ZOE Science & Nutrition - Will fermented foods improve my gut health?
Episode Date: October 27, 2022Fermentation is a hot craze in fancy restaurants around the world. And fermented foods, like kombucha and kimchi, are even sold in corner stores. Listeners of this show will have heard that fermente...d foods might benefit our gut health. But these foods make us uneasy. The idea of letting food rot, then eating it goes against everything our parents taught us. So, is fermentation scary and dangerous? This episode will show you why it's not only safe but beneficial to eat fermented foods, and that fermenting foods is something you can try at home. Jonathan speaks to Tim Spector and Sandor Katz — whom the food magazine CHOW calls a provocateur, trendsetter, and rabble-rouser — to better understand the fabulous world of fermentation. Sandor Katz is a food activist who is widely credited with reintroducing fermentation to the US and the UK, calling himself a fermentation revivalist. Tim Spector is a co-founder at ZOE and one of the top 100 most cited scientists in the world. Download our FREE guide — Top 10 Tips to Live Healthier: https://zoe.com/freeguide Timecodes: 00:00 - Intro 00:13 - Topic introduction 02:21 - Quickfire questions 04:10 - Isn’t fermentation niche? 05:05 - What is fermentation? 07:36 - Why did our ancestors ferment their food? 08:54 - How is fermentation preserving food? 12:45 - What are the impacts on our health of eating fermented foods? 16:27 - How to make kimchi 19:00 - What is kefir? 20:25 - Why are fermented foods good for our health 24:19 - Why don’t we have to worry about bacteria in fermented foods? 29:36 - What are the best fermented foods to get started with? 34:16 - Can you purchase fermented foods at stores? 39:26 - 5 tips for people interested in trying fermented foods 42:42 - Summary 44:17 - Listener’s question: What’s the most unusual food that you’ve fermented? 45:16 - Goodbyes 45:24 - Outro Episode transcripts are available here. Follow Sandor: https://www.instagram.com/sandorkraut/ Learn Sandor’s sauerkraut recipe here. Get Sandor’s book here. Follow ZOE on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zoe/ This podcast was produced by Fascinate Productions.
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Welcome to ZOE Science and Nutrition, where world-leading scientists explain how their
research can improve your health.
Fermentation is the hot craze in fancy restaurants across the Western world.
Fermented foods with strange names like kombucha and kimchi are now sold in corner stores.
Listeners of this show will have heard that fermented foods might benefit our gut health.
But these foods make us uneasy.
The idea of letting food rot and then eating it goes against everything our parents taught us.
So is fermentation scary and dangerous?
Many of us don't realize that some of our favorite foods
are already fermented.
Bread, cheese, wine, all amazing examples
of how microbes can transform what we eat.
This episode will show you why it's not only safe but beneficial to eat fermented
foods and that this is something you can do yourself at home. In fact we will even share an
easy recipe to get started. Joining us on this episode is author and food activist Sandor Katz
who is widely credited with reintroducing fermentation to the US and the UK with his book Wild Fermentation.
He calls himself a fermentation revivalist. The food magazine Chow calls him a provocateur,
trendsetter and rabble rouser. I'm also joined by Tim Spector, one of the world's top 100 most
cited scientists and my co-founder here at Zoe to help us understand the science of fermentation and why it might bring unique health benefits. So abandon any fears you may have and let's
dive into the fabulous world of fermentation. Sandor and Tim, thank you for joining me today.
I am really excited about this one. Five years ago, when I started at ZOE, I really had no idea
what fermentation was. To be honest, a fermented food sounded like something that I would have to
throw in the trash. So I think our listeners are in for a treat to sort of hear in an accelerated
way from you about what this means. And as always, what I'd like to do is start with a quick fire
round of questions from our listeners.
So Sandor, to start with, do you think we should all eat fermented foods?
We already do.
That's a great one. Not quite a yes or a no, but that's fantastic.
Is it hard to ferment food at home?
No.
And last one, can you ferment fruit?
There is nothing we could possibly eat that cannot be fermented.
What does it mean to you to be a fermentation revivalist?
Fermentation has been an integral part of how people in every part of the world
make effective use of whatever food resources are available to them. It's part of our cultural
legacy everywhere. And yet over the past several generations, fewer and fewer people have been
practicing fermentation. And so when I talk about myself as a fermentation revivalist is really
trying to revive interest in these ancient practices and basically help people feel confident
to bring them into their home kitchens.
All right.
And I think we're going to come back to a bit of that
in more detail later.
