Kids and adults alike can celebrate the holiday season with this bubbly, naturally probiotic rich fermented cranberry soda!

Fermented Cranberry Soda :: A naturally probiotic rich, kid friendly, real food soda!

Product links in this post are affiliate links. It does not cost you anything and helps maintain the free information on this site, as well as answer the questions of “what brand do you use?” Please know I never personally recommend any product I wouldn’t use on my own family.

I remember the year like it was yesterday…

My oldest was 2 1/2 and we were enjoying a delicious New Year’s dinner platter of raw cheeses, crackers, fruit, olives – the works! My husband and I had glasses of wine to ring in the new year and my toddler was all of a sudden not as excited about her glass of milk!

Fermented Cranberry Soda :: A naturally probiotic rich, kid friendly, real food soda!Listen…kids love to celebrate just as much as we do!

Creating amazing memories for them while they are little so that the smells, the people, the traditions, and the food have a warm, nostalgic feeling every time the holidays come around builds family pride and appreciation.

After that year we started making sure that the girls had something special to drink with us as we rang in the new year as a family! (They also love having these fun swing top bottles to make them feel like they have their own special drink!)

Fermented Cranberry Soda :: A naturally probiotic rich, kid friendly, real food soda!

Naturally fermented, bubbly cranberry soda became our New Year celebration tradition!

While some years I chose the easier route and served store bought Kombucha as I sleepily nursed newborns, or tended to crabby witching hour toddlers, we are now in a really cool season of kids that actually sleep through the night (most of the time!), and a couple of older kids that really love to help in the kitchen and truly appreciate real food.

Fermented Cranberry Soda :: A naturally probiotic rich, kid friendly, real food soda!Use real food to make real, bubbly soda!

All you need to make a traditionally fermented soda is a fermenting medium such as whey, a ginger bug, or brewed water kefir or kombucha, a little sugar for them to feed on to grow, and a really fun seasonal fruit to flavor it! You can choose whatever fermenting medium you wish, and the cranberries give this soda the most vibrant, beautiful red color you have ever seen! It is also helpful to have these grolsch/swing top type bottles to make your fermenting happen easily!

Fermented Cranberry Soda :: A naturally probiotic rich, kid friendly, real food soda!

A note on the sugar

The sugar in the recipe is for the probiotic bugs, not for you! While there is some sugar left behind, the amount is completely up to you! The longer you let the drink ferment, the less sugar there will be, as the bugs in the fermenting medium (the whey, ginger bug, or brewed water kefir or kombucha) eat up the sugar.

The beauty is in being able to taste it along the way. I check the bottles every couple days and decide when it’s done. It’s pretty cold up here so fermenting happens slow in the winter – if you are in a warmer climate I would recommend checking for taste daily.

Fermented Cranberry Soda :: A naturally probiotic rich, kid friendly, real food soda!Fermented drink newbies, this part is for you!

If you are new to fermenting drinks, don’t be intimidated! It is so easy!

If you are just starting out and don’t have a fermenting medium such as a ginger bug, water kefir grains, or a SCOBY for kombucha, simply strain off some whey from a container of quality yogurt and you’ll be good to go! Put a thin towel over a bowl, scoop a 32oz container of plain, whole milk yogurt into the towel, and then tie the towel up to a cupboard door handle. The whey will drip out into the bowl – you’ll need about 1 cup to make this drink recipe and that should take about an hour-ish to drip if you squeeze it a little. The leftover yogurt in the towel is essentially “Greek yogurt”, or, if you strain it completely, it is like cream cheese!

(If you are interested in getting into more fermenting, here is my full tutorial about getting into water kefir brewing, and I love these tutorials from The Nourished Kitchen on making and using a ginger bug, as well as how to brew kombucha.)

Fermented Cranberry Soda :: A naturally probiotic rich, kid friendly, real food soda!Happy New Year from my family to yours!

Have the kids help you bottle up something special to ring in the new year! The hands on time is pretty minimal – once it’s bottled it just needs some time to sit and work it’s bubble magic!

Fermented Cranberry Soda :: A naturally probiotic rich, kid friendly, real food soda!

