Acetobacter aceti
Wissenschaftlicher Name: Acetobacter aceti
Essigsäurebakterium — wandelt Ethanol in Essigsäure um (Essig) und bildet die zellulose 'Essigmutter'; obligater Aerobier, unterscheidet Essige von alkoholischen Fermenten
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Über diese Kultur
Acetobacter aceti is the defining microorganism of every vinegar tradition worldwide. Wherever ethanol meets oxygen and Acetobacter is present — whether on grape skins (wine vinegar), apple skins (cider vinegar), or in air (anyone making any kind of fermented alcoholic beverage that subsequently contacts air) — the bacterium oxidizes the ethanol to acetic acid. The reaction is exothermic and fast under good conditions: a barrel of unspoiled wine left open in a warm cellar can be vinegar in weeks.
The metabolic chemistry is straightforward but specific. Acetobacter aceti uses pyrroloquinoline-quinone (PQQ)-dependent membrane-bound alcohol dehydrogenase to oxidize ethanol → acetaldehyde, then aldehyde dehydrogenase to oxidize acetaldehyde → acetic acid. Both enzymes are located on the outer face of the cell membrane and require oxygen as the terminal electron acceptor — which is why Acetobacter is an *obligate aerobe*, the single most important distinction between vinegar fermentation and alcoholic fermentation. Vinegar making requires open or oxygen-permeable vessels; alcoholic ferments require sealed or airlock-protected vessels.
Acetobacter aceti also produces nanocellulose — a layered mat of cellulose fibrils that floats at the air-liquid interface. This 'mother of vinegar' or zoogleal mat is the bacterial community's growth surface and protects the underlying liquid from drying. The mat is harmless and can be used to inoculate fresh substrates for new vinegar batches. Some traditional vinegar producers (notably the traditional balsamic makers of Modena) consider the maintenance of healthy mother cultures across decades a key part of the tradition. The kombucha SCOBY is functionally similar — Komagataeibacter xylinus (closely related to Acetobacter) produces the cellulose mat that hosts the broader microbial community.
In the kombucha SCOBY, Acetobacter species (most commonly A. xylinum, now Komagataeibacter xylinus) work alongside Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Brettanomyces, and lactic acid bacteria to produce the characteristic kombucha flavor profile — slight ethanol from yeast, lactic acid from LAB, and acetic acid from Acetobacter. The same is true for jun (the honey-and-green-tea kombucha cousin) and for some sour beer traditions where Acetobacter contamination contributes positively to the intended sour character.
For home fermenters: making vinegar requires (1) a base alcoholic ferment 4-12% ABV, (2) exposure to air via wide-mouth jar with breathable cloth cover, (3) inoculation with active Acetobacter (a 'mother' from a previous batch, raw unpasteurized vinegar, or wild ambient contamination), (4) several weeks to months at 20-30°C. The process is slower and gentler than alcoholic fermentation but requires patience and air access.
Mikrobiologische Klassifikation
Optimale Bedingungen
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- Use a base alcoholic ferment 4-12% ABV — too low (<3%) doesn't sustain Acetobacter; too high (>14%) is inhibitory.
- Provide oxygen — wide-mouth jar with breathable cloth (cheesecloth, paper towel) on top. Sealed containers prevent oxidation.
- Maintain warm temperature 25-30°C — slow at cooler temperatures; speeds up dramatically at the optimum.
- Don't disturb the mother mat unnecessarily — broken mats slow the conversion. Leave it floating intact.
- Stop when target acidity reached — Acetobacter will continue past acetic acid to CO₂ ('overoxidation') if no ethanol remains. Test acidity with pH meter or titration.
Häufige Fehler
- Sealing vinegar fermentation in airlock containers — stops the obligate aerobe. Vinegar making is the opposite oxygen-handling of alcohol making.
- Confusing the cellulose mother with mold contamination — mother of vinegar is a smooth gelatinous mat, beneficial. Mold is fuzzy and colored; throw out moldy batches.
- Using distilled, pasteurized vinegar as a starter — pasteurization kills the live Acetobacter. Use raw unpasteurized vinegar or active mother culture.
- Trying to convert pasteurized wine or beer — pasteurization removed both yeast and any Acetobacter. Must inoculate with live culture.
- Letting fermentation run too long — past optimal, Acetobacter overoxidizes acetic acid to CO₂, weakening the vinegar.