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Biochymickal Arts 20130914
welcome/framing
maja kuzamnovic
spelling - intentionally from a period when language was in flux, pre-formation of modern science
shift in rituals
demystification → modern science
in a time when a new form of demystification, access, opening processes, learning without 'initiation' into x
need for new metaphors. industrial/mechanical → biological/living
rethinking “growth”. linear economics view → cyclic, fermentation, death, transformation
being open to understanding technical foundations to find new metaphors
“arts” from a period when more entangled with craft, science and society
meaningful art is often about something other than itself, about the wider world, not just the 'medium'
art and design can help us ask 'better questions' rather than finding solutions to the 'wrong problems'
flow of the day
keep notes, take photos, put stuff on the libarynth
introduction to fermentation and ancestral practice
maria tarantino
overview of texts - “Wild Fermentation” (WF) and “Art of Fermentation” (AoF)
quote from first page of AoF
experiments in finding how widespread fermented veg are, taste is familiar in many cultures
fermentation is very simple “45 grams of salt for 2 kilos of vegetables” as basic rule
very obvious signals if veg. fermentation go 'wrong', others are not so obvious (e.g. almond taste → cyanide, prussic acid)
only lactobacteria can thrive in such a concentration of salt
ancestral practice
Korean text on fermentation with ~1000s of years of written history
video MAHJONG.dv
in japan. fish that is neither raw, nor cooked, at that point didn't know much about fermentation. put the fish in a doll box. LHR→BRU
developed a strategy to find out what this fish is.
went to .jp restaurant (“just throw it away”)
went to .jp supermarket (“some special fish” discovered it was fermented)
asked around, pointed to well know .jp chef from inada (ancient technique, needs green tea (unfermented) to be poured over it, had never tasted it himself)
had grown into the shape of a legend, by the time it was served
taste wasn't so special, red fish, fermented rice, sour
returns to japan, contacts expert in fermented sushi (funazushi), able to make it at home
visit people making it, tasted it, was wonderful
taste of 'parmesan' to Italian, like 'Roquefort' for a Frenchman
possible origins in Vietnam/Laos 'pla ra', spread to CJK
funazushi ~1300 AD near kyoto, keeping fish in salt to deliver to emperor packed with cooked rice. during that period, rice was more important than fish. fish used to enhance the rice. body of fish (usually with eggs) filled by the mouth with cooked rice and kept for ~1yr prototype for contemporary sushi
foods often exist in a specific biotope, does it make sense (or even work) to create them in another. e.g. rice straw in making funazushi
rice straw very important for making natto
what bacteria is in the straw? can the ancestral practice be 'translated' into another culture? e.g. carp → tench
6yr old sample → tastes 'fine'
not about quantity, but intensity of taste
“discover the nutritional value of wild foods” chart/table Robert Shosteck
http://www.motherearthnews.com/real-food/wild-foods-zmaz86jazgoe.aspx#axzz2erI1WwdO
Korean cuisine (wide range of fermentation (short hot summer, long cold winter), proximity of sea and mountains e.g fish & chestnuts) as masters of architecture of flavour
various cuisines as situated on a time line of fermentation
kiosk. Lebanese wild fermentation of bulgour
vocab. 'trigger' rather than culture or innoculum. something able to start the fermentation. “starter” in brewing. (SCOBY is an acronym for Symbiotic Colony of Bacteria and Yeast)
'seed culture' for milk and 'root culture' → bread
the biochemistry of fermentation
brian degger & general discussion
citric acid cycle with aconitate
fermentation of liquids to produce safe/palatable drinking 'water'
sugar, yeast, water
alcohol producing fermentation → self sterilising → alcohol production kills bacteria
(biotech as method to maintain selection pressure)
fermentation as method to produce insulin,
where is the line between metabolism and fermentation
veg. fermentation - usually anaerobic
spontaneous → relying on wild yeast & bacteria
controlled → specific introduced
what category distinctions are useful?
possible to manipulate 'environment' in which fermentation occurs to favour particular organisms or products (e.g yeast and sugar in beer/wine production)
harmful bacteria == “bacteria that can eat you”
fermentation in food production as method to favour selection of productive rather than harmful bacteria
microbiology relying on 'law of excluded middle' quite heavily
GFP as basis for many diagnostics
GFP yogurt as 'Hello World' for biohacking
ascorbate sytheisis pathway is 'broken' in humans, most mammals have metabolic pathway to produce vitamin C as end product. “how can you reboot the ascorbate synthesis pathway?”
establish artificial symbiotic relation with human microbe to produce missing enzyme?
modify one of the 'yogurt making bacteria' to produce missing enzyme
early days of 'microbiome engineering'
x.ref MetacCyc “L-abscorbate biosynthesis IV”
check metacyc for link between Lactobacillus and asorbic acid production
continued at biochymickal_arts_20130915