The Diversity of Microorganisms in Kefir
Kefir is not merely a fermented drink; it is a complex microbial ecosystem in the form of a biofilm, created by a 24-hour double fermentation of sugar with tibicos grains. The result is a remarkable diversity of up to 36 strains, encompassing lactic acid bacteria such as Lactobacillus, Streptococcus, and Bifidobacterium, alongside yeasts like Saccharomyces and Kefiranofaciens, each playing a specialised role in producing beneficial metabolites.
This diversity not only enhances the potential for regulating the gut microbiome but also allows the kefir's microbial community to adapt to the body's environment more effectively than standard probiotics with limited strains. The microorganisms in kefir work synergistically, which may improve digestion and nutrient absorption compared with single- or dual-strain products.
Resilience Through Biofilm Structure
The tibicos grains used to ferment kefir are not ordinary grains; they are biofilm structures where multiple microbial species coexist in a symbiotic matrix. This structure acts as a protective barrier against gastric acid, heat, and oxygen—major obstacles that can deplete the potency of many probiotics before they reach the large intestine.
Consequently, kefir's microorganisms are more likely to survive the harsh digestive process and arrive in the colon alive and functional. This resilience makes kefir a highly effective vehicle for delivering living microbes to their intended destination in the gut.
CFU Concentration and Microbial Potency
Rokabo’s kefir comes in 280 ml bottles and contains a probiotic concentration of ~12 billion CFU per millilitre. This value is high and consistent, measured through laboratory analysis as a concentration per unit volume—not a total per bottle. The CFU figure reflects the ability to introduce a large number of viable microbes into the intestine, which may significantly support the repopulation of beneficial bacteria, especially in individuals with disrupted gut balance due to antibiotics or unbalanced diets.
pH and Safety Profile
Fully fermented kefir has a pH of 4.32, an acidity level that supports the survival of beneficial microorganisms, particularly lactic acid bacteria that thrive in acidic environments. This pH also effectively inhibits the growth of pathogenic microbes. Additionally, each bottle contains only 2.1 grams of sugar—low compared with typical beverages—indicating a highly efficient fermentation where most sugars are converted into acids and beneficial metabolites. This makes kefir not only low in sugar but also nutritionally rich.
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