Me put food in jar. Me forget jar. Many moon. Jar remember now. Jar smell funny. Me drink juice. I then experienced a euphoriant effect and recorded the findings in my data.
*Yeast farming is quite the tradition among us Rotifers. Every 4 cell cycles, a competition is held to see who can grow the biggest yeast culture. Ah, the cellular fair, such wonderful memories!*
god i love bread. so so so much. but baking powder (tartaric acid mixed with sodium bicarb) works just fine. the only issue is wine. i do love wine. like, _a lot_ and probably would be unable to socialize without it. on the other hand, it's burny and itchy when it gets in your body, and makes the world's most horrifying cottage cheese spew from one's body. i still haven't made up my mind yet, as to whether i love or despise it. though i'd have to say, in everyday life, wine is a much more common product of yeast than the cottage cheese. wine is an everyday thing, while cottage cheese is a few times a year type of thing. still, it's hard to decide. i guess it's a love-hate relationship. but i definitely feel conflicted. thank god for unsweetened kefir. or unsweetened yogurt in a pinch. don't wanna give those little invaders any sugar to feed on. *angrily shakes fist*
I can't stand it, I know you planned it I'mma set it straight, this Yeastgate I can't stand bubbling when I'm in here 'Cause your sourdough ball ain't so crystal clear So while you sit back and wonder why I got this fuckin' yeast in my side Oh my god, it's a SCOBY I'm tellin' y'all, it's a kombucha So, so, so, so listen up, 'cause you can't brew nothin' You'll shut me down with a push of your airlock But, yo, I'm out and I'm anaerobic I'll tell you now, I keep it cool and dark 'Cause what you see, you might not get And we can bet, so don't you get fermented yet Scheming on a thing, that's a high ethanol concentration I'm trying to tell you now, it's saccharomyces cerevisiae
I'll be damned! "Schmoo: Noun. (plural shmoos or shmoon) A fictional animal created by cartoonist Al Capp. (biology) A projection from yeast in response to mating ." Thank you for that! pheromones."www.google.com/search?sxsrf=ALeKk01U8t0rQsalSMULhaObtGZ3fPfQ8Q:1599254881365&q=What+is+a+Shmoo+in+biology%3F&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjPpO_YuNDrAhUBL6wKHT-lChIQzmd6BAgMEB8&biw=1222&bih=610
A shmoo, according to the late cartoonist Al Capp: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shmoo#/media/File:Lifeshmoo.jpg According to Capp, the shmoo was an obliging creature that produced milk and eggs which would willingly, even cheerfully allowed humans to slaughter and eat it, thereby preventing certain poverty-stricken communities (like Dogpatch) to survive. Of course the drop in profits for grocery stores prompted the oligarchy to send out the US military to destroy all smoos, but a few survived and carry on the lineage to this day [supposedly]. Wikipedia about shmoos: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shmoo
Little etymological trivia: "Barm" is actually derived from the Old English "beorma," meaning "yeast" or something leavened with yeast. The term "barmy" then stemmed from that and was originally used to refer to an overexcited person (frothing or bubbling with excitement the same way yeast makes beverages bubble). The modern sense where it implies "foolishness" or "craziness" may be from the conflation of it with 18th century London slang "balmy," which means the latter.
"Despite having only one cell, yeast have somehow figured out how to convert sugar into alcohol. This is, let's face it, a far more impressive achievement than anything we can attribute to large, complex, multicellular organisms, such as, for instance, the Secretary of Transportation." Dave Barry
*Yeast is one of the staple food groups to maintain a healthy outer cuticle. Though to be honest, as a larva I didn't really find it all that appetizing. It was the only way mama Rotifer would let me have any mitochondrial cakes for dessert though, so I was left no other choice!*
This is truly my favourite channel on youtube. I come here when I’m stressed and always leave more relaxed, educated and curious! It also helps to remind me about why I love biology and why I am studying it during university, during times when I somethimes question my choice of education. Thank you!
This reminds me of the days I was doing my FYP and spending days and nights staring at yeast and fungi. Some yeast smell amazing, some fluffy, some may cause skin infections. The nightmares of writing the thesis
If you want to learn more about our history with yeast I highly recommend the Gastroegyptology episode of the Ologies podcast! Alie Ward interviews Seamus Blackley about his work with researchers to bring back ancient strains of yeast and how he’s been baking with them!