Tim, does fermented food have proven health benefits?
Yes, in some cases,
but most fermented foods have not been tested fully.
Is eating fermented foods better than swallowing probiotic pills?
In general, yes.
And finally, can we consume too much fermented food and drinks?
You can consume too much wine.
That's true.
But in general, if it's non-alcoholic, I don't think so, as long as there's variety.
Fantastic. So I think we'll come back to many of those, but why don't we just start
right at the beginning? And Sandra, I think the initial question is,
isn't fermentation quite niche? Why would we even talk about this topic?
Well, I mean, every person in every part of the world eats and drinks products of fermentation
almost every day. I'm not sure how
you could call that a niche type of food. Think about the kind of diet that maybe people in the
UK or people in the US have. Bread is fermented. Cheese is fermented. Cured meats are fermented.
The condiments that we use are fermented. Olives are fermented. Pickles are fermented. Coffee is fermented. Certain kinds of tea are fermented. Chocolate is fermented. Vanilla is fermented. Obviously, beer and wine are fermented. I mean, an incredible range of foods that are really everyday foods are products of fermentation. And so I think that probably opens up our mind to the reach of fermentation. What is it and why is it something specific that
we would think about and that you've really sort of dedicated, I guess, your life to?
Well, broadly speaking, fermentation is the transformative action of microorganisms.
For thousands of years, long before we specifically knew of the existence of microorganisms, people have been working with the reality that these organisms inhabit our food. And of course, one possibility is that microorganisms decompose our food into a disgusting, ugly mess that nobody would ever put into their mouths. Which I think is for many of us, like how
we naturally think about these things, right? I think this is the world that many of us have been
brought up with. I mean, many of us are victims of what I would call the war on bacteria and this
sort of indoctrination that bacteria are our enemies. But for thousands of years, people have been working with these invisible
life forces on our food. And with our ancestors' powers of observation and trial and error,
people in every part of the world develop techniques for working with these organisms
so that rather than decomposing our food, they somehow improve our food. They produce alcohol.
They make our food more stable for storage. They make our food more delicious. They make our food more digestible. Fermentation is just an essential part of how people everywhere have been able to
make effective use of whatever kinds of food resources are available to them. We all are familiar with
products of fermentation, but the thing that has disappeared from most people's lives is a
familiarity with the process of fermentation. And because it has largely disappeared into factories,
we imagine that it must require sterile conditions, require a microscope or a knowledge of microbiology.
We project all of our anxiety about the idea of cultivating bacteria onto the simplest of facilities and really without any knowledge
of microbiology for thousands, literally thousands of years.
And so historically, why did our ancestors ferment food?
And you touched a little bit, but it helped to understand.
You're describing something that's very central.
Why were they fermenting their food? Well, for a variety of reasons. I mean, to produce alcohol. I mean,
absolutely, the production of alcohol is the most widespread application of fermentation.
It's the only way anyone has ever created alcohol. And every kind of carbohydrate source we know
about has been turned into alcohol. Beyond alcohol, especially for people in temperate
environments with limited growing seasons, preservation has been a very important
application of fermentation. But fermentation is practiced in tropical regions of the world,
just as much as it's practiced in temperate regions of the world. And in tropical regions, it's less about
preservation of food to feed people through a long, harsh winter. And it's more about removing
toxins from food, making things more digestible, making things more delicious. So there's a variety
of practical benefits to fermentation, but there's always a practical benefit to fermentation.
Got it. So you didn't start with taste.
You started with a lot of practical reasons, whether that's to generate alcohol, which
and we know human beings, many of them are quite keen on alcohol, but also you're talking
about preservation.
Can you explain a bit more what's going on in that second case?
So I've got a food, I'm generally worrying about this food going off quite fast, which
is part of why I think I was taught by my parents
to be worried about it going bad and these microbes. How can these microbes that I tend
to associate with food going rotten, how are they actually able to be in this world where you're
saying, hey, this is making it safer and this is preserving food?
So, I mean, first of all, I should point out that there's a great deal of biodiversity on all of the plants and all
of the animal products that make up our food. And so really the big question in fermentation is which
organisms are going to grow. And generally in the case where we're trying to preserve food,
we are creating conditions that encourage the growth of certain organisms and simultaneously
discourage the growth of other kinds of organisms. And we want to encourage the type of certain organisms and simultaneously discourage the growth of other kinds of organisms.
And we want to encourage the type of organisms when our objective is food preservation. We want
to encourage the acid-producing organisms. So in most cases, that would be lactic acid bacteria.
