H.U.L.K. is here

Her Unfiltered Local Kombucha is now available in Hollywood, Los Angeles, CA!

We are excited to launch our new line of pure, unfiltered, local kombucha in small batches for discerning customers.

Available in 1-liter swing-top refillable bottles – returnable for your next batch!

Free tastings available by appointment – get in touch today!

Our ingredients

We use only organic ingredients. Our proprietary secondary ferment yields what many have called the best kombucha you’ve never tasted!

Not sold in stores. Not owned by a giant corporation.
Local deliveries only.

H.U.L.K. is made with decaffeinated organic green and white loose-leaf teas. Green tea has great health benefits that are brought to the next level with the probiotic “friendly” bacteria — fixes your microbiome up right!*


We use organic, vegan, gluten free dried cane juice that is completely consumed by the kombucha mother in the brewing process. The final brew is decaffeinated, sugar-free, slightly fizzy, and only 35 calories per 8-oz serving.**

Limited quantities available
Place your order today!

Current flavor sensations:

  • Star anise
  • Cardamom
  • Ginger
  • Hibiscus
  • Raisin
  • Mango
  • Cranberry
  • Apple
  • Lemon

Mix and match up to 3 flavors in each liter!

Ask about our special program for weekly subscribers =)

*No guarantees provided. No health claims presented. If you are unused to drinking kombucha, start small and slowly increase the amount you consume.

**A slight amount of alcohol is present in the finished brew, as a natural byproduct of the fermentation process. H.U.L.K. is not a hard kombucha. The ABV is similar to a near-beer.

Specialty infusions

The latest developments here at the CMI are super exciting, but we can’t share them just yet.

So in the meantime, we thought we’d update you about a few new flavor experiments we’ve been trying:

  • Hibiscus: a Vitamin C-rich flower that lends a ruby color and sweet-tart flavor to any brew. Especially nice when blended with sweet fruits – cherry, blueberry, mango, or blackberry.
  • Tinctures: kombucha blends well with any kind of alcohol — try it with an absinthe or vodka-based tincture that really packs a punch!
  • Vanilla: Whole vanilla beans added after bottling bring a beautiful richness to kombucha that must be tasted to be believed. Blended with fruits, like orange (creamsicle!) or strawberry, kombucha takes on a whole new delightful character.

Stay tuned – we hope to make some very exciting announcements soon!

Late summer kombucha cocktail recipe

Late summer… when everyone rushes to the beach to wring those last warm rays out of this time of year… the time when things end, and things begin… just in time for Labor Day weekend and saying goodbye to your summer fling, here’s a kombucha cocktail recipe that blends . Enjoy this bittersweet cocktail.

In a pint glass, over ice, combine:

  • 3 oz kombucha – I used a sour cherry cardamom homebrew with organic oolong black tea and organic green rooibos, but you can use any kind of kombucha. I wouldn’t advise using those weird green ones, or the ones with chia in them. Ginger would be nice. Homebrew is always best!
  • 3 oz cider – I used Crispin hard cider, but you could use any kind, including nonalcoholic.
  • 1.5 oz bourbon or whiskey – I used Temptation straight bourbon. Omit for nonalcoholic version.
  • 7 shakes of bitters – I used Angostura, but any kind will work
  • approx 3 oz soda/seltzer (to top)

Use another glass or a cocktail shaker to mix and enjoy.

Homemade Mozzarella and Pizza

Have you ever made mozzarella from scratch? It’s really easy and really fun! And the results are absolutely delicious. It only takes about half an hour! I use the instructions at SimpleBites. I only made a half-batch, because I only had a half-gallon of milk, but it was plenty for my pizza. I got my rennet from the Homebrew Emporium in Cambridge, and my citric acid from the Whole Foods at Fresh Market. I’d recommend the liquid rennet – it’s easier than dealing with the tablets.

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Pizza ingredients: whole-wheat pizza dough, tomato sauce, fresh mozzarella, tempeh bacon, mushrooms, and spinach

I used a batch of  Tuscan Pizza Company’s organic whole-wheat pizza dough, put some tomato sauce on it, and topped it with  my homemade mozzarella and some tempeh bacon, spinach, and mushrooms.

Going into the oven
Going into the oven

I made the tempeh bacon (using this recipe) with my latest add-on treat from Boston Organics: Rhapsody Natural Food’s Organic Tempeh. The mushrooms and spinach were also from this past week’s delivery (I love my weekly grocery box so much!) If you want high-quality organic produce and groceries delivered to your door from a B-Corp, and you live in the Boston area, I highly recommend Boston Organics!

Sign up using this promo code and get 10% off your first delivery! 

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Finished pizza!
Finished pizza!

