framing fowl
On a mission
Thanks Free. I think I'll toss this batch and start over. I couldn't imagine how anyone would like fermented food if you tasted that batch.
I found it interesting in light of the discussion a few weeks ago about the tsunami and aftermath in Japan. This also reminded me that I remember reading somewhere, but no longer know where, that some people got through the aftermath of the Hiroshima bombing better than others, and traced their success to daily consumption of miso.Kombucha was looked at more closely after Chernobel (sp?) when there was a community that had no cancer. Scientists investigated closely to see what was different in that community. They had clung to the old ways of taking some fermented foods every day, and kombucha was the most common.
What was your starter for the malt vinegar? anything with hops is going to take quite a while if it ferments at all. that is why hops is added to beer originally as a Preserative and now days for the bitter flavor.ORChick said:I was looking through the early pages of this thread to find a certain recipe, and found this (on p. 9, written by freemotion):
I found it interesting in light of the discussion a few weeks ago about the tsunami and aftermath in Japan. This also reminded me that I remember reading somewhere, but no longer know where, that some people got through the aftermath of the Hiroshima bombing better than others, and traced their success to daily consumption of miso.Kombucha was looked at more closely after Chernobel (sp?) when there was a community that had no cancer. Scientists investigated closely to see what was different in that community. They had clung to the old ways of taking some fermented foods every day, and kombucha was the most common.
As to what I am fermenting today - just the usual: kefir, wine vinegar, and am trying to see if I can get some malt vinegar going. It isn't smelling very vinegar-y yet though, and has been on the counter for about 6 weeks so far.