Dairy
Fermented Milk and History|Beneficial & Therupatic effects of Fermented Products
History of Fermented milk Products
- The history of fermented foods is lost in antiquity. It may have been a mere accident when people first experienced the taste of fermented food.
- The first fermentation must have started with the storage of surplus milk, which resulted in a fermented product the next day.
- After drying, fermentation is the oldest food preservation method.
- Fermentation became popular with the dawn of civilization because it not only preserved food but also gave it a variety of tastes, forms, and other sensory sensations.
- Slowly, people over the ages have realized the nutritional and therapeutic value of fermented foods and drinks, and this has made fermented foods even more popular.
- It seems that the art of fermentation originated in the Indian subcontinent, in the settlements that predate the great Indus Valley civilization.
- During the Harappan spread or pre-Vedic times, there are indications of a highly developed system of agriculture and animal husbandry.
- Artefacts from Egypt and the Middle East also suggest that fermentation was known from ancient times in that region of the world.
- It is believed that the knowledge is written in the four Vedas (sacred Hindu writings) came from the experiences, wisdom, and foresightedness of sages, which had been preserved by verbal tradition.
- Both the biological and medical communities now recognise the significance of the role of fermented milk in both health and disease.
- The bacterial microflora of the human gut is widely accepted as an integral component of the functional food industry. A prebiotic is a non-viable component of the diet that reaches the colon in an intact form and is selectively fermented by colonic bacteria.
- The most recent definition regarding a prebiotic is ‘A selectively fermented ingredient that allows specific changes, both in the composition and/or activity in the gastrointestinal microflora, that confer benefits on host well-being and health’. The selectivity is by commensal bacteria already resident in the gut that are thought to have beneficial properties to the host regarding the promotion of health.
- Examples of such colonies include Lactobacilli and Bifidobacterial, both of which are present in significant numbers. Health is improved by fortification of such selected bacteria. A schematic representation of the prebiotic concept is shown in Figure.
KEY MILESTONES IN HISTORY OF FERMENTED FOODS
Mile stones | Development /Location |
ca.10,000 B.C. to Middle Ages | Evolution of fermentation from salvaging the surplus, probably by pre-Aryans. |
ca. 7000 B.C. | Cheese and bread making practiced |
ca. 6000 B.C. | Wine making in the Near East |
ca. 5000 B.C. | Nutritional and health value of fermented milk and beverages described |
ca. 3500 B.C. | Bread making in Egypt |
ca. 1500 B.C. | Preparation of meat sausages by ancient Babylonians |
2000 B.C.–1200 A.D. | Different types of fermented milks from different regions |
ca. 300 B.C. | Preservation of vegetables by fermentation by the Chinese |
500–1000 A.D. | Development of cereal-legume based fermented foods |
1881 | Published literature on koji and sake brewing |
1907 | Publication of book Prolongation of Life by Eli Metchnikoff describing therapeutic benefits of fermented milks |
1900–1930 | Application of microbiology to fermentation, use of defined cultures |
1970–present | Development of products containing probiotic cultures or friendly intestinal bacteria |
1980-1990 | Development of DVC (Direct vat Cultures) cultures |
Origin of Some Important Fermented Milk Products │Health Benefits of Fermented Milk Products
Product | Characteristics and use | Culture used |
Dahi/Curd India 6000 4000 BC | Coagulated sour milk eaten as a food item; an intermediate product for making country butter and ghee (clarified butter) | LACTIC CULTURES -Lb. delbrueckii ssp. bulgaricus, Streptococcus thermophilus or Lc. lactis ssp.lactis, Lc. lactis ssp. cremoris, Lc. lactis ssp. lactis biovar diacetylactis, and Leu. mesenteroides ssp. cremoris |
Chhhach (Butter Milk) India 6000 -4000 BC | Diluted dahi or the butter milk left after churning of dahi into butter; used as beverage after or with meal | Lb. delbrueckii ssp. bulgaricus, Streptococcus thermophilus or Lc. lactis ssp. lactis, Lc. lactis ssp. cremoris, Lc. lactis ssp. lactis biovar diacetylactis, and Leu. mesenteroides ssp. cremoris |
Laban zeer/Khad Egypt 5000-3000 BC | Sour milk, traditionally coagulated in earthenware vessels | Lactic cultures |
Leben Iraq Ca.3000 BC | Traditional fermented milk containing yogurt bacteria; whey partially drained by hanging the curd | Lb. delbrueckii ssp. bulgaricus, Str. thermophilus |
Zabady Egypt 2000 Bc | Natural type yogurt; firm consistency and cooked flavor | Lactic Cultures |
Cultured cream Mesopotamia 1300 BC | Naturally soured cream | Lactic cultures |
Shrikhand /shrikhand wadi India 400 BC | Concentrated sour milk, sweetened and spiced; semisolid mass eaten with meals as sweet dish | Cultures used in Dahi/curd. Lactic cultures. |
Kishk Egypt & Arab world | Dry fermented product made from Laban and par boiled wheat ,hard texture; highly nutritious with high amino acids and vitamin content | |
Kumys, Kumiss Central Asia (Mongol, Russia) 400 BC | Traditionally mares’ milk fermented by lactobacilli and yeast; sparkling beverage containing lactic acid, alcohol, and carbon dioxide | Lb. acidophilus, Lb. delbrueckii ssp. bulgaricus, Sacchamyces lactis, Torula koumiss |
Mast Iran | Natural type yogurt; firm consistency and cooked flavor | |
Villi Finland | High viscosity fermented milk with lactic acid bacteria and mold | Lc. lactis ssp. lactis, Lc. lactis ssp. cremoris, Lc. lactis ssp. lactis biovar diacetylactis, Geotrichum candidum |
Taette Norway | Viscous fermented milk also known as cellarmilk | |
Langfil, Tattemjolk Sweden | Milk fermented with slime-producing culture of lactococci | Lactococci cultures used. |
Ymer Denmark | Protein fortified milk fermented by Leuconostocs and lactococci; whey is separated | |
Skyr Iceland 870 AD | Made from ewes’ milk by addition of rennet and starter; today concentrated by membrane technology | |
Prostokvasha Russia | Fermented milk made from ancient times by fermenting raw milk with mesophilic lactic bacteria | |
Kefir Caucasusian China | Milk fermented with kefir grains; foamy effervescent product with acid and alcoholic taste | Lc. