The word Yeast or Sourdough generally indicates the component used for leavening. The most common yeasts are natural yeast and brewer's yeast.
Sourdough is a traditional technology that improves the quality of baked goods, makes them rise with a wide range of flours and has a positive influence on the final product, improves the consistency, the shelf-life, the taste, but above all the functional and nutritional characteristics of the product.
It exerts a positive influence on the final product, improves the consistency, shelf-life, taste but above all, the functional and nutritional characteristics of the product.
Lactic acid bacteria and yeasts play the most important part in the leavening process.
There are many microbial communities involved in the natural leavening process, including:
- Saccharomyces cerevisiae
- Candida carpophila
- Hyphopicchia pseudoburtonii
- Torulaspora delbrueckii
- Kazachstania humilis
- Kazachstania bulderi
- Kazachstania saulgeensis
- Kazachstania unispora
- Rhodotorula mucilaginosa
Sourdough studies
Brewer's yeast is derived from the yast fungus Saccharomyces cerevisiae that consists of myriads of unicellular fungi that develop during fermentation
In the brewing process, the role of Saccharomyces cerevisiae is to convert sugars from beans into ethanol.
It is used in the food industry as a leavening factor for bread, wine (1), beer (2) and it has some interesting characteristics:
- body purifier
- it helps the bacterial flora to regenerate itself
- it helps the immune defense
- it provides proteins (3)
Contraindications: high dosage, intolerances.
Brewer's yeast has proved to be very useful in the study of degenerative disease Sla as it has allowed to analyze the course of the disease.
This study attributes brewer's yeast a promising activity as an antiulcer and antiproliferative remedy (4).
Brewer's yeast studies
References______________________________________________________________________
(1) Hyma KE, Fay JC. Mixing of vineyard and oak-tree ecotypes of Saccharomyces cerevisiae in North American vineyards. Mol Ecol. 2013 Jun;22(11):2917-30. doi: 10.1111/mec.12155.
(2) Garcia Sanchez R, Solodovnikova N, Wendland J. Breeding of lager yeast with Saccharomyces cerevisiae improves stress resistance and fermentation performance. Yeast. 2012 Aug;29(8):343-55.
(3) Shivange G, Kodipelli N, Monisha M, Anindya R. A role for Saccharomyces cerevisiae Tpa1 protein in direct alkylation repair. J Biol Chem. 2014 Nov 7. pii: jbc.M114.590216.
(4) Amorim MM, Pereira JO, Monteiro KM, Ruiz AL, Carvalho JE, Pinheiro H, Pintado M. Antiulcer and antiproliferative properties of spent brewer's yeast peptide extracts for incorporation into foods. Food Funct. 2016 May 18;7(5):2331-7. doi: 10.1039/c6fo00030d.