“The team looked for a fermenting agent that could remain reactive in substances with a temperature of up to 370 degrees Celsius and alcohol of the recommended 16 percent per volume.”
My guess is that the reporter forgot a decimal point and meant 37.0 degrees Celsius. Because finding a yeast that actively metabolizes sugar at 370 degrees Celsius might be somewhat challenging.
Bananas are notoriously hard to turn into a cleaner wine, mainly because of the fact that most bananas that are not Cavendish have a lot of latex and turn into goop. Most of the places where banana wine is produced (tropics) ultimately also turn it into banana "gin", and there's an incredibly deep and long cultural history of its production, e.g. it's tied to British colonialism in West Africa funded by liquor revenues, regulation was a hot topic of local protests, and drinking bars used to be hotbeds of nationalist agitation. When Nkrumah's CPP took over Ghana, they legalized homemade wine/liquor as a symbol against the gin drinking imperialists (in 1890 a bunch of countries in Brussels banned liquor importation to Africa).
The other much easier to produce wine and spirit comes from palm sugar (akpeteshie in Ghana, toddy in Indonesia), but the time window of when it is fresh and can be consumed is counted in hours, so it's not stable enough as an agricultural product to sell. Banana wine is an easy way to turn surplus calories into surplus cents.
But fresh palm wine is now bottled for sale in Ghana at least. I know because I've bought some in Ghana several times. Not sure how they preserve the freshness and prevent further fermentation though.
Banana is one of those flavors that some people love and some people really hate. Others in this category -- lutefisk, kimchi, certain cheeses -- make sense: their distinctive flavor is associated with decay. Why bananas, though?
My grandfather was a banana hater. His observation on the topic: "I hate bananas, and I'm glad that I hate them, because if I liked them I'd eat them, and I HATE them!"
I went a couple years ago in coutryside Rwanda, where locals brought me to a place where I could have some homemade banana wine, or "Urwagwa" (not sure about the spelling!). That place was someone's house with a few people hanging out and drinking, the wine was served in already-opened glass bottles.
For those curious, it is not very boozy (maybe around 7%-10% abv), but very yeasty - to a point where it kinda numbed my mouth. For those curious the yeast is the dominant flavor, followed by banana. Very earthy taste.
Later on I saw Urwagwa sold in a can at the airport, it was very different, no yeast but bitterness instead. I preferred the homemade one.
It took me until my 30s to make the connection that bananas cause me intense headaches. I used to love to eat them, but now won't touch them.
I think I'm fine with them cooked, but not raw.
I don't know the mechanism, but if you do searches on bananas and headaches you will find people prescribing them as a cure for headaches, not the other way around.
The explanation as to why flour yeast and grape wine yeast are unsuitable is a bit of a tautology. I know little about yeast. Can someone explain why one sort of yeast is not suitable for another use? And why is "sorghum, the traditional fermenting agent of banana wine" unsuitable or not acceptable to regulators?
Different yeasts have different temperature and alcohol tolerance. For example a bread yeast may not continue making alcohol beyond 5-6%, or another yeast may only be productive in a narrow temperature range that’s too warm or too cool for a given application.
It's similar to the malting process. Certain ingredients will contain enzymes and other important metabolites that can break down complex sugars into smaller simpler sugars that can be eaten by yeast (glucose, fructose). You need them to get a fermentation started and warmed up.
Even more confusing: "We mixed the fermenting agent with sorghum flour to keep the traditional color and aroma of sorghum, the traditional fermenting agent of banana wine"
So they developed a yeast to replace the sorghum as the fermenting agent, and then mix sorghum in. What has been gained? Does yeast make for a more controlled fermentation making regulation easier? Or just easier to industrialize?
I suspect that using sorghum for fermentation really means using whatever wild yeast happened to be on the sorghum, and the results too variable to regulate for commercial sale or export.
Sorghum is acceptable I believe. It’s the fifth most produced crop in the world. It sounds like what might not have been acceptable is using wild yeasts to ferment it.
They've been making banana wine from wild yeast presumably for at least a 100 years or longer. It sounds like the regulators in their country are a PITA and won't get out of the way.
There's a million different strains of yeast but they all do the same thing. If you don't add any yeast it will still ferment with the wild yeast.
Regulation is extremely important, and has been part and parcel of alcohol and wine production since prehistoric times. Besides the health reasons, wine is very easy to cut with synthetic or artificial ingredients, which has important economic and health consequences - hence the use of government bonding for hundreds of years around the world.
But more recently, regulation is vital for setting up geographical indicators for production of items that are locally unique, e.g. Parmesean, Champagne, and the German Reinheitsgebot which are legally protected practices for the reasons in the first paragraph. Being able to identify the specific strains of yeast in this banana wine is a big part for arguing the provenance of it.