Fermented Cranberry Soda

Renee - www.raisinggenerationnourished.com
Kids and adults alike can celebrate the holiday season with this bubbly, naturally probiotic rich fermented cranberry soda!
4.95 from 19 votes
Prep Time 5 minutes
Cook Time 10 minutes
Ferment 7 hours
Total Time 15 minutes
Course Drinks
Cuisine American
Servings 8 servings

Ingredients
  

  • 8 cups fresh cranberries
  • 2 quarts of water
  • 2 1/2 - 3 cups organic pure cane sugar
  • 1 cup whey OR 1 cup ginger bug, OR 1-2 quarts brewed water kefir or kombucha

Instructions
 

  • Put the cranberries, water, and sugar into a large soup pot and bring to a boil. Reduce to a simmer until the cranberries soften and burst. You can use the back of your wooden spoon or a potato masher to squish them up.
  • Pour the cranberry sugar mixture through a strainer over a gallon jar to strain the cranberry pulp from the sugary cranberry syrup using a fine mesh strainer. Use the back of your wooden spoon to push the liquid through the strainer, spreading the pulp around. The leftover pulp can be blended into a smoothie or stirred into yogurt or soaked oats.
  • Let the cranberry syrup cool to lukewarm/room temp and then stir in your fermenting medium (The whey, ginger bug, or brewed water kefir or kombucha). If using the whey or ginger bug, you'll have to add water to top off the gallon jar leaving a couple inches of head space
  • At this point, you can either put a tight lid on your jar to ferment, or transfer to swing top/grolsch style bottles to ferment. Leave the soda at room temp for a few days to a week, checking for taste daily. The rate of fermenting greatly depends on the environment in which you live. This time of year where I live the fermenting takes 7-10 days since it is so cold here (we do have heat but it is still quite cool - this week we were in the single digits for wind chills!). I leave the flip top bottles up in a high cupboard where the heat rises in the kitchen near my stove. I do find that my ferments finish up faster using the flip top bottles versus a jar with lid. A Pickle Pipe on your jars work just as good as flip top bottles in my experience too. (I love my Pickle Pipes!)
  • Once your cranberry soda is the taste and amount of natural carbonation you like, transfer your jar or bottles to the fridge to slow down the fermenting. They will keep in the fridge 3-4 weeks.
Keyword cranberry soda recipe, fermented cranberry soda, fermented cranberry soda recipe
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

More real food recipes you might like ::

Similar Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




107 Comments

        1. This looks amazing! I’m in the GAPS diet, so we can only do honey. Is this possible? I would think so since my kombucha feeds in honey….

          1. Hi Julie! Honey doesn’t work to ferment as well as sugar – the probiotic bugs eat up the sugar better than honey. You could give it a try – just watch for molding.

  1. I’ve gotten out of fermenting stuff lately but I think this is going to make me get back into it! My kids would go nuts over this and after this trip we are on in Mexico with the kids drinking tons of sugary pina coladas, they need to get back on the healthier drink train! This will be just the thing.

  2. I’m SO ready to celebrate 2017 and this drink makes me want to party already! I have to say I think it is so wonderful to see you and your husband want to include your kids in the festivities. What a fun way to make them (or anyone) feel special. Happy New Year!

  3. Can I just say that this is amazing?! The color of this is absolutely incredible and I imagine the taste must be simply tantalizing. Also, I love that it is wonderful that it is equally wonderful for adults and children alike.

  4. 5 stars
    Will the pickle pipes let all of the fizz out or just enough to keep it from exploding? I am a little nervous about having an explosion.

  5. Has anyone actually MADE this soda? Comment on the photos is great, and they are tempting, but how does it taste?

  6. Hi Renee, I make a lot of Kefir Milk and then Kefir Milk Cream Cheese. This gives me lots of Whey. With this recipe could I use Whey instead of filtered water as I have 12 Liters of Whey from making my cream cheese? Interesting enough I put fresh guavas through my food processor, then through a steel strainer to remove all the pips. The pulp was so thick that I thinned it out with Kefir Whey kept it in the fridge to make smoothies. Granted I did not add sugar to it. I need to use up all this Kefir Whey.
    Regards Frances from Sunny South Africa

    1. Hi Frances! I think you could swap some of the water for whey, but it might be too much and ferment a lot if you set it out to culture with all whey. I believe you can freeze whey – you could freeze it for using later too maybe?

