• What yeast is this ?

    From Shadow@21:1/5 to All on Tue Jul 19 23:12:32 2016
    600 ml lukewarm water
    70 g white flour
    70 g common sugar
    10 g salt

    Put them in a plastic basin, in that order, don't mix. Cover
    with a cloth.
    After 24 hrs, mix gently 2x a day.

    After 5 days, there is a lot of activity.

    Take 200 g of the mixture above, put it in a loosely covered
    jar (I used a 1 liter plastic coke bottle with a loose plastic top)
    and add
    400 g warm water
    70 g white flour
    70 g sugar
    5 g salt

    Mix well.
    The next day it's fermenting so fast you can make bread with
    it, as long as you add a generous amount of sugar to the recipe.
    It smells yeasty, sweetish, and slightly alcoholic, but not
    sour.
    Anyone have any idea what the biological agents are ?
    TIA
    []'s

    --
    Don't be evil - Google 2004
    We have a new policy - Google 2012

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  • From Dusty@21:1/5 to Shadow on Thu Jul 21 10:30:30 2016
    On 19-Jul-16 19:12, Shadow wrote:

    600 ml lukewarm water
    70 g white flour
    70 g common sugar
    10 g salt

    Put them in a plastic basin, in that order, don't mix. Cover
    with a cloth.
    After 24 hrs, mix gently 2x a day.

    After 5 days, there is a lot of activity.

    Take 200 g of the mixture above, put it in a loosely covered
    jar (I used a 1 liter plastic coke bottle with a loose plastic top)
    and add
    400 g warm water
    70 g white flour
    70 g sugar
    5 g salt

    Mix well.
    The next day it's fermenting so fast you can make bread with
    it, as long as you add a generous amount of sugar to the recipe.
    It smells yeasty, sweetish, and slightly alcoholic, but not
    sour.
    Anyone have any idea what the biological agents are ?
    TIA
    []'s

    Wow! Not at all sure. Never heard of a scheme like that. If you've
    made it, how's it doing?

    Dusty
    --
    "The ideals which have lighted my way, and time after time have given
    me new courage to face life cheerfully, have been Kindness, Beauty, and
    Truth." - Albert Einstein

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  • From Shadow@21:1/5 to gordon+usenet@drogon.net on Thu Jul 21 19:13:52 2016
    On Thu, 21 Jul 2016 20:57:56 -0000 (UTC), Gordon Henderson <gordon+usenet@drogon.net> wrote:

    In article <2kmtobp0ofnmtb3j9n4elsrs7ecd35jvk9@4ax.com>,
    Shadow <Sh@dow.br> wrote:

    600 ml lukewarm water
    70 g white flour
    70 g common sugar
    10 g salt

    Put them in a plastic basin, in that order, don't mix. Cover
    with a cloth.
    After 24 hrs, mix gently 2x a day.

    After 5 days, there is a lot of activity.

    Take 200 g of the mixture above, put it in a loosely covered
    jar (I used a 1 liter plastic coke bottle with a loose plastic top)
    and add
    400 g warm water
    70 g white flour
    70 g sugar
    5 g salt

    Mix well.
    The next day it's fermenting so fast you can make bread with
    it, as long as you add a generous amount of sugar to the recipe.
    It smells yeasty, sweetish, and slightly alcoholic, but not
    sour.
    Anyone have any idea what the biological agents are ?

    It seems similar to the Herman friendship cake/bread thing, although
    some of them also have milk in.

    Yes, it's something like what we call "Christ's Yeast". The
    smell is a little different though. Sweeter.
    Still interested in the biology of the yeast, and if it's in
    any way related to sourdough/commercial yeast.
    []'s
    --
    Don't be evil - Google 2004
    We have a new policy - Google 2012

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  • From Gordon Henderson@21:1/5 to Sh@dow.br on Thu Jul 21 20:57:56 2016
    In article <2kmtobp0ofnmtb3j9n4elsrs7ecd35jvk9@4ax.com>,
    Shadow <Sh@dow.br> wrote:

    600 ml lukewarm water
    70 g white flour
    70 g common sugar
    10 g salt

    Put them in a plastic basin, in that order, don't mix. Cover
    with a cloth.
    After 24 hrs, mix gently 2x a day.