And so once the lactic acid bacteria start acidifying the environment and the pH in that
environment goes down, that has the effect of narrowing the range of what other organisms
can survive.
And it's very convenient for us that in a sufficiently acidic environment, the organisms
that we associate with food poisoning and illness cannot survive. You know, acidification of food through fermentation is just an incredibly effective strategy for
food safety.
And you can't really have effective food preservation without having food safety at the same time.
I think that perhaps the most vivid example of this would be milk.
And for those of us who grew up in the 20th century, we all had a refrigerator in our,
I mean, not everywhere in the world, but I'm assuming most of the people listening to this
podcast grew up with a refrigerator.
Now, fresh milk really has not been a possibility for most people throughout history.
People with cows and goats could have fresh milk, but anyone else was drinking soured milk. In the English language, we have this word that's
become obsolete, clabbered milk. Clabbered milk is simply milk, typically raw milk with its
indigenous bacteria dominated by lactic acid bacteria intact. When it just sits on the counter
at ambient temperatures, those organisms consume
lactose and produce lactic acid. The milk acidifies. What most people throughout history
have enjoyed in terms of dairy products has been fermented forms of dairy. And the fermentation
makes the dairy more stable by acidifying it. Or in the case of cheesemaking, also by removing some of the
watery aspect and making it something drier and denser.
And I'm sure Tim would be up for trying the soured milk or any other variant of this that
you can provide.
Everyone listening to this is familiar with fermented milk.
And yogurt would be an example of fermented milk.
Kefir would be an example of fermented milk. Kefir would be an example of fermented milk.
And for these, we use specific starters.
But if we try to think conceptually about where they came from, they were spontaneous
occurrences in some places that people developed a technique to perpetuate.
So I think it's really interesting that, you know, we live with all of this.
We tend not to think about them as fermented products normally, and that originally there's a sort of this self-sterilization is sort of what you're describing, right? That there's this sort of magic process that makes us healthy without what we're all used to, this idea that you've got to sterilize through, you know, heating something at a very high temperature or, it with something. I guess many of the people
listening to this podcast are particularly interested in about how this might impact,
in fact, to health. So you're describing a world where really we were focused on being able to
sustain these products, have access to them afterwards. Is the health products just,
are they real? Are they a byproduct of this? How do we understand this?
They're definitely real. And it's not a new idea. I mean, I think in many different cultural
contexts, there has been, you know, the idea that particularly these live fermented foods,
whether it's yogurt or kefir, whether it's sauerkraut or kimchi or pickle brine. But there's longstanding folklore recognizing some of the special
nutritional qualities of these live ferments. And I think in our age of microbiology and PCR
testing and more sophisticated techniques for understanding what's happening, there's been quite a bit of affirmation of the
idea that these live fermented foods have special health benefits, not the least of which is
probiotics, the bacteria that are in them that sort of continue to have a life and influence
in our bodies. And Tim, I'd love to get your thoughts. I know a lot of your research is around exactly these areas. Yes. Well, as Sandra said, the Chinese medicine, Indian medicine often
had fermented foods at its base. So they understood, they didn't exactly know why, but they knew they
had some benefits. And I think what people need to understand is that when I talk about fermented
foods, it's not things like supermarket
bread or the process involved in it, but it's still got live microbes at the end. And I think
we don't really have a word for that yet, but it's sort of live fermented food, I guess might be the
way to describe it. Often has very much more in the way of microbes and microbe diversity than
buying your probiotics at the health food shop.
Because generally in a health food store, you're going to get one,
maybe three varieties of microbe that you hope are there and hope aren't dead.
Whereas if you have a standard kefir or a kimchi or a kombucha,
you can have at least 10 varieties, sometimes up to 30 varieties of live microbes,
all different to different varieties of those products and in large numbers.
When populations like the Koreans, who I looked up recently, actually eat 36 kilograms each of
kimchi. 36 kilos. That's a lot of kimchi.
There's a lot of kimchi, but they start young and they happen to be the healthiest
westernized population. And that's probably no surprise that that happens. But in a way,
what they're doing is every day they are having this extra probiotic supplement of an extra 20 species that they are ingesting, including
yeasts, fungi, other things that aren't traditionally in health food stores.
So I think that's important.
Well, I'm just admiring Sandor's kimchi as on the bowl.
Is that a tradition?
For everybody else who's listening to this, Sandor has just picked up this spectacular
jar.
Sandor, what is in that jar?