I was thinking the same.
Though wild fermenting works well for small batches, I have no idea of it scales. I was guessing this is a comercial operation if regulators are involved.
Normally, you ferment at lower temperatures because your drink will taste disgusting… (there will be terrible byproducts) this article has no explanation as to why this traditional drink suddenly tastes fine with a high temperature yeast other than something about regulators accepting some shit. I imagine that traditionally they they didn’t add commercial yeast… they just opened the top of it and prayed.. and the wild yeast which probably where they live Ferments fine at higher temperatures however, I had to make this all up in my head because there is no fucking information in this entire article and certainly no science and I’m amazed it’s number three. What the is this shit
I think you need to try some kveik yeast, that might change your mind on high temperature fermentation: kveik is a Norwegian yeast, somewhat recently (last 25 years) rediscovered but brewed with for centuries, and can handle 37ºC without the byproducts.
bannana wine, just does not work well in.english
or bannana beer, or bannana cider, would be interesting to hear the term or terms used localy
that might be evocative and perhaps marketable
but certain words just dont work together.....
like english, and cuisine, ha ha!
it is and will forever be english food.
rooooll your ooooo's
[+] [-] bcatanzaro|1 year ago|reply
My guess is that the reporter forgot a decimal point and meant 37.0 degrees Celsius. Because finding a yeast that actively metabolizes sugar at 370 degrees Celsius might be somewhat challenging.
[+] [-] johnofthesea|1 year ago|reply
So 35C is interesting. 350 would be too much even if it was Kelvin.
[+] [-] aDyslecticCrow|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] interludead|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] jojobas|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] xattt|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] nxobject|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] dluan|1 year ago|reply
The other much easier to produce wine and spirit comes from palm sugar (akpeteshie in Ghana, toddy in Indonesia), but the time window of when it is fresh and can be consumed is counted in hours, so it's not stable enough as an agricultural product to sell. Banana wine is an easy way to turn surplus calories into surplus cents.
[+] [-] prmph|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] gp|1 year ago|reply
Last time I was in Rwanda I had banana wine. It comes in beer bottles.
I think it’s an acquired taste - I didn’t have the acumen to acquire it myself.
[+] [-] lambda|1 year ago|reply
Looking there you find the original article, and it has the correction to the right temperature: https://www.scidev.net/global/supported-content/rwandan-scie...
[+] [-] ReptileMan|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] tiahura|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] unknown|1 year ago|reply
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[+] [-] DFHippie|1 year ago|reply
Banana is one of those flavors that some people love and some people really hate. Others in this category -- lutefisk, kimchi, certain cheeses -- make sense: their distinctive flavor is associated with decay. Why bananas, though?
My grandfather was a banana hater. His observation on the topic: "I hate bananas, and I'm glad that I hate them, because if I liked them I'd eat them, and I HATE them!"
[+] [-] vgrafe|1 year ago|reply
For those curious, it is not very boozy (maybe around 7%-10% abv), but very yeasty - to a point where it kinda numbed my mouth. For those curious the yeast is the dominant flavor, followed by banana. Very earthy taste.
Later on I saw Urwagwa sold in a can at the airport, it was very different, no yeast but bitterness instead. I preferred the homemade one.
[+] [-] sram1337|1 year ago|reply
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matoke
[+] [-] cmrdporcupine|1 year ago|reply
I think I'm fine with them cooked, but not raw.
I don't know the mechanism, but if you do searches on bananas and headaches you will find people prescribing them as a cure for headaches, not the other way around.
[+] [-] interludead|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] quijoteuniv|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] sjmulder|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] jrflowers|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] dluan|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] stubish|1 year ago|reply
So they developed a yeast to replace the sorghum as the fermenting agent, and then mix sorghum in. What has been gained? Does yeast make for a more controlled fermentation making regulation easier? Or just easier to industrialize?
I suspect that using sorghum for fermentation really means using whatever wild yeast happened to be on the sorghum, and the results too variable to regulate for commercial sale or export.
[+] [-] yial|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] declan_roberts|1 year ago|reply
There's a million different strains of yeast but they all do the same thing. If you don't add any yeast it will still ferment with the wild yeast.
[+] [-] dluan|1 year ago|reply
But more recently, regulation is vital for setting up geographical indicators for production of items that are locally unique, e.g. Parmesean, Champagne, and the German Reinheitsgebot which are legally protected practices for the reasons in the first paragraph. Being able to identify the specific strains of yeast in this banana wine is a big part for arguing the provenance of it.
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