Mesoamerica — pre-Columbian Nahuatl origin; now sold throughout Mexico as street food and consumed as a daily beverage in many households
Tepache is a lightly fermented pineapple drink of pre-Columbian Nahuatl origin, made from pineapple rinds, piloncillo, and warm spices fermented at room temperature over two to three days using only the wild yeasts present on the fruit skin. The result is a mildly effervescent, gently sour, and aromatic drink with an alcohol content of typically less than two percent — just enough fermentation to add complexity without intoxication. The pineapple rinds are the heart of the technique. After removing the flesh for eating, the rinds and core are thoroughly rinsed but not scrubbed — the wild yeasts and bacteria on the pineapple skin are the fermentation agents, and removing them prevents proper fermentation. Piloncillo (or panela) is dissolved in warm water and combined with the rinds in a non-reactive vessel — typically a large clay pot or glass jar. Warming spices — Mexican cinnamon sticks, cloves, and sometimes a dried chilli such as a morita or chile de árbol — are added for flavour. The vessel is covered with a cloth (not sealed with a lid, as carbon dioxide produced by fermentation must escape) and left at room temperature, ideally between 25°C and 30°C. Fermentation begins within 12 hours: small bubbles appear on the surface as the wild yeasts convert sugar to alcohol and carbon dioxide. After 24 hours, the tepache tastes sweet with just a hint of fermentation. By 48 to 72 hours, the flavour has deepened into a complex sour-sweet beverage with light effervescence. The fermentation window is narrow — at 72 hours in warm conditions, tepache begins to turn to vinegar. It should be strained, chilled immediately, and consumed within two days of straining. Served over ice with a squeeze of lime and a small pinch of chilli salt on the rim of the glass, tepache bridges the worlds of artisan fermentation and everyday street refreshment.
Gently sour, tropical, and spiced — lightly effervescent pineapple sweetness with cinnamon warmth, clove depth, and a mild fermentation tang that refreshes without overwhelming
Use pineapple rinds with wild yeasts intact — rinse but never scrub the exterior of the pineapple Use a non-reactive, breathable vessel — cover with cloth, never seal, to allow carbon dioxide to escape Maintain fermentation temperature between 25°C and 30°C for optimal wild yeast activity Taste daily — fermentation windows vary with temperature; at 72 hours it risks turning to vinegar Chill and strain immediately when the desired flavour is reached to halt fermentation
For a more complex tepache, add tamarind paste and a piece of ginger to the fermentation vessel A splash of dark beer added to the finished tepache is a traditional Mexico City preparation that adds depth and carbonation For restaurant service, ferment large batches and transfer to refrigerator to halt fermentation at the desired stage Tepache makes an exceptional cocktail mixer with mezcal and lime — the fermented depth complements smoky spirits The spent rinds after straining can be composted or used in a second, weaker batch with additional water and piloncillo
Scrubbing the pineapple rinds clean, removing the wild yeasts needed for fermentation Sealing the vessel with a lid, trapping carbon dioxide and creating pressure or off-flavours Fermenting in a warm kitchen beyond 72 hours without tasting, resulting in acidic vinegar rather than tepache Using refined white sugar only rather than piloncillo — the molasses in piloncillo adds complexity and feeds wild yeasts better Serving at room temperature rather than chilled — tepache's refreshment depends on being served very cold