Kimchi that I just made the other day.
It's some cabbage and spices, basically.
The spices are rice-based paste, a little bit of fish sauce in it.
But in the warm summer temperatures, it's fermenting very vigorously,
and it'll have to go into the refrigerator soon.
How hard is it to do that? Could you talk us through what it would take if someone was
listening here and would like to make their own kimchi at home?
Sure. Well, let me first of all say that the easiest way to ferment vegetables of all is what
I would describe as the sauerkraut method, dry salting the vegetables. All you do is you shred vegetables, create surface area,
lightly salt them. There's no magic number about how much salt. You salt it lightly, mix it up,
taste it, add more salt if desired. Add seasonings if you like, caraway seeds or garlic or chili
peppers or anything. Squeeze the vegetables for a few minutes and that helps get them juicy.
Once they're juicy and you like the balance of flavors, pack them into a vessel so they are
submerged under their own juices and then wait some days or some weeks. And that's the whole
process. For making kimchi, there's an additional step to the process. And that is that I shred the vegetables and I
submerge them under a saltwater brine solution. I don't measure the salt, but I taste it and I'm
going for the flavor of the sea. I want it to be somewhere around five or 6% salt.
Pretty salty.
Pretty salty. And then you just leave that for 24 hours. And then the next day you go ahead and you
make a little spice paste.
You ever add a little spoon of sugar sometimes to the kimchi?
No, I mean, basically, the rice paste does the same thing. So typically, people add some sort
of more concentrated carbohydrate. And that could be grain-based, like my rice paste. It could be fruit-based. Sometimes people will use pears or apples or
other fruit. Sometimes people just add a spoonful of sugar or honey. There's various ways to achieve
that, but just by adding some more concentrated carbohydrate element just makes for a more
vigorous, faster fermentation. It doesn't keep it sweet. And just to say that there are infinite
varieties of kimchi. And if you go to Korea, each family has their own version, don't they? So it's,
you know, there are infinite numbers of potential microbes that you can get out of a kimchi. And
that's what the publications show. I think there's over 100 different types of microbes
you can get from a similar mix of
kimchi.
But what I think is interesting is also for people who aren't aware of the difference
between say the health benefits of kimchi versus say kefir is that...
And Tim, I think there'll be plenty of people listening to this who won't even know what
kefir is.
So just help us to understand. Kefir in the States, kefir, is fermented milk. And so this is what Sander was talking about.
You have these grains, which you just put into normal milk and then leave for a few days and
they start to produce this kefir or kefir, which is all around the world and the versions in India
and all over the place.
It's like a super yogurt, I would call it.
But the difference with the kimchi is that it's got,
you're eating the vegetables, which have fiber.
And as you eat them, they're giving off the probiotics,
which are these microbes, but the actual hard texture of the original vegetables,
10 or so different plants you've got in there also helping your gut and keeping those microbes going.
So it's sort of, you're getting the prebiotic
and the probiotic, the fertilizer and the seeds,
both at the same time.
And I think that's what's unique about those sort of types
of fermented vegetables that we don't often talk about.
And that's probably why they potentially have greater health benefits than just the
pure microbes on their own. I don't know if Sandor would agree.
And Tim, I think people are listening to Sandor's description and say,
that sounds delicious, right? It sounds amazing. You definitely think about something you want to
eat. Can you help us understand a bit more?
Because you described the fact there's lots of microbes, but can you help to sort of fill
in the details?
So why is it that eating this thing which is fermented is actually improving our health?
And also, particularly, there's two parts to this, and I just want you to sort of unpack
a bit for the audience because the food itself is changing, isn't it?
And you've got these microbes. Could you just explain a bit more like why both of those things are affecting our
health? Yes. So the food itself, we know that if you're eating plants that have either a high
fiber content or a high polyphenol content, which is the defense chemicals in plants that
our gut microbes feed off, They are stimulating your community of gut
microbes to help your immune system, to help all aspects of your metabolism and infinite things we
still don't understand. So it's really important that the plants you're eating in something like
a kimchi is part of trying to get this big variety of plants in your diet.
And I would say aim for your 30 plants a week.
I'm sure Sandor does many more.
But just by having a kimchi, you're getting probably about eight or so of them, eight or 10 different plants in one spoonful.
So that's important.
They're feeding the whole gut community.
And then you've got on top of that,
you've got these microbes that are sitting on those foods that go through your intestinal system.
