15 Ancient Living Drinks Your Body Is Secretly Begging For

In this video, we uncover 15 ancient fermented drinks that our ancestors relied on for thousands of years to naturally protect their gut health and vitality. While modern grocery shelves are lined with heavily pasteurized, artificially sweetened, commercialized "health drinks" that have had the life cooked completely out of them, traditional ferments were made right on the kitchen counter using nothing but water, time, and wild cultures. From traditional milk kefir and sparkling Mexican tepache to the resourcefulness of old-world bread kvass, we explore how easy it is to reclaim your self-sufficiency and brew your own fizzy, probiotic tonics at home for pennies. 🌿 Download our FREE Natural Living Starter Kit. Simple swaps to replace modern products with what nature already provides. → https://natural-living-library.kit.co... For partnerships, sponsorships, and paid opportunities: [email protected] In this video: 00:00 — The Industrialized "Health Drink" Lie 00:57 — 15: Oxymel (The Ancient Greco-Roman Reset Tonic) 02:12 — 14: Ayran 03:00 — 13: Boza (Mesopotamia’s Thick Fermented Grain Porridge) 04:29 — 12: Kanji (The Wild Window-Sill Lacto-Ferment) 05:37 — 11: Traditional Milk Kefir vs. Grocery Store Yogurt 07:12 — 10: Tepache (Turning Pineapple Scraps Into Summer Soda) 08:17 — 09: Lassi (The Ancient Ayurvedic Digestive Pairing) 09:35 — 08: Smreka 10:26 — 07: Bread Kvass 11:26 — 06: Short Mead (The Raw Honey Wild Soda Alternative) 12:18 — 05: Jun Tea (The Champagne of Fermented Teas) 13:31 — 04: Water Kefir 14:33 — 03: The Truth About Store-Bought Kombucha 15:49 — 02: Sima (Finland’s Sparkling Wild Citrus Harvest Drink) 17:09 — 01: Tibicos 18:41 — How to Start Bringing the Old Ways Back Frequently Asked Questions: Q: Why are store-bought probiotic drinks considered "dead"? A: To survive months of shipping and sitting in warehouse coolers, many commercial kombuchas and probiotic drinks are pasteurized (heat-treated). This process neutralizes the wild yeasts and beneficial bacteria, transforming what should be a living food into bubbly, pasteurized sugar water. Q: What is the easiest fermented drink to make at home for beginners? A: Sima (fermented lemon soda) or wild short mead are excellent starting points for beginners. They require zero commercial starters or specialized equipment, relying entirely on the wild yeasts naturally present on raw fruit skins and unpasteurized honey to create carbonation. Q: What are the black particles or floating discs in traditional ferments? A: Traditional living ferments like kombucha or jun tea develop a rubbery cellulose disc on top, while drinks like milk or water kefir utilize jelly-like clusters of bacteria and yeast. These are not spoilage. They are the active, living biological structures that ferment the liquid. About Natural Living Library: Natural remedies, herbal recipes, ancestral foods, fermented foods, and self-sufficient living. Practical, time-tested ways to support your health using real food, healing herbs, and traditional remedies you can make at home. New videos every week. #NaturalLivingLibrary #AncestralHealth #NaturalRemedies #TraditionalFoods #GutHealth #HomesteadLiving Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. The information shared is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before changing your health routine, starting any new food or supplement, or using herbal remedies.