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The science: Tepache ferments quickly because the pineapple skins are covered in wild yeasts that love sugar. In the warm ambient temperature, they multiply rapidly, creating CO2 (bubbles) and a small amount of alcohol (usually 1-2%, occasionally up to 3%). By stopping the fermentation early and refrigerating, you capture that perfect sweet-tart-fizzy moment before it becomes wine, and long before it becomes vinegar.

Sharon's tip: If you're nervous about timing, taste it at 48 hours. Still too sweet? Leave it another 12-24 hours. Getting nicely tangy? Strain and refrigerate. Trust your palate - tepache should make you want another glass, not pucker up like vinegar does.

Serving suggestions: Traditional Mexican street-style over ice, or mix with beer for a tepache chelada, add to cocktails in place of pineapple juice, or blend with coconut water for a probiotic sports drink.

Make both: Start a tepache for immediate enjoyment, and when you strain it, don't throw those pineapple pieces away - they can go straight into making pineapple vinegar! The yeasts are already active, so your vinegar will get a flying start.

For more: This recipe gives you everything you need to make excellent tepache, but for deeper exploration of variations, troubleshooting, and the cultural history of this beautiful drink, see the full chapter in my book Wild Drinks.

Written by Sharon Flynn

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