And a lot of them get killed off, but enough get through the stomach acid to get to your lower gut, where they will have an interactive effect on your microbes, stimulating to produce good
chemicals that are, again, really key for your
immune system and your digestion, your metabolism, etc. So it's that double system of both feeding
the original contents of your gut microbes, stimulating new ones to grow more of the good
guys, and these probiotic microbes that don't live in humans just passing through,
having like a beneficial effect, a bit like rich American cruise ships going through some poor
island community dispensing money as they go. So I think that's the analogy.
And so Tim, just to make sure we're clear on that, what you're saying is when I'm eating
something that might have some live bacteria in it, whether it's a yogurt or your
kimchi, the microbes aren't necessarily staying in my gut permanently, which is I think what
most people were assuming. You're saying probably they're passing through and yet they can still
have this positive effect? That's correct. Exactly. So we used to think that they did,
well, there was the naysayers
about 10 years ago said, well, none of this works because they're either killed off at the stomach
or they can't stay in the human gut. And now many science experiments have shown that's
only partly true and they still have a beneficial impact, but it sort of means you have to have them
regularly to be healthy. I think that's the point. You can't just have a once a month fermented food fest and hope that it's going to last you for the whole month. You
have to have these things regularly. And when you do, then they are healthy and the data supports
them. So it's a bit more like taking a medicine. It has this impact, but it passes through and it
falls away. And so I need to keep doing this. It's not every day, but it's every
few days. But it's also like food because we can't just eat once a month and have all of our needs
met. I mean, it's not like medicine. It's like food where we need to eat them regularly. I only
react to that because people sometimes imagine they're like medicine and they say, oh, what's the correct dosage of kimchi? And I mean, it's not medicine like that. It's food, but it's food which can
support our health. A lot of different kinds of foods really are like that.
And Sander, one of the things I find amazing, and again, I think this shows you how, I guess, medicalized I am, is that you didn't say you go and add the particular correct bacteria into your kimchi, right?
In fact, you didn't even mention anything about the bacteria.
They just sort of magically appeared.
Could you help us to understand and why don't we have to be really careful about this step?
Sure.
The reason why we don't have to add some specific pure culture starter
that's been propagated in a laboratory
is that we have a clear understanding
that all plants are host to lactic acid bacteria.
I mean, there's a broad consensus among microbiologists and botanists that all
plants growing out of soil on planet Earth are host to lactic acid bacteria. And so if we create
the conditions in which the lactic acid bacteria can thrive, they are always there to do so.
Now, I mean, you could certainly find on the internet a packet of white
powder of lactobacillus plantarum, which people will be happy to sell you as a starter for making
sauerkraut or kimchi or other kinds of fermented vegetables. But, you know, I would consider that
to be an exploitative product because the lactic acid bacteria are already present on vegetables and
you don't need to add a starter. That's amazing. So you're saying, because I thought maybe it was
in the air, you're saying actually the plants themselves, it's not like they come pre-packaged
with their own bacteria. You literally just have to add the salt, put them in the jar and you're
away. I mean, they're growing out of the soil. And the soil is this just incredible,
complex system that we're only beginning to develop tools to be able to appreciate the level
of complexity of it. But the seedling is emerging, you know, partly with the help of microorganisms
in the soil. The plant is able to grow and flourish with the assistance of microorganisms in the soil, the plant is able to grow and flourish with the assistance of
microorganisms in the soil. And so, you know, the soil is the source of all of this and the
organisms that enable the animals that we raise for our food that are grazing on plants, you know,
it's the soil organisms that are feeding their gut bacteria as well. So, I mean,
I would say the microbial system really begins and ends in the soil, and that's the source of
the constant renewal of life, really. There's a sort of beautiful connectivity as you talk
about this, right? Where actually, you know, through the food and the bacteria, you're connected back to the soil and the
world.
And that's obviously very different from the interaction with food that most of us have
now in the West where everything comes in a packaged plastic wrapped solution.
And the more that it has been separated and sterilized, the better. And I do think that
it's amazing that just as we've been discovering how important these microbes are inside our gut
for our health, we also see equally well that we always used to have this very interactive
back and forth connection with the bacteria outside us. And I guess what I'm hearing is
that fermentation is one of these ways that you can start to maybe pull this back together again.
Absolutely. And I mean, I think beyond fermentation, I mean, we really have an imperative
to reconnect to the sources of our food and reclaim our food. You know, food is not a commodity like
every other commodity. I mean, you know, food is what enables us to continue to exist.
Food comes from plants and animals.
The pursuit of food connects every kind of organism in the world with its environment.