Certainly after watching this video, the next bread I make, will have a deeper taste. I have been studying the process of fermentation. This video was a great dive! Thanks indeed!!!
It's got to the point now that I can't go to sleep without Journey to the Microcosmos. And I live in Southern Spain, so that's the 4pm sleep and the 11pm sleep.
My favourite thing about yeast is how special it is as a model organism because it's a fungus, and therefore /much/ more closely related to us than bacteria, whilst still being a very simple and microscopic organism which for a huge number of reasons is super valuable. Not to mention the fact that we've been figuring out how to grow it for, as discussed at length here, literally centuries.
The level of depth in this episode seems to me to be similar to most others, I think it only feels like you're missing information because you're already somewhat familiar with S. cerevisiae. Anyway, if you have a more specific question I might be able to help you. Some years ago I worked in a lab that studies yeast for a few months
Yeast is one of my favorite ingredients to work with. The way it foams up is really cool and personally I think it smells really cool, sort of like wine but less acidic and more earthy.
Love to see the little friends who’s handiwork I am drinking as we speak! I started Mead brewing to pass the time in the outbreak, and the ‘champagne’ type of yeast make up to 18% alcohol under good conditions; the cherry blend I finished aging is really good, especially lengthened with some lavender soda
This video infected my brain and expanded my thoughts like it was gluten and is now aging and maturing. You might say it's fermenting and I'm now drunk with the power of my newfound knowledge.
Uma pessoa they are not saying the videos help them remember to hydrate. they are saying the videos are relaxing. the reminder to hydrate was just for anyone reading their comment, reminding everyone to take care of themselves
Just a little note regarding what the definition of yeast is, since it’s a bit unclear in the video. The term “yeast” refers to any single celled stage of a fungus’s life cycle. Many fungi only have a yeast form, many only have a hyphal form, some switch between yeast and hyphal forms depending on environmental factors or reproductive stage, and so on. Fungi are wild
I work as laboratorie technician so I do sometimes work with yeast and the thing about Yeast been "domesticated", you could say that. it is a living thing, that we can control and do what we want with, and all the types of yeast strains that we have "bred" throughout these present time, as we have also done with E. coli to support in cloning.
I am a biotechnologist working on yeasts and their exploitation in biorefineries as natural microbes and genetic modified. Thanks a lot for this very interesting video! I am also involved into science communication, therefore I really like this video and all the channel!
As a food fermentation student I am very happy you guys covered yeasts 😁. Would love to see an episode on rhizopus oryzae and other fermentation related microbes!
_There is an inn, a merry old inn_ _beneath an old grey hill,_ _And there they brew a beer so brown_ _That the Man in the Moon himself came down_ _one night to drink his fill_
Wooh, this is a hidden gem in the world of youtube! Looove your channel. I am not a biologist who is interested in biology. You know, I always wonder while reading those boring research papers... why these researchers not filming their observations and conclusions. And here I am...
In the tropics, where various species of date and coconut palms grow, no knowledge of yeats is required to produce alcoholic drinks. Fresh sap extracted from the palms begins to ferment immediately on exposure to air, producing a mildly alcoholic drink in just a couple of hours. Left overnight, levels of alcohol continue to increase. The fermented sap can be drunk as-is or distilled into strong liquor with alcohol levels equal to bottled rum or whisky.
You reminded me of the shortest poem I have ever written. There is no true open mystery, only the unopened books of our history. I will admit I could have heard this somewhere else and thought I made it up much like when I was in preK I thought I made up the word Infinity.
Now you've go0tta do a followup episode looking at sourdough! It would be cool to look at a sourdough starter that is going well and a starter that went bad because of bacteria proliferation.
I was struck during this video the question: "Why aren't there like/dislike options, as well as subscription options during a fullscreen PC experience?" It could be a little 'activation' area on the edges of the screen (, like Firefox offers for Picture-in-Picture type behavior). I frequently forget to 'like' videos I actually really love because I'm entirely consumed by the ideas in the video.
When Hank mentioned lactic acid fermentation, I was hoping for a shout-out to sauerkraut. Not as flashy as bread and beer by any means, but hey. And speaking of hay, lactic acid fermentation is what breaks down the fibers making it better for our rumenant friends. And it makes salami salami.
