural carbonation in the refrigerator over 12 to 24 hours. Consume within 3 to 5 days — kvass continues slowly souring and is best fresh. :CHECKLIST What You Need [ ] 500g stale rye or dark sourdough bread [ ] 3 liters water [ ] 3 tbsp sugar [ ] 1/4 tsp active dry yeast [ ] Large pot for steeping [ ] Fine mesh strainer or cheesecloth [ ] Clean bottles for bottling :NOTE The Bread Quality Determines the Kvass Quality Use real rye bread — sourdough rye or a dense dark rye loaf. Commercial white bread makes insipid kvass with little flavor. The darker the bread, the deeper the malt and color in the finished drink. Stale bread works better than fresh — it has already lost moisture and toasts more evenly. :QUOTE [quotetype:personal] Forty-eight hours from now, stale bread becomes something worth drinking. Do not skip the toasting step. :LINK https://honest-food.net/kvass-recipe/ Hank Shaw — Traditional Russian Kvass Recipe