And human beings, in the name of our sort of supposed progress, have really sort of
severed that connection. And, you know,
I think we need to become reconnected to the sources of our food and reclaim our food as a
product of our environment that, you know, we interact with. Absolutely agree with everything
Sandal's been saying. And I only started fermenting about 10 years ago,
but I found that having a jar, whether it's kimchi or kombucha, which is fermented tea,
you can actually see the process that's not only going on inside our guts and our bodies every day,
but also gives you an idea of what's happening in the soil and plants in a visual way. And I think
this is why everybody should be teaching their kids to ferment something,
to really understand not only our relationship with food, but how we all have these similar
pathways as organisms.
And I think it's incredibly insightful as we see the whole thing unifying together and
realizing that what's happening in soil is very
similar to what's happening inside our own bodies and is not nearly as different as we expected.
So I think there'll be lots of people listening to this who are really excited about the idea
of fermenting, but also feeling really daunted. And you've already mentioned
kimchi and kombucha, and there's a lot of scary words that maybe they don't really know anything about. Let's say that they're saying, I'd like to
start, but I'm completely new to this. What's the best fermented foods to get started with? And
particularly maybe for people who think they don't like fermented food. And I think I historically
was definitely in that category. I grew up thinking all those strong flavors and acidic flavors are disgusting.
You know, fermentation, that sounds sort of gross.
And as you said, Sander, I did that while happily, you know, eating a double cheese
pizza.
So, you know, I didn't know what I was talking about, but I think that's where they come
from.
Is the entry point, does it have to be, you've got to figure out kimchi?
What would you advise?
No, no, not at all. I mean, as I said earlier, I mean, I think that the sauerkraut method is just
the simplest way to ferment. I mean, you shred vegetables, salt them, season them, pound them,
or squeeze them for a few minutes to get them juicy, pack them into a jar. But there's incredible
range. I mean, so, I mean, on my counter right now here, this is something I made yesterday. These are, I call these dilly beans and they're basically
immature beans, green beans. Some of these are red. They're a different variety.
Yeah. They look like they're about three inches long, I would say, or I guess what's that? 10
centimeters in what, what, what is that? Like a half a liter jar, something like that?
Yeah, it's a liter size jar,
but it's just these green beans, garlic, dill,
and a saltwater brine solution.
And I'll probably ferment them for four or five days.
I already tasted one this morning, one day old.
I want them to have a more assertive sourness, so I'm giving them more time.
But that's a very simple way to do it.
You know, fermented cucumbers were really my gateway into fermentation.
They were the gateway drug, were they, Sandor?
Yeah, so you can do it with cucumbers, but cucumbers end up being kind of among the most challenging vegetables to ferment,
only because they get soft and mushy.
So in my book, Wild Fermentation, you can find some very specific suggestions about how to
ferment cucumbers and keep them crisp. I have another jar here. This is a Chinese style
called pao cai, and it's basically vegetables in a perpetual brine. And I've been maintaining this
brine for more than two years now. And I mean, the flavor just gets better and better.
So you're sort of constantly topping it up and emptying it, Sander, almost like a sort of
making bread where you're always keeping a bit for the next one. Is that how this works?
Well, no. What I'm doing is I'm removing the vegetables that are mature pickles and eating
them and then putting fresh vegetables in it. And then over time, because salt and the flavor of the
seasonings migrate out with the mature vegetables, then I'll add not only more vegetables, but a
little bit more salt, a little bit more of the Sichuan peppercorns, a little bit more of the ginger and
the other seasonings. So really what I'm trying to say is that there's a wide variety of different
traditions for fermenting vegetables. And I even meet people who are creating new traditions. I
mean, you know, there are not like a finite number of ways of doing this. You know, the concepts are
very, very simple and I try to explain them
as clearly as I can in my books. But then you can experiment with different seasonings,
different kinds of vegetables. You can make beverages that are infusions of fermented
vegetables. You can make a mix of 20 different vegetables. You can make just any single kind
of vegetable fermented alone. I love the Southeast European style of fermenting whole heads of cabbages.
And then you peel off the outer leaves of the cabbages, and then you can wrap things
in them and make beautiful stuffed cabbage things in it.
So really what I'm saying is that there's not a very small, finite number of possibilities.
There's a lot of different possibilities.
And in my kitchen, I'm definitely eating fermented vegetables with pretty much every meal, but
not necessarily the same ones.
So I have a lot of variation in my palate with different seasonings, different levels
of sourness.