You know what's funny? Just three days ago the idea popped up in my head to suggest 'differences between fermentation and rotting' as a topic to JttM. Never got around to doing it, but I guess this answeres one of my questions.
Let us also not forget the honorable mention of other fermented things: Chocolate, Kimchi, Sauerkraut, Miso, Kefir, Yogurt, Kombucha, Tempeh, Kvass, Natto, Coffee, and even Tobacco! ...and probably so much more!
Fungi- the kingdom that made us people. Damn near symbiotic. I don't know if we cultured the yeast or if it cultured us. It has been so extremely successful at reproducing through using us.
YAY! YEAST EPISODE! Was thinking Journy to the Microcosmos should do an episode shortly after watching Adam Regusa's video a couple days ago. Love the knowledge!
As a Central European I have to say that lactic acid fermentation is also delicious and that one oft forgotten fermented product from the eyes of US people are the multitude of salami and related products. If you thought hacked meat and fat seasoned with pepper and paprica that you smoke in your shed can taste pretty good wait untill you slap some of that microbe coating on it so you make a mold-coated hungarian salami :D
its not called homeostasis. thats a different thing. most of them form resistent spores when drying up, that can resist dry environments, amongst other things
To make bread, one also uses sugar. Its food for the yeast, who flatulate what becomes all the bubbles in bread. This has always disturbed me, that we love to eat yeast flatulations, especially sour bread.
Kinda important to note that we usually kill the yeast before eating it. In the case of bread at least, it dies during the baking process - the yeast actually dies at a lower temperature than the one at which bread starts to... yknow... bake, so you could if you want to kill the yeast in bread dough without baking it.
"Did we domesticate [yeasts]?" An interesting question, there is some who believe that wheat is what domesticated us, and we rarely use wheat w/o yeast.
I found your initial description of yeast's metabolic processes a bit misleading. It made it sound as if yeast only relies on alcoholic fermentation in the absence of alcohol, but I thought that I had seen studies done that showed that yeast preferred to rely on this anaerobic process even in the presence of oxygen, and mainly relied on oxygen for the production of sterols which are important for the structural integrity of their cell membranes.
Enjoying some homemade wine while I watch the microcosmos episode about yeast, I love this show. But my thoughts on domestication are that; yes beer yeast and bread yeast are the domesticated form of yeast, can we talk about KOJI mold, which is how sake lees (for ease of finding) are arguably even more domesticated as Chinese/Korean/Japanese alcohol brewers have 3 distinct varieties of koji mold used to break down rice starch into sugars giving sake its unique flavor profile. One such koji mold shows a domestication syndrome trait in that it is white rather than the black wild varieties or even the black domestic varieties. Sorry for the text wall but domestication syndrome is by far my favorite field of biological study of humans and their domestics.
Your translation is pretty good, conserving the essence of the subject. I want to propose my translation of his title : Pasteur 1957 Mémoire sur la fermentation alcoolique. [Memoire about alcoholic fermentation.]. Understanding this fermentation produce alcohol, instead of CO2 and H2O, and is not about fermentation of alcohol. Same about lactic fermentation, instead of producing CO2 and H2O, that fermentation produce lactic acid.
My curiosity is how they play a role in metabolism in my own body vs insulins to help migrate lipids as glycerol into cells as they increase and the slowing effects on metabolic actions from ethanol other bi products. That along with helpers such as natural cortisol from fruits such as grapefruits and other hormones such as glucagon to aid in lipolysis. As while I do think I ate a lot growing up with fiber my triglycerides tend to be slightly high and normal cholesterol with slightly low HDL good cholesterols and lots of starchy carb filled school lunches and adult food insecurities. I'm try to think of way or things to eat to get that engine going maybe even out it into high gear for awhile touch balance but i do think I've lacked fermented or yeast activated breads more so then a typical American as one of those changes along with more targeted fruits vegetables and fungi.
My question is what is required to filter out yeast after/during brewing, what kind of mesh etc. Also: some say yeast float when they die after too much ethanol and that some sink to the bottom, is this so and what is the reason. Thanks.
