Guest guest Posted March 10, 2006 Report Share Posted March 10, 2006 thanks KC, I think Ill pass,lol, I dont think yeast is to happy with me. --- In , " tigerpaw2c " <tigerpaw2c@...> wrote: > > Fungus formula: Yeast essential ingredient in making bread, beer and > wine > > By Hudson Sangree > Scripps News Service > Complete Living Index > > http://www.seacoastonline.com/news/exeter/03102006/currents/91960.htm > > Exeter News-Letter - Exeter,NH > > With hopes for a bountiful new year, this is a good time to say a > word of thanks to Saccharomyces cerevisiae - the common yeast - and > the many gifts it bestows on us. > Invisible yet indispensable, the one-celled fungus is the key agent > of bread, beer and wine. > > There's no doubt that without it we'd be drinking grape juice. > > Yeast, it seems, might even have prompted the beginnings of modern > civilization. According to some historians, humans gave up their > nomadic ways and settled in villages to grow grain for baking and > brewing after they discovered the benefits of yeast, namely > fermentation and leavening. > > Writing, science and culture followed. > > There are scholars who say the Egyptians who built the pyramids were > paid with bread and beer. > > " Without yeast, where would the human race be? " asks > , head winemaker at Bogle Vineyards in sburg, Calif. > > Calling yeast an " unsung hero, " suggests that a bit of > gratitude might be in order. Billions upon billions of yeast cells > must die in their own alcoholic excretions to make a bottle of > petite sirah, he notes. > > " It's a great sacrifice they make for us, " says . > > Not all yeast are so unlucky. > > At the University of California-, millions of the microbes are > living to old age in a room resembling a walk-in cooler. > > The university's Department of Food Science and Technology houses > one of the world's largest collections of yeast, with more than 500 > species and 6,000 strains, including heirloom wine yeast from > California and Europe. > > Much of the collection was gathered by professor Herman J. Phaff, > who has been called the Indiana of yeast. > > On expeditions to Japan, Argentina, the Caribbean and Mexico, Phaff > gently scraped samples of yeast from tree branches and fruit, > cactuses, flowers and rotting stumps. He brought the prizes back to > UC-, where he worked for decades. > > " He really laid the foundations for our understanding of yeast, " > says Kyria Boundy-Mills, Phaff's successor as curator of the > collection. > > Though Phaff died in 2001 at age 88, much of his yeast lives on in > thousands of test tubes arrayed on wooden shelves. > > Stepping into Phaff's storeroom is like entering a strange n > museum, except the natural specimens aren't dead and stuffed but > resting quietly, giving off their distinctive yeasty scent. > > The oldest of the yeast is from 1893, according to Boundy-Mills. > > There are about 20,000 test tubes filled with small samples of yeast > and fluid and corked with cotton wool. The yeasts are dormant but > can be revived easily. > > For efficiency's sake, the collection gradually is being transferred > to a freezer and stored at a temperature of minus 100 degrees > Fahrenheit. That's cold enough to freeze human skin on contact, but > the hardy yeast can survive. Warm it up, give it food and water, and > the yeast will grow again. > > The yeast in the Phaff collection is identified, studied and shared > with other universities. > > Boundy-Mills also assists biotechnology companies that use yeast in > genetic research and as living factories for organic chemicals, > including pigments, proteins and enzymes. > > Much of this work ultimately benefits humans, with whom yeasts have > more in common than they do with plants or bacteria. > > " They are the simplest form of higher life, " says Boundy-Mills. > > Yeasts must eat; unlike plants, they can't produce their own food > through photosynthesis. And unlike bacteria, yeast cells have a > nucleus and genetic structure like ours. > > Still, they are very basic organisms. They are also tiny. One gram > of yeast contains some 20 billion cells. > > Yeast feeds on sugars and excretes carbon dioxide and alcohol. As a > kind of fungus, yeast grows naturally on high-sugar fruits such as > grapes. It even floats through the air. > > At her lab, Boundy-Mills is experimenting with different strains of > yeast meant to attract flies that are destroying California's olive > crop. > > One of Phaff's discoveries, gathered from a tree in Japan, is a type > of yeast that contains a rosy pigment. The substance is fed to > farmed salmon to give their flesh - naturally white - its pink > color. > > In bread-making, yeast colonies can thrive for decades, producing > flavorful sourdoughs and crusty baguettes. Some dough starters in > France are more than 100 years old. > > At the Village Bakery in , Aziz Fattahi has been feeding and > growing his yeast strain for a dozen years. On a recent Friday, a 5- > gallon bucket of yeast, flour and water sat bubbling by a sunny > window. > > Yeast thrives on warmth and food. > > " If you add a couple of grams of yeast to water and flour, within 24 > hours you'll have a few gallons of poolish, " he says, using the > French term for the baking mixture. > > That, in turn, will produce dozens of airy, golden loaves - the > leavened bread that first persuaded nomads to take up farming. > > Even good yeast can go bad, however. > > The microorganisms are always present in large numbers in our > bodies. In their natural balance, they are beneficial, but an > imbalance can cause infections. > > Jungle rot, which has plagued soldiers by eating up their canvas > tents and leather boots, is the result of yeast at work. > > In beer-making, bad or weak yeast can impart a " funky, moldy, cheesy > taste, " says Costello, owner of Brew It Up in Sacramento, > Calif. > > The right yeast, however, can impart pleasant flavors such as cloves > or banana to wheat beer, and will create a clean-tasting lager or > ale under proper conditions, he said. > > At the Anheuser-Busch plant in Fairfield, Calif., brewmaster > Poley says he works hard to keep his yeast happy, making sure it is > well-fed and has ideal conditions in which to grow. > > The brewery can produce 136 million gallons of beer each year. But > all that Budweiser depends on the well-being of the yeast, a secret > strain used by Anheuser-Busch since 1876. > > " I think of the yeast as almost having a personality, " Poley > says. " You have to have a lot of respect for the yeast. If you don't > treat it right, it will not produce the beer you are trying to > produce. > > " It's like your companion in the brewing business, " he says. " If > it's not happy with you, then you're not happy. " > > Distributed by Scripps News Service, www.shns.com. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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