I'm definitely feeling hungry now.
And we will make sure that
in the show notes, we have links both for the very simple sauerkraut recipe and of course,
through to Sandor's book for those who really want to fully experiment. I think some people
will be listening to this and saying, this sounds great. I'm not ready to try and experiment at home
and do all of this myself. Is it possible to eat fermented foods through
things that you can purchase at the store? Oh, yeah, absolutely. I mean, I know you have
listeners from all over. I was just in the UK a few weeks ago. My first trip teaching in the UK
was in 2008. And I remember trying to find live fermented vegetables in stores there 15 years ago,
and I just I couldn't find any. Now when I go,
they're really quite widely available. So, you know, generally a live fermented vegetable,
you're going to find in a refrigerated section. If they're, you know, if they're on a shelf without
refrigeration, typically that means they've been heat processed before going to the store. So you
really want those live bacteria. So if you're
shopping for them, you want something in a refrigerated section. And generally it is going
to advertise the fact that it is raw, live, unpasteurized on the label, but that's really
what you want. There's been explosion in the UK of things like kefirs and kombuchas that you can buy in stores. And there's a suspicion that many
of them do not contain live microbes. They're easily using really ultra-fine filtration systems
that get rid of some of these microbes, or that in order to do big quantities and ship them around
the country, they have to basically pasteurize it. Or the sugar
content is so high that it might inhibit the microbes. Or occasionally, you've got things like
apple cider vinegars that have such high acidification that it kills off the actual
microbes in there, the mother, etc., is actually dead. So it's great to have these
products, but I feel they could be exploited. And I wonder if you had any thoughts.
Sure. I mean, I think that that's a really important question. Definitely the more educated
you can make yourself as a consumer, the better quality products you can find. Generally, I would advise people to sort of steer away
from big national brands and support, you know,
smaller regional brands because they have less reason
to, you know, sort of try to, you know,
develop these workarounds.
So yeah, I mean, I would say, you know,
buy as local of a product as you can.
And if you have any questions, then, you know,
really try to pose
those questions to the producers and, you know, see if they can answer them to your satisfaction.
Do you think too much sugar is a problem for the health benefits of some of these?
In order to get increased number of people, you know, trying them, they're making them sweeter and
easier to test. Do you think there's a danger that that
really does inhibit the microbes? Have you tried any of that sort of stuff yourself?
I've experimented with everything, but there's a reason why I mostly talk about fermenting
vegetables and don't talk as much about lightly fermented soft drinks that are based on sugar,
because I myself prefer not to consume a lot of sugar,
not really for reasons of the microbiome, but just for, you know, general health. And I think that,
you know, part of the appeal of some of these lightly fermented soft drinks has been
people who already have sort of like a sugar habit, transferring it from one type of beverage
to satisfy that to a different type of beverage that they perceive to
be healthier. And, you know, I think it's true that, you know, drinking lightly fermented sweet
beverages probably is better for you than drinking Coca-Cola. But if you're ingesting, you know,
in the end, the same amount of sugar, you still have certain health challenges as a result of
that sugar. So I would say, you know, in anything sugar sweetened, you know, you still have certain health challenges as a result of that sugar. So I would
say, you know, in anything sugar sweetened, you know, you really want to exercise restraint and
moderation. And those are important values. And, you know, just to get back to a question
that Jonathan asked Tim earlier about, can you eat too much fermented foods? I mean, I would say
in the realm of the vegetable ferments that I'm talking about, salt would be the limiting factor. And so, especially a lot of traditions where,
you know, these foods had to do with survival through a long, harsh winter, sometimes people
made them with extremely high levels of salt. And in general, I advocate for people to use
more moderate levels of salt because for most people learning how to make it today,
they're not looking for survival through a long, harsh winter. And instead, they're looking for
the probiotics or something that's going to taste delicious and maybe encourage their family's good
health. But you can make these things with really exceedingly small amounts of salt. But I would
think that in general, the limiting factor
as to how much a person should eat would be the level of salt in it. And we all need some salt,
but too much salt creates a whole set of problems. That's a really interesting way to think about it.
So basically, there's only so much salt you should take, and that's really the limit on
your fermentation. There's not another way to be limited. So I know we're coming towards the end of the time. I would love, Sandor, maybe to wrap up with five tips for trying fermentation
yourself. I think there'll be lots of people who've listened to this who are saying, you know
what, I'd really like to try this this weekend. And by the way, it's a great, for those of you
with kids, like it's an amazing thing also to do with children or to do with a sort of family
activity. What would be your five tips for someone who's coming into this fresh?