Making bread feels very "primal" and even "primitive". Feeling the dough get stretchy when you knead it, watching the gluey paste puff up and become soft, and giving off an interesting smell; seeing that the dough expanded even more when you baked it, and tastes nothing like raw grain. Then put a piece of raw dough into a lot of water, and drink the result... the ancient Egyptians and Sumerians had Goddesses of Beer. And a biologist I know has told me that most kinds of yeast have a fair number of genetic features in common with humans. This may be why we found the products yeast helps us produce turned out to be so useful and agreeable to us.
Me put food in jar. Me forget jar. Many moon. Jar remember now. Jar smell funny. Me drink juice. I then experienced a euphoriant effect and recorded the findings in my data.
Ah, the history/process of biological and culinary exparimentation.
Sorry! Me late. CV broke...
Lol that shift in grammar after the drink
props to the madman who actually drank the juice.
@@fidalf99
"Oh, uh... smells kinda funny.... I guess it is still ok to drink.... WHOAH, the ground moves"
*Yeast farming is quite the tradition among us Rotifers. Every 4 cell cycles, a competition is held to see who can grow the biggest yeast culture. Ah, the cellular fair, such wonderful memories!*
How small is your keyboard?
Yes.
That's every 4 generations!
Or every 120 years, human time.
god i love bread. so so so much. but baking powder (tartaric acid mixed with sodium bicarb) works just fine. the only issue is wine. i do love wine. like, _a lot_ and probably would be unable to socialize without it. on the other hand, it's burny and itchy when it gets in your body, and makes the world's most horrifying cottage cheese spew from one's body. i still haven't made up my mind yet, as to whether i love or despise it.
though i'd have to say, in everyday life, wine is a much more common product of yeast than the cottage cheese. wine is an everyday thing, while cottage cheese is a few times a year type of thing. still, it's hard to decide. i guess it's a love-hate relationship. but i definitely feel conflicted. thank god for unsweetened kefir. or unsweetened yogurt in a pinch. don't wanna give those little invaders any sugar to feed on. *angrily shakes fist*
@@BothHands1 sorry to tell you but yeast is in flour
"Yeasty Boys" is what my husband calls our homebrew yeast cultures. The future is fermentation!!!
That’s the name of my kombucha culture!
I can't stand it, I know you planned it
I'mma set it straight, this Yeastgate
I can't stand bubbling when I'm in here
'Cause your sourdough ball ain't so crystal clear
So while you sit back and wonder why
I got this fuckin' yeast in my side
Oh my god, it's a SCOBY
I'm tellin' y'all, it's a kombucha
So, so, so, so listen up, 'cause you can't brew nothin'
You'll shut me down with a push of your airlock
But, yo, I'm out and I'm anaerobic
I'll tell you now, I keep it cool and dark
'Cause what you see, you might not get
And we can bet, so don't you get fermented yet
Scheming on a thing, that's a high ethanol concentration
I'm trying to tell you now, it's saccharomyces cerevisiae
@@Leo-hk6qg great!! 😂👍
Your husband deserves 👏 👏 👏
There was a girl band in the 80s called the Yeastie Girls 😂
Missed opportunity to mention one of the best words in microbiology: “shmooing” - part of yeast sexual reproduction cycle
I'll be damned! "Schmoo: Noun. (plural shmoos or shmoon) A fictional animal created by cartoonist Al Capp. (biology) A projection from yeast in response to mating ." Thank you for that!
pheromones."www.google.com/search?sxsrf=ALeKk01U8t0rQsalSMULhaObtGZ3fPfQ8Q:1599254881365&q=What+is+a+Shmoo+in+biology%3F&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjPpO_YuNDrAhUBL6wKHT-lChIQzmd6BAgMEB8&biw=1222&bih=610
Ill be sure to use shmooing word in my day to day life
"Hey babe, let's do some shmooing tonight after dinner"
A shmoo, according to the late cartoonist Al Capp: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shmoo#/media/File:Lifeshmoo.jpg
According to Capp, the shmoo was an obliging creature that produced milk and eggs which would willingly, even cheerfully allowed humans to slaughter and eat it, thereby preventing certain poverty-stricken communities (like Dogpatch) to survive. Of course the drop in profits for grocery stores prompted the oligarchy to send out the US military to destroy all smoos, but a few survived and carry on the lineage to this day [supposedly]. Wikipedia about shmoos: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shmoo
Shmoo shmoo
I can just imagine the rolling fields of ancient China with scattered herds of wild yeast
"The Wild Yeast" would be a good name for a rock band.
