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Food > Yeast
The following information is about Yeast.
Yeast Defined
Yeast is a living, microscopic, single-cell organism that, as it grows, converts its food (through a process known as fermentation) into alcohol and carbon dioxide. This trait is what endears yeast to winemakers, brewmasters and breadbakers. In the making of wine and beer, the yeast's manufacture of alcohol is desired and necessary for the final product; and carbon dioxide is what makes Beer and Champagne effervescent. The art of breadmaking needs the carbon dioxide produced by yeast in order for certain doughs to rise. To multiply and grow, all yeast needs is the right environment, which includes moisture, food (in the form of sugar or starch) and a warm, nurturing temperature (70 degrees to 85 degrees F is best). Wild yeast spores are constancy floating in the air and landing on uncovered foods and liquids. No one's sure when these wild spores first interacted with foods but it's known that the Egyptians used yeast as a Leavening agent more than 5,000 years ago. Wine and other fermented beverages were made for millennia before that. Today, scientists have been able to isolate and identify the various yeasts that are best for winemaking, beermaking and baking. The two types commercially available are baker's yeast and brewer's yeast. Baker's yeast, as the name implies, is used as a leavener. It's categorized into three basic types -- active dry yeast, compressed fresh yeast and Yeast Starters. Active dry yeast is in the form of tiny, dehydrated granules. The yeast cells are alive but dormant because of the lack of moisture. When mixed with a warm liquid (105 degrees to 115 degrees F), the cells once again become active. Active dry yeast is available in two forms, regular and quick rising, of which the latter takes about half as long to leaven bread. They may be used interchangeably (with adjustments in rising time) and both are available in 1/4-ounce envelopes. Regular active dry yeast may also be purchased in 4-ounce jars or in bulk in some health-food stores. It should be stored in a cool, dry place, but can also be refrigerated or frozen. It should always be at room temperature before being dissolved in liquid. Properly stored, it's reliable when used by the expiration date, which should be stamped on the envelope or jar label. One package of dry yeast is equal to 1 scant tablespoon dry yeast or 1 cake of compressed fresh yeast. Compressed fresh yeast, which comes in tiny (0.06-ounce), square cakes, is moist and extremely perishable. It must be refrigerated and used within a week or two, or by the date indicated on the package. It can be frozen, but should be defrosted at room temperature and used immediately. One cake of fresh yeast can be substituted for one envelope of dry yeast. The more convenient active dry yeast has primarily replaced the use of compressed fresh yeast. All bakers' yeast should be given a test called Proofing to make sure it's still alive. To proof yeast, dissolve it in warm water and add a pinch of sugar. Set the mixture aside in a warm place for 5 to 10 minutes. If it begins to swell and foam, the yeast is alive, active and capable of leavening bread. Brewer's yeasts are special non-leavening yeasts used in beermaking. Because it's a rich source of B vitamins, brewer's yeast is also used as a food supplement. It's available in health-food stores. Brewer's yeasts are also marketed in specialty beermaking equipment shops, with different strains used for different beers.
This definition is in context to Food. See more contextual defintions for Yeast.
Questions/Answers
Published July 5, 2009, 12:27 am, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin
Questions and answers on Daily Bulletin stories from readers like you. POMONA - When most of you are sound asleep, Daniel Swift is thinking about your breakfast.
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Published July 5, 2009, 12:23 am, Denver Post
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Published July 5, 2009, 12:07 am, Poughkeepsie Journal
Growing up the second-oldest of nine children, Terry Tesoriero, 54, remembers clearly how often her mother needed her to look after siblings whenever she suffered one of her many debilitating headaches.
Outlaw Ranch cook keeps campers plates full
Published July 4, 2009, 11:08 pm, Rapid City Journal
Chris Nelson knows a good cook when she finds one. Working a summer job as wrangler for the horses at Outlaw Ranch near Custer, Nelson — like many campers and counselors before her — soon was introduced to the camp’s Delicate Dining Hall and the cooking of Marlys Sogn.
Creating comfort food from family recipes
Published July 4, 2009, 10:15 pm, The Times of Northwest Indiana
For decades, Sarah Starewicz's family has enjoyed recipes that originated in Poland and Lithuania. Now this fledgling entrepreneur is making those Eastern European dishes available through her new business, Buscia's.
Pomona Baking Co. fulfills a real knead
Published July 4, 2009, 7:35 pm, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin
POMONA - When most of you are sound asleep, Daniel Swift is thinking about your breakfast. He has yeast and flour on the brain. He's pouring 40 eggs into a 60-quart mixer. His apron is already stained.
HPV vaccines at a glance
Published July 4, 2009, 4:53 pm, The Star
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Smells take us back in time
Published July 4, 2009, 4:22 pm, Springfield News-Sun
A month ago, my brother-in-law Jon Clouse and I were driving west on Menchofer Road not far from Coldwater, Ohio, discussing the relative bouquets of manures. Chicken manure, we agreed, was the worst with pig a close second. Cows were, by-and-large ... . . .
Boiling up a brewski
Published July 4, 2009, 4:07 am, The Buffalo News
Bill Koch walks toward the stove and peers intently into the steaming pot, first checking the temperature gauge before determining this batch of brew has a ways to go.
Just how friendly are those probiotics in your food?
Published July 3, 2009, 7:45 pm, Seattle Times
As manufacturers add probiotics, the so-called "friendly" bacteria with health benefits, to many products, experts caution that the word "probiotic" is widely misused and misunderstood.
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