Guest guest Posted August 29, 2006 Report Share Posted August 29, 2006 Mark, is the lab available for other ferments. I am always looking for new sources of labs for my testing. IMO, your chocolate/coffee biofilm should be a lacto-ferment. I agree with you there are more than one or two but he may have been referring to the domination of just one or two and not a democracy. Ed Kasper LAc. Licensed Acupuncturist & Herbalist www.HappyHerbalist.com Santa Cruz, CA. 3c. non-kombucha biofilm id Posted by: " mark robert " colowe@... imesefel Date: Tue Aug 29, 2006 1:00 pm (PDT) Hope this isn't off topic, but I am getting my " wild " chocolate/coffee biofilm identified at a lab. Four microbes have so far appeared, but it's too early to id. I'm excited. Hopefully after I get the species named, I can find out if they are toxic/pathogenic. The technician made a curious comment. He said 4 species were too many because typical biolfims only have 1 or 2 species, and he figured at least 1 or 2 were contaminates. I almost argued with him, but he's the expert and it's still early. But I had read that it always takes at least 2 species to make the polysaccharide matrix that forms the film/mat, and considering the number of species identified in Kombucha... Oh well, I'm sure we'll be finding out soon enough. I think this guy is only a lab assistant, as the main guy is on vacation. -Mark Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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