Wilderyeast.
this is what youtube comments should be like
@@sprotte6665 indubitably good sir mmm yes 🧐
@@DankMemer42013 axiomatic
I really kneaded this.
69th like. Nice.
@@calcaware Ha ha, nice.
+
you savage
I laughed so hard I'm out of breadth
Still love the David Attenborough version of Hank Green on this channel. Keep it up, man.
Little etymological trivia: "Barm" is actually derived from the Old English "beorma," meaning "yeast" or something leavened with yeast. The term "barmy" then stemmed from that and was originally used to refer to an overexcited person (frothing or bubbling with excitement the same way yeast makes beverages bubble). The modern sense where it implies "foolishness" or "craziness" may be from the conflation of it with 18th century London slang "balmy," which means the latter.
"Despite having only one cell, yeast have somehow figured out how to convert sugar into alcohol. This is, let's face it, a far more impressive achievement than anything we can attribute to large, complex, multicellular organisms, such as, for instance, the Secretary of Transportation." Dave Barry
So yeast is kind of like jesus
*Yeast is one of the staple food groups to maintain a healthy outer cuticle. Though to be honest, as a larva I didn't really find it all that appetizing. It was the only way mama Rotifer would let me have any mitochondrial cakes for dessert though, so I was left no other choice!*
We thank Rotifer mama for watching over this tiny, tiny friend.
If you don't eat your yeast, you can't have any pudding!
I am from Egypt and l really love this channel ,it enrich my mind also it help my in my studies
This is truly my favourite channel on youtube. I come here when I’m stressed and always leave more relaxed, educated and curious! It also helps to remind me about why I love biology and why I am studying it during university, during times when I somethimes question my choice of education. Thank you!
released just in time for supper. you guys make dinner very entertaining and educational for me, thank you for all you been doin
released or reyeast?
@@HappyBeezerStudios Fermented perhaps...
This reminds me of the days I was doing my FYP and spending days and nights staring at yeast and fungi. Some yeast smell amazing, some fluffy, some may cause skin infections. The nightmares of writing the thesis
Yeasts and molds are fascinating
If you want to learn more about our history with yeast I highly recommend the Gastroegyptology episode of the Ologies podcast! Alie Ward interviews Seamus Blackley about his work with researchers to bring back ancient strains of yeast and how he’s been baking with them!
By Dawn and Dusk, what a fascinating proposition. Thank you!
A video about lactobacili and the fermentation of our food would be great! I think they're just as important as S. cerevisiae c:
Certainly after watching this video, the next bread I make, will have a deeper taste. I have been studying the process of fermentation. This video was a great dive! Thanks indeed!!!
Can’t understand why this doesn’t have enough views. This microbe has shaped human evolution!
Congratulations! Here's to another year of the Microcosmos.
It's got to the point now that I can't go to sleep without Journey to the Microcosmos. And I live in Southern Spain, so that's the 4pm sleep and the 11pm sleep.
My favourite thing about yeast is how special it is as a model organism because it's a fungus, and therefore /much/ more closely related to us than bacteria, whilst still being a very simple and microscopic organism which for a huge number of reasons is super valuable. Not to mention the fact that we've been figuring out how to grow it for, as discussed at length here, literally centuries.
I am the yeast I worship
- Death Grips (sort of)
I drench my feast and eat it
I light my toast and burn it
@@Matiburon04 I light my toast and fement*
Fiaca it’s deep because it’s ineloquent.
I was hoping you would talk about their structure and behavior. How do they do what they do? What bits make them special?
Yeah episode was interesting but a bit light on the microcosmos.
The level of depth in this episode seems to me to be similar to most others, I think it only feels like you're missing information because you're already somewhat familiar with S. cerevisiae. Anyway, if you have a more specific question I might be able to help you. Some years ago I worked in a lab that studies yeast for a few months
Answer: "yeasty magic"
Andrew! You found the PERFECT use for your modular synths. This is it.
I started brewing my own wine and making homemade bread since the pandemic started.