    After 5 days, there is a lot of activity.

    Take 200 g of the mixture above, put it in a loosely covered
    jar (I used a 1 liter plastic coke bottle with a loose plastic top)
    and add
    400 g warm water
    70 g white flour
    70 g sugar
    5 g salt

    Mix well.
    The next day it's fermenting so fast you can make bread with
    it, as long as you add a generous amount of sugar to the recipe.
    It smells yeasty, sweetish, and slightly alcoholic, but not
    sour.
    Anyone have any idea what the biological agents are ?

    It seems similar to the Herman friendship cake/bread thing, although
    some of them also have milk in.

    Gordon

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    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Dario Niedermann@21:1/5 to Shadow on Wed Aug 24 02:05:59 2016
    Shadow <Sh@dow.br> wrote:

    600 ml lukewarm water
    70 g white flour
    70 g common sugar
    10 g salt

    The inclusion of salt is surprising. Shouldn't it inhibit the
    micro-organisms, at least a little?

    --
    Dario Niedermann. Also on the Internet at:

    gopher://retro-net.org/1/dnied/ , http://devio.us/~ndr/

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  • From Shadow@21:1/5 to DustySN@InnerLodgeREMOVETHIS.com on Thu Jul 21 17:42:19 2016
    On Thu, 21 Jul 2016 10:30:30 -0700, Dusty
    <DustySN@InnerLodgeREMOVETHIS.com> wrote:

    On 19-Jul-16 19:12, Shadow wrote:

    600 ml lukewarm water
    70 g white flour
    70 g common sugar
    10 g salt

    Put them in a plastic basin, in that order, don't mix. Cover
    with a cloth.
    After 24 hrs, mix gently 2x a day.

    After 5 days, there is a lot of activity.

    Take 200 g of the mixture above, put it in a loosely covered
    jar (I used a 1 liter plastic coke bottle with a loose plastic top)
    and add
    400 g warm water
    70 g white flour
    70 g sugar
    5 g salt

    Mix well.
    The next day it's fermenting so fast you can make bread with
    it, as long as you add a generous amount of sugar to the recipe.
    It smells yeasty, sweetish, and slightly alcoholic, but not
    sour.
    Anyone have any idea what the biological agents are ?
    TIA
    []'s

    Wow! Not at all sure. Never heard of a scheme like that. If you've
    made it, how's it doing?

    Made dough with it last night, baked it this morning. It
    almost quadrupled in size( almost tripled with the rise, then
    increased > 1/3 from oven spring). The gluten did not deteriorate at
    all, I could have let it rise more, it seems to feed on sugar only.
    But not as nice as sourdough, it has a slightly unpleasant
    after-taste, not noticeable if you eat it with jam, but quite definite
    if you eat it with only butter.
    I'll see what happens to the after-taste when I toast it.
    []'s

    PS try making it, it might be some "regional yeast" I picked up in
    Brazil. Not exactly expensive or labor-intensive. I'd be interested to
    know if this is a yeast present in all flour that gets killed off by
    the sourdough acidity.
    --
    Don't be evil - Google 2004
    We have a new policy - Google 2012

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  • From Shadow@21:1/5 to dnied@tiscali.it on Fri Aug 26 12:32:52 2016
    On Wed, 24 Aug 2016 02:05:59 +0200, Dario Niedermann
    <dnied@tiscali.it> wrote:

    Shadow <Sh@dow.br> wrote:

    600 ml lukewarm water
    70 g white flour
    70 g common sugar
    10 g salt

    The inclusion of salt is surprising. Shouldn't it inhibit the >micro-organisms, at least a little?

    It probably does. But it's so fast that's a "feature", not a
    "bug".
    ;)
    []'s
    --
    Don't be evil - Google 2004
    We have a new policy - Google 2012

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