2021
DOI: 10.1086/716014
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Toward a Global Ecology of Fermented Foods

Abstract: The control of microbes in food has been as important to human societies as the domestication of plants and animals. The direct or indirect management of microbes has been critical to food safety, ensuring nutrient availability, and developing desired sensory characteristics in food. Fermentation is more universal than is agriculture inasmuch as it is practiced by agricultural societies, pastoralists, and hunter-gatherers. In addition, fermentation likely predates agriculture, potentially by hundreds of thousa… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
3
1
1

Citation Types

0
6
0
1

Year Published

2022
2022
2024
2024

Publication Types

Select...
6
3
1

Relationship

0
10

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 21 publications
(7 citation statements)
references
References 76 publications
0
6
0
1
Order By: Relevance
“…While the role of S. epidermidis in food is still unknown and can be treated as a possible contamination from handling, it is possible that, as with S. saprophyticus, S. gallinarum, and S. kloosii, S. epidermidis may be not a contaminant, but a typical and even beneficial part of the ecosystem of certain fermented foods. It is common for certain strains to circulate innocuously between human bodies and fermented food ecologies (Dunn et al, 2021;Reese et al, 2020), and growing research around the emerging concept of the holobiont (Faure et al, 2018;Simon et al, 2019)-reconceptualising individual organisms as ecologies formed of the 'host' and their microbiota-provides a promising framework to further investigate and normalise these microbial circulations from bodies to foods and back again. When it comes to this particular species, more studies are needed to understand its behaviour and potential in food and to establish the conditions of its safety.…”
Section: The Safety Of Staphylococci In These Misos and In Fermented ...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While the role of S. epidermidis in food is still unknown and can be treated as a possible contamination from handling, it is possible that, as with S. saprophyticus, S. gallinarum, and S. kloosii, S. epidermidis may be not a contaminant, but a typical and even beneficial part of the ecosystem of certain fermented foods. It is common for certain strains to circulate innocuously between human bodies and fermented food ecologies (Dunn et al, 2021;Reese et al, 2020), and growing research around the emerging concept of the holobiont (Faure et al, 2018;Simon et al, 2019)-reconceptualising individual organisms as ecologies formed of the 'host' and their microbiota-provides a promising framework to further investigate and normalise these microbial circulations from bodies to foods and back again. When it comes to this particular species, more studies are needed to understand its behaviour and potential in food and to establish the conditions of its safety.…”
Section: The Safety Of Staphylococci In These Misos and In Fermented ...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…В процессе ферментации данные продукты приобретают уникальные вкус, текстуру, внешний вид и функциональность по сравнению с исходными ингредиентами, из которых они вырабатываются [1]. Несмотря на многолетнюю известность, данная категория продуктов высоко ценится и в настоящее время: например, годовой объем продаж только ферментированных напитков превышает 2 трлн долларов [2], а объем мирового рынка комбучи, по прогнозам, к 2027 г. достигнет 10,45 млрд долларов [3].…”
Section: краткие сообщенияunclassified
“…Research programs have recently addressed the production methods, preparation tools, consumption rituals, frequency, and other issues related to fermented beverages. This has led to some outstanding studies that have contributed to the revival of traditional fermented products (Madej et al, 2014;Flachs and Orkin, 2019;Herrera Cano and Suárez, 2020;Kraus et al, 2022), their consideration as part of local biocultural heritage (Chaves-López et al, 2014;Puerari et al, 2015;Puerari et al, 2015;Tamang et al, 2016;Pérez-Armendáriz and Cardoso-Ugarte, 2020) and their relevance for diversifying diets (Chileshe, 2019;Bultosa et al, 2020;Dunn et al, 2021). Nevertheless, several social and economic pressures have promoted changes in values and cultures in the last decades that have resulted in the almost extinction of several of these products.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%