This video was right in my area and very fascinating!
I'm so happy I found this channel - literally my favorite content on youtube and possibly the centralized web
Yeast is one of my favorite ingredients to work with. The way it foams up is really cool and personally I think it smells really cool, sort of like wine but less acidic and more earthy.
Yaaay, Microcosm did my favorite microbe.
Why do they have to look so fizzy? Just looking at this makes me wanna grab a beer.
Love to see the little friends who’s handiwork I am drinking as we speak! I started Mead brewing to pass the time in the outbreak, and the ‘champagne’ type of yeast make up to 18% alcohol under good conditions; the cherry blend I finished aging is really good, especially lengthened with some lavender soda
This video infected my brain and expanded my thoughts like it was gluten and is now aging and maturing. You might say it's fermenting and I'm now drunk with the power of my newfound knowledge.
using this joke for too long makes it go a little bit sour, do.
Love the thumbnail, “Yeast mode”
Lmao
*Marshawn Lynch busts in grabbin his ding ding and eatin skittles*
One of the only channels where I can press like before even watching the video.
loving and appreciating this channel! helps me realign and calm down
This channel is my catharsis also
Uma pessoa they are not saying the videos help them remember to hydrate. they are saying the videos are relaxing. the reminder to hydrate was just for anyone reading their comment, reminding everyone to take care of themselves
Just a little note regarding what the definition of yeast is, since it’s a bit unclear in the video. The term “yeast” refers to any single celled stage of a fungus’s life cycle. Many fungi only have a yeast form, many only have a hyphal form, some switch between yeast and hyphal forms depending on environmental factors or reproductive stage, and so on. Fungi are wild
Congratulations people of the journeys to the microcosmos! Keep up your great work!
I work as laboratorie technician so I do sometimes work with yeast and the thing about Yeast been "domesticated", you could say that. it is a living thing, that we can control and do what we want with, and all the types of yeast strains that we have "bred" throughout these present time, as we have also done with E. coli to support in cloning.
I am a biotechnologist working on yeasts and their exploitation in biorefineries as natural microbes and genetic modified. Thanks a lot for this very interesting video! I am also involved into science communication, therefore I really like this video and all the channel!
Make an episode about kefir bacteria! :-D they seem properly domesticated and very old!
Also lactic bacteria :-)
As a food fermentation student I am very happy you guys covered yeasts 😁. Would love to see an episode on rhizopus oryzae and other fermentation related microbes!
_There is an inn, a merry old inn_
_beneath an old grey hill,_
_And there they brew a beer so brown_
_That the Man in the Moon himself came down_
_one night to drink his fill_
Last Time I was this Early, I was Learning About Mitochondria
It's the power house of the cell, you know.
.........lol.
As an avid home brewer I approve this message! These videos are so good! Keep this shit up seriously!
Nothing like waking to a Saturday morning, eating cereal and watching a show like this. :]
Yeast actually killed the aliens from the War of the Worlds.
Actually, it didn't happen.
Be careful how you use the English language.
@@hopsta5628 i mean not so careful that you don't have fun, but yeah careful.
And they were delicious.
Hopsta you sound like somebody’s lame 11th grade English teacher
@@hopsta5628 I don't get you dude?
Wooh, this is a hidden gem in the world of youtube! Looove your channel. I am not a biologist who is interested in biology. You know, I always wonder while reading those boring research papers... why these researchers not filming their observations and conclusions. And here I am...
In the tropics, where various species of date and coconut palms grow, no knowledge of yeats is required to produce alcoholic drinks. Fresh sap extracted from the palms begins to ferment immediately on exposure to air, producing a mildly alcoholic drink in just a couple of hours. Left overnight, levels of alcohol continue to increase.
The fermented sap can be drunk as-is or distilled into strong liquor with alcohol levels equal to bottled rum or whisky.
You reminded me of the shortest poem I have ever written.
There is no true open mystery, only the unopened books of our history.
I will admit I could have heard this somewhere else and thought I made it up much like when I was in preK I thought I made up the word Infinity.
Now you've go0tta do a followup episode looking at sourdough! It would be cool to look at a sourdough starter that is going well and a starter that went bad because of bacteria proliferation.
thanks Hank, never stop being awesome!