Eating Animals

Tonight I finished reading Eating Animals, the book by Jonathan Safran Foer that’s been getting all kinds of press. I liked most of it, agreed with most of it, and am giving a copy to my mom for Christmas. I am glad the book is so thorough in describing problems with our current animal agricultural system, and I think that’s where it needed to focus in order to be most persuasive to the greatest number of people.

Unfortunately, it seems like a lot of people are taking in the arguments in Eating Animals and concluding that the solution lies in abolishing factory farming, not embracing veganism (and I think that’s probably by design). That’s what happens when you focus on the animal welfare story instead of the animal rights story. Even if “happy meat” is a total myth, people really really want to believe that it’s possible.
Here are some quotes from the book that I thought were particularly interesting.
From p. 109:

In the past fifty years, as factory farming spread from poultry to beef, dairy, and pork producers, the average cost of a new house increased nearly 1,500 percent; new cars climbed more than 1,400 percent; but the price of milk is up only 350 percent, and eggs and chicken meat haven’t even doubled. Taking inflation into account, animal protein costs less today than at any time in history. (That is, unless one also takes into account the externalized costs — farm subsidies, environmental impact, human disease, and so on — which makes the price historically high.

This is the kind of information that most people don’t know, but it makes total sense. If in fact “Americans eat 150 times as many chickens now as we did only 80 years ago” (p. 137 in the book and mentioned in several interviews he’s given), it’s because of this.

 By the way, according to the “Broilers: production and income” worksheet found on this page, there were 34 million broiler chickens produced in 1934 and 8.7 billion produced in 2004 -that’s 256 times more in 70 years.
Here’s another interesting passage (p. 220-221):

The idea of robustly humane animal agriculture isn’t so much seen as objectionable to most people who work in the name of animal rights as it is hopelessly romantic. From the vantage of animal rights, the animal welfare position is like proposing we take away basic legal rights for children, offer huge financial incentives for working children to death, place no social taboo on using goods made from child labor, and somehow expect that toothless laws advocating “child welfare” will ensure that they are treated well.

In a section discussing Michael Pollan’s work, Foer writes (p. 229):

…virtually all of the time, one’s choice is between cruelty and ecological destruction, and ceasing to eat animals… A meat industry that follows the ethics most of us hold (providing a good life and an easy death for animals, little waste) is not a fantasy, but it cannot deliver the immense amount of cheap meat per capita we currently enjoy.

And here’s a great, persuasive section from p. 257-258:
A good number of people seem to be tempted to continue supporting factory farms while also buying meat outside that system when it is available. That’s nice. But if it as far as our moral imaginations can stretch, then it’s hard to be optimistic about the future. Any plan that involves funneling money to the factory farm won’t end factory farming… If anyone finds in this book encouragement to buy some meat from alternative sources while buying factory farm meat as well, they have found something that isn’t here.
If we are at all serious about ending factory farming, then the absolute least we can do is stop sending checks to the absolute worst abusers. For some, the decision to eschew factory-farmed products will be easy. For others, the decision will be a hard one… the ultimate question is whether it is worth the inconvenience. We know, at least, that this decision will help prevent deforestation, curb global warming, reduce pollution, save oil reserves, lessen the burden on rural America, decrease human rights abuses, improve public health, and help eliminate the most systematic animal abuse in world history… How would making such a decision change us? … One of the greatest opportunities to live our values — or betray them — lies in the food we put on our plates.
Finally, in the closing passages, he writes this (p. 266-267):
It shouldn’t be the consumer’s responsibility to figure out what’s cruel and what’s kind, what’s environmentally destructive and what’s sustinable. Cruel and destructive food products should be illegal. We don’t need the option of buying children’s toys made with lead paint, or aerosols with chlorofluorocarbons, or medicines with unlabeled side effects. And we don’t need the option of buying factory-farmed animals.
However much we obfuscate or ignore it, we know that the factory farm is inhumane in the deepest sense of the word. And we know that there is something that matters in a deep way about the lives we create for the living beings most within our power. Our response to the factory farm is ultimately a test of how we respond to the powerless, to the most distant, to the voiceless — it is a test of how we act when no one is forcing us to act one way or another. Consistency is not required, but engagement with the problem is.

Kitchen Garden Day


table of goodies

Today we had a few people over to celebrate home-grown food. The food was really good! Afterwards we walked around the garden and discussed all the things we’re growing. If you’re not growing your own food, you should! So many reasons:

– Fun
– Thrift
– Grow varieties you can’t get in the store
– Know where your food came from
– Food is fresher and maybe even more nutritious (if you grow organically)
– Connection to nature
– Totally egalitarian (everyone eats)
– Great exercise
– Satisfying and fulfilling

Not that I would want to be responsible for growing everything we eat – nor do I think we could do so, on just 2/3 of an acre – but I love being able to step out the back door to pick ingredients for dinner!