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History of Technology Videos 160 videos
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History of Technology 5: Fermentation 20 Views
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Description:
Check out this video about fermentation. If you want to snack while you're watching, we humbly suggest pickles. Here at Shmoop, we love a good theme.
Transcript
- 00:03
Quick, when we say fermentation, what comes to mind? [person speaks onstage]
- 00:06
Alcohol? Healthy people who drink kombucha? Kimchi? Or maybe just a fermen... what? [fermented food/drink examples]
- 00:13
Yeah. And what things can be fermented? Well, lots of stuff--from green juice, to
- 00:19
cabbage, to cheese, to meat. Yeah, meat... they ferment shark meat in Iceland.
- 00:24
Seriously it was a Viking thing; we're not making this up. Of course, the [fermented shark meat feast]
Full Transcript
- 00:28
fermentation process looks different depending on what kinds of bacteria are [bacteria work on fermentation]
- 00:31
at work. Oh, you didn't realize there was bacteria involved? Yup lots and lots
- 00:36
of bacteria. No worries, it's not as scary as it sounds, for the most part. [person hides]
- 00:40
Let's take it to of the major categories of stuff that humans and
- 00:43
friendly bacteria have fermented over the years. We'll start with the obvious: [person hangs out with bacteria]
- 00:47
booze, the sauce, wacky juice, as some call it...
- 00:50
Okay, well nobody calls it that anymore. But the fact is that one of the biggest [people drinking]
- 00:54
uses for fermentation has been the production of alcoholic beverages, and
- 00:57
it's also one of the oldest. Humans probably first drink alcohol from fruit
- 01:02
that accidentally rotted or something, but they got the hang of making it [man eats bad fruit]
- 01:05
themselves soon after... like, really soon after. Archaeologists have found beer
- 01:10
jugs from 10,000 BCE, which is right around the time we started to [people excavate beer jug]
- 01:14
domesticate crops. Yeah, quick work, there, Stone Age guys. But fermentation wasn't [early farmer works]
- 01:19
just for booze. It also helped us out with dairy products. See, dairy has [bacteria with cow]
- 01:23
always been kind of a problem for humans. It's high-calorie and fatty, but it tends
- 01:27
to go bad super fast. You never really know what's going on inside the fridge [milk goes rogue]
- 01:31
until it's too late. Luckily, there are lots of different ways
- 01:35
of fermenting milk to make it into other stuff that keeps longer. There's yogurt, [dairy factory video]
- 01:40
buttermilk, most kinds of cheese, and this stuff called kefir, which is a drinkable
- 01:45
yogurt loaded with bacteria... the good kind of bacteria, not the kind that turns our [fermented dairy example]
- 01:49
internal organs to goop. Fermenting also helps us preserve
- 01:54
vegetables. Well, most fermented fruits just turn into wine, but vegetables can have a [fruit becomes wine]
- 01:59
lower sugar content, so regular fermenting ain't going to work.
- 02:03
This means they get pickled. Yup, they're either pickled with vinegar or they're [vegetables pickled]
- 02:08
left to ferment in anaerobic, or oxygen-free, environments, where they
- 02:12
start to produce lactic acid. The lactic acid then pickles the vegetables and
- 02:17
preserves them so they don't rot. Hey, what did the cucumber say to the other [guy does pretty rough stand-up routine]
- 02:21
cucumber when they were shoved into a vinegar-filled jar? We're in a pickle now... is this thing on?
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