Not every time you eat bread... some bread is unleavened!
I was struck during this video the question: "Why aren't there like/dislike options, as well as subscription options during a fullscreen PC experience?" It could be a little 'activation' area on the edges of the screen (, like Firefox offers for Picture-in-Picture type behavior). I frequently forget to 'like' videos I actually really love because I'm entirely consumed by the ideas in the video.
Thumbs up! Its the yeast i can do! I hope to see your channel continue to rise!
This is so cool I work at a donuts shop making the donuts so it’s interesting to learn more about this I use these little guys every single day 👍
How many have you nicked?
I've loved sci show and eons forever! I cant believe I just found this channel !!
When Hank mentioned lactic acid fermentation, I was hoping for a shout-out to sauerkraut. Not as flashy as bread and beer by any means, but hey. And speaking of hay, lactic acid fermentation is what breaks down the fibers making it better for our rumenant friends. And it makes salami salami.
I love that they're are 5 pages of Patreon supporters of this channel. Super cool how it's grown.
"the grim realities of disease"... and the incredibly positive realities of our own microbiota.
These guys should direct the live-action adaptation of Osmosis Jones.
Nice! I love fungi! Do aspergillus next!
You know what's funny? Just three days ago the idea popped up in my head to suggest 'differences between fermentation and rotting' as a topic to JttM.
Never got around to doing it, but I guess this answeres one of my questions.
Perhaps you can do one on Koji next :) It's the other half of the equation for brewing Sake.
I'll drink to that. 🍻
Let us also not forget the honorable mention of other fermented things:
Chocolate, Kimchi, Sauerkraut, Miso, Kefir, Yogurt, Kombucha, Tempeh, Kvass, Natto, Coffee, and even Tobacco!
...and probably so much more!
Fungi- the kingdom that made us people. Damn near symbiotic. I don't know if we cultured the yeast or if it cultured us. It has been so extremely successful at reproducing through using us.
Yeast is my new favorite thing as both The Thought Emporium and these guys are posting about it!
YAY! YEAST EPISODE! Was thinking Journy to the Microcosmos should do an episode shortly after watching Adam Regusa's video a couple days ago. Love the knowledge!
That domestication could pertain to yeasts is really interesting. Thanks!
As a Central European I have to say that lactic acid fermentation is also delicious and that one oft forgotten fermented product from the eyes of US people are the multitude of salami and related products. If you thought hacked meat and fat seasoned with pepper and paprica that you smoke in your shed can taste pretty good wait untill you slap some of that microbe coating on it so you make a mold-coated hungarian salami :D
I just love the calm narration ❤️
I really love this channel! :)
A toast to bread! Provided by our funny fungal friends!
Finally an episode about yeast! Loved it.
"leaving much of the organism's history..." * musters up all the dad joke energy* "... still a mystery." that rhyme thoooo (8:28)
I love Yeast, he's a real fun guy.
Don't try bartering with him at the car dealership though. When it comes to pricing, he doesn't have mushroom to maneuver.
@@VintageSG Virtual EYE roll and face palm to both of you...puns are painful to me LOL
Hey Rogue Wolf, i didn´t think i´d see a PS2 youtuber here. ^^
I hope you´re having a great day!
@@rubiniosity You also, thank you!
Hank: fun jai?
How does dried yeast "reactivate"? Shouldn't it have been killed in the dry environment?
Some microbes can go dormant. How they do it, is excellent and deep question. Maybe you will be the one to answer this mystery.
It's called homeostasis
its not called homeostasis. thats a different thing.
most of them form resistent spores when drying up, that can resist dry environments, amongst other things
@@gabriel300010 do you mean cysts
5:00 You're spot on, "The Memoir of alcoholic fermentation" :-)
To make bread, one also uses sugar. Its food for the yeast, who flatulate what becomes all the bubbles in bread. This has always disturbed me, that we love to eat yeast flatulations, especially sour bread.
Do you think it’s possible to take a peek at sourdough starter? Or would it be too difficult an ask?
Yeast also grows on and in our bodies. We get into trouble when they overgrow.
Глупые люди ещё не знают, что они все умирают от этого!
