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In its strictest sense fermentation is the energy-yielding anaerobic metabolic breakdown of a nutrient molecule, such as glucose, without net oxidation. Fermentation yields lactate, acetic acid, ethanol, or some other simple product.Fermentation is also used much more broadly to refer to the bulk growth of microorganisms on some medium. No distinction is made between aerobic and anaerobic metabolism when the word is used in this sense.
This process is often used to produce or preserve food. Fermentation typically refers to the fermentation of sugar to alcohol using yeast, but other fermentation processes include the making of yogurt. The science of fermentaition is known as zymology.
Fermentation usually implies that the action of the microoganisms is desirable.
1 Uses
The primary benefit of fermentation is the conversion, e.g. converting juice into wine, grains into beer, and carbohydrates into carbon dioxide to leaven bread.
According to Steinkraus (1995), traditionally food fermentation serves five main purposes:
- "Enrichment of the diet through development of a diversity of flavors, aromas, and textures in food substrates"
- "Preservation of substantial amounts of food through lactic acid, alcoholic, acetic acid, and alkaline fermentations"
- "Enrichment of food substrates biologically with protein, essential amino acids, essential fatty acids, and vitamins"
- "Detoxification during food fermentation processing"
- "A decrease in cooking times and fuel requirements"
Fermentation has some benefits exclusive to foods. Fermentation can produce important nutrients or eliminate antinutrients . Food can be preserved by fermentation, since fermentation uses up food energy and can make conditions unsuitable for undesirable microorganisms. For example, in pickling the acid produced by the dominant bacteria inhibit the growth of all other microorganisms.
1.1 Fermentated foods, by region
- Worldwide: olives, vinegarVinegar (from Old French vinaigre "sour wine") is a sour liquid made from the oxidation of ethanol in wine, cider, beer, or the like. Vinegar is typically three to five percent by volume acetic acid, and natural vinegars also contain smaller amounts of ta, wineThis article is about the beverage. See WINE for an article about the software of the same name. Wine is an alcoholic beverage typically made by fermentation of grapes. The word comes from Greek omicron;ινο&sigmaf through Latin vinum, (bot, yoghurtYoghurt ( Turkish: yogurt , or yogurt less commonly yoghourt or yogourt is a dairy product produced by bacterial fermentation of milk. Any sort of milk may be used to make yoghurt, but modern production is dominated by cow's milk. It is the fermentation o
- India: acharAchar (also written as "Achaar") is the Hindi word for the pickle. Indian pickle is very hot and spicy. This word has also been borrowed by other Indian languages to mean the same thing. However, these languages may have their own words for pickle. For in, gundruk , Indian pickles
- South East Asia: asinan, bai-ming, belacanBelacan (also spelled belachan blachang balachong is a Malay condiment prepared from fermented krill. To prepare belacan, fresh krill are mashed into a paste and buried for several months. The fermented krill are then dug up, fried and pressed into cakes., burong mangga, dalok, jeruk, fish sauceFish sauce is a condiment derived from fish that have been allowed to ferment. The term describes a wide range of products used in many different cultures at different times. Fermentation is normally used to describe microbial digestion of carbohydrates (, kimchiKimchi or Gimchi ; (Hanja: in archaic prononciation) is a Korean fermented chillied vegetable dish, usually based on cabbage. Common ingredients include Chinese cabbage, radish, garlic, red pepper, spring onion, fermented shrimp or other seafood, ginger,, leppet-so, miang, nata de coco, nata de pina , naw-mai-dong, pak-siam-dong, paw-tsay, phak-dong, phonlami-dong, fish paste, sajur asin, sambal tempo-jak, santol, si-sek-chai, sunki, tang-chai, tempeh, tempoyak, vanilla
- East Asia: cha-ts’ai, dan moogi, dongchimi, hiroshimana, hot pepper sauce, jangagee, kachdoo kigactuki, kakduggi, kimchi, miso, mootsanji, nara senkei, natto, narazuke, nozawana, nukamiso-zuke, oigee, oiji, oiso baegi, omizuke, pow tsai, red in snow, sake, seokbakji, siozuke, soy sauce, szechwan cabbage, tai-tan tsoi, takana, takuan, totkal kimchi, tsa tzai, tsu, umeboshi, wasabi-zuke , yen tsai
- Central Asia: kumys (mare milk), shubat (camel milk)
- Africa: hibiscus seed, hot pepper sauce, lamoun makbouss, mauoloh, msir, mslalla, oilseed , ogili, ogiri
- Americas: pickles, sauerkraut, lupin seed, oilseed , vanilla, fermented walrus meat / fish / birds
- Middle East: kushuk, lamoun makbouss, mekhalel, torshi, tursu
- Europe: sauerkraut, kephir, filmjölk, fermented Baltic Herring
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