Okay, number one, do not be afraid.
Do not project all of the anxiety you've ever had
about bacteria onto the process of fermentation.
Understand that these are ancient practices
that have been tested by time
and that they are extremely safe.
Okay, number two. Fermentation is all about manipulating environmental conditions so as to encourage the growth of certain organisms and are. In the case of fermenting vegetables,
it's simply getting the vegetables submerged,
which protects them from the flow of air with oxygen.
And that's what supports the flourishing
of the lactic acid bacteria
rather than say spores of molds.
So understand the condition you're trying to create.
A third one I'll say that's a little bit different is, you know, don't overthink it.
Don't try to imagine everything that could theoretically go wrong and make yourself crazy.
You know, these are simple processes, like accept the simplicity of them.
Number four, don't be afraid to experiment.
It's the process that's important.
You know, if you add a different kind of vegetable or a different kind of seasoning,
that's great. As Tim was saying about kimchi, kimchi is not one thing. You know, kimchi is the
name for this, you know, incredibly diverse tradition. And there's a lot of regional variation,
but there's also just family recipes.
And, you know, every grandma who has her own secret something that she adds into it. So don't
be afraid to experiment. Don't be afraid to play. Number five, be creative about how you incorporate
these foods into your diet. I think for a lot of people who aren't accustomed to them, that's the
hard part. And just experiment.
Like, I love it with eggs.
I love it as a condiment on a sandwich.
You know, there's endless applications.
I love to use the extra juice of the sauerkraut or the pickles in salad dressings.
But, you know, be creative.
That's fantastic.
And I would add that I asked Sandor this question when we chatted last time, and he had five
almost completely different tips. I would add that I asked Sandor this question when we chatted last time and he had five almost
completely different tips. So I feel that we can ask this again and we get another five
brilliant ideas. So next time I'm going to ask this again and slowly we're going to build this
up to this magnificent list. I'm a big fan of smelling raw milk cheese with kimchi. It's one
of my favorite accompaniments. So then you've got the microbes that everyone's been
eating for centuries and is happy with, with these other new sets of microbes. And so you've got a
very gut-friendly dish there. So I think I could now go and ask for 10 more recipes and everyone
will just listen and salivate, but I'm afraid we're at time. So I'd just like to do a quick
summary as we always do. So firstly, we discovered that
fermentation is actually something that we've been doing for thousands of years. It's completely
normal. It's not this sort of weird new thing that lots of foods are fermented. And in fact,
Sandor gave us a list which had almost every food we think about, many of which we might not think
as fermented. You can definitely do this at home.
And in fact, you don't need to do anything really complicated because the plants you want to ferment
carry their own bacteria. We then discussed about the health benefits. Then I think we had a big
watch out from Sandor about sugar drinks, pretending to be healthy because they're
lightly fermented and just in general needing to be careful if we're going to be buying these fermented products from shops. And then finally, we had five tips for trying this
yourself. Don't be afraid. Understand the conditions you're trying to make. Don't overthink
it. It's not rocket science. It's going to be okay. Don't be afraid to experiment because actually
these things like kimchi, it's not one recipe you have to do perfectly.
It's sort of like a whole tradition and way of approaching.
And finally, be creative in how you add these fermented foods to your diet.
You can add them in many more ways than you might think.
And so find the ways that work for you.
I would add that we will definitely give the recipe for the dry sauerkraut method.
I would recommend that you all have a go.
We will point you to some videos as well that show that this is really easy. Just before we go,
we've got a listener question from Sal that I'd like to ask Sandor and try and get him to answer.
And his question was, Sandor, what's the most unusual food that you have fermented?
I mean, that's a hard question only because I just take it as a given
that anything we could possibly eat can be fermented.
I would say that in my travels,
maybe the most unexpected fermented food that I tried,
it was in Colombia in South America
and it was an Amazon ferment called tucupi.
And it was basically the toxic cyanide rich juice of cassava
fermented which breaks down the cyanide compounds into benign forms and then cooked down into this
like tarry sticky thick substance that was so incredibly delicious as a condiment. So that was an
unexpected one that I was served. I love that. And one, you definitely want to make sure that
the chef knows how they're making it, sounds like. Thank you, Sandor. Thank you, Tim. And I hope we
can come back and talk about some more of these things in the future. Great. Thank you so much.
Thank you to Sandor and Tim for joining me on Zoe's Science and Nutrition today.
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