@@lubovvlasova5077 no yeast = immortal? :)
Kinda important to note that we usually kill the yeast before eating it. In the case of bread at least, it dies during the baking process - the yeast actually dies at a lower temperature than the one at which bread starts to... yknow... bake, so you could if you want to kill the yeast in bread dough without baking it.
I find intriguing the idea of microfauna accidental domestication.
Always inspiring
Man is downright amazing at outsourcing digestion.
Man!! Your microscopic photographs!! Every microbiologists dream! Please make a tutorial on your microscopic techniques and tricks specifically
apparently they want to keep it to themselves
"Did we domesticate [yeasts]?" An interesting question, there is some who believe that wheat is what domesticated us, and we rarely use wheat w/o yeast.
I found your initial description of yeast's metabolic processes a bit misleading. It made it sound as if yeast only relies on alcoholic fermentation in the absence of alcohol, but I thought that I had seen studies done that showed that yeast preferred to rely on this anaerobic process even in the presence of oxygen, and mainly relied on oxygen for the production of sterols which are important for the structural integrity of their cell membranes.
Enjoying some homemade wine while I watch the microcosmos episode about yeast, I love this show. But my thoughts on domestication are that; yes beer yeast and bread yeast are the domesticated form of yeast, can we talk about KOJI mold, which is how sake lees (for ease of finding) are arguably even more domesticated as Chinese/Korean/Japanese alcohol brewers have 3 distinct varieties of koji mold used to break down rice starch into sugars giving sake its unique flavor profile. One such koji mold shows a domestication syndrome trait in that it is white rather than the black wild varieties or even the black domestic varieties. Sorry for the text wall but domestication syndrome is by far my favorite field of biological study of humans and their domestics.
Never thought yeast was this interesting!
4:15 I know it's spelled Leeuwenhoek, but it's funny to me that a guy who observed yeast had a name that sounds like it has "leaven" in it
Great video....so what is a 'yeast infection'?
Your translation is pretty good, conserving the essence of the subject. I want to propose my translation of his title : Pasteur 1957 Mémoire sur la fermentation alcoolique. [Memoire about alcoholic fermentation.]. Understanding this fermentation produce alcohol, instead of CO2 and H2O, and is not about fermentation of alcohol. Same about lactic fermentation, instead of producing CO2 and H2O, that fermentation produce lactic acid.
Whoever came up with that title deserves a raise
No one:
Yeast: nom
Humans: this is some serious gormet shit
"fart/pee co2 and ethanol*
My curiosity is how they play a role in metabolism in my own body vs insulins to help migrate lipids as glycerol into cells as they increase and the slowing effects on metabolic actions from ethanol other bi products. That along with helpers such as natural cortisol from fruits such as grapefruits and other hormones such as glucagon to aid in lipolysis. As while I do think I ate a lot growing up with fiber my triglycerides tend to be slightly high and normal cholesterol with slightly low HDL good cholesterols and lots of starchy carb filled school lunches and adult food insecurities. I'm try to think of way or things to eat to get that engine going maybe even out it into high gear for awhile touch balance but i do think I've lacked fermented or yeast activated breads more so then a typical American as one of those changes along with more targeted fruits vegetables and fungi.
I am enjoying this episode with a nice, tall glass of beer and a Cheddar-cheese and salami sandwich.
Ahh yes... yeast
7:39 I guess cats are not domesticated after all, it actually makes a lot of sense.
My question is what is required to filter out yeast after/during brewing, what kind of mesh etc. Also: some say yeast float when they die after too much ethanol and that some sink to the bottom, is this so and what is the reason. Thanks.
Ha! I love that I got a beer advertisement as this video started!
Making bread feels very "primal" and even "primitive". Feeling the dough get stretchy when you knead it, watching the gluey paste puff up and become soft, and giving off an interesting smell; seeing that the dough expanded even more when you baked it, and tastes nothing like raw grain. Then put a piece of raw dough into a lot of water, and drink the result... the ancient Egyptians and Sumerians had Goddesses of Beer.
And a biologist I know has told me that most kinds of yeast have a fair number of genetic features in common with humans. This may be why we found the products yeast helps us produce turned out to be so useful and agreeable to us.
Fungi are the best when it comes to creating mind altering substances. Interesting how organisms very far related to us can change our minds.
You also drink yeast in beer and wine. we eat it in bread and some cheeses.