  7. 5 stars
    This soda looks so great! I can’t wait to try making this at home. I’m curious to see if I can manage to make it look as good as the pictures. Hopefully it keeps some of that great cranberry flavor I love. This sounds like a great way to get the probiotics your body needs to help with digestion! Thank you for sharing!

  8. This looks so yummy! I just got a Fermentation Creation wide mouth airlock. Can I divide the ingredients proportionally to fit into a smaller Ball size. I don’t want to use the half gallon size because I don’t have that many cranberries.
    Thank you,
    Esther

  9. Soda is one of those things I hardly think about, but when I get the craving for it, nothing else will do. This is such a great alternative. Ferment anything and I’m pleased with it! This is a must-make xx

  10. Is this alcoholic? I made it and it tastes great but has a wine flavor and I’m kind of nervous about the kids drinking it??

    1. Hi Emily! The longer the bottles sit to ferment, the more it will taste that way – it won’t have much more than a .05% alcohol content. I serve 4 oz servings to my kiddos.

  11. When you say to use kombucha, do you mean the finished kombucha or a scoby? Or would either work? I really want to try this! It is beautiful!

  12. What a great way to get more probiotics. I need to make more fermented foods, and this sounds like a good one to try!

  13. 5 stars
    So, if I am understanding this, if I add a ginger bug, I also add more water to the gallon jar? Is it to be diluted? Thanks!! (Can’t wait to try this!! All ready to go)

  14. What is your opinion about using ginger bug and then brewed water kefir as the added water? So excited to try this!

    1. Hi Anjea! There will be a “fermented” or “alcohol” like aroma to any naturally fermented food. If it is growing green fuzzy stuff on the top, or it smells sour and “off” then you can toss it but that is very rare to happen.

  15. Can this work being made with less sugar. I like very tart cranberry drinks. I’d like to as little sugar as possible, even none if this will still ferment

    1. Hi Karen! The sugar is for the fermentation bugs to feed on – it will not work without this amount of sugar. The probiotic bugs actually eat the sugar, so by the time it ferments the sugar content is actually quite low, and this drink does have a great tart bite to it!

  16. Hi, I am very new to fermenting drinks and I was wondering if I can use honey or maple syrup as my sugar? My household is sugar cane intolerant. I am looking into making kefir and possibly a ginger bug.

    1. Hi Michelle! The sugar is for the probiotic bugs to “eat” – it ends up with less sugar but there is still some there. The bugs will not eat off honey or maple syrup very well and it won’t ferment properly!

  17. Can you use kombucha bought from the store as a starter? I’m new to this whole scene but the gorgeous red is irresistible. Thanks!

  18. Question on the kombucha. Do you add the cranberry syrup to the kombucha after the first fermentation or after the second fermentation when the kombucha is finished (in place of the juice and sugar). So excited to try this!!!

  19. 5 stars
    that sounds wonderful. used to make my own Kombucha but started buying it for convenience. This just may get me started again..Thank You

    1. Hi Megan! The probiotic bacteria feed best off sugar – honey does not always result in a good ferement, and could go bad. The bacteria eat up a good portion of the sugar.

  20. Hi, I’m excited to try this ferment. My questions is how probable an explosion is while fermenting this soda? Do you burp the bottles every day to let the gas escape? I’m guessing that once you put them in the fridge it is safer because the fermentation slows down considerably. But even then if you plan to keep them in the fridge for 2 or 3 weeks do you recommend burping them at all?

    1. Hi Annie! It would be a good idea to burp the bottles, yes. You’ll want to taste a little every day or so anyway to see where you want the taste to be. I’m in a pretty cold climate and the ferment happens slower here, so if it is warm where you are, then it could ferment much faster.

    1. Hi Jackie! No, whey is a milky liquid byproduct from making cheese/yogurt. To make whey protein powder, they take the whey, and remove the carbohydrates, fat, and water, and dehydrate it into a powder. So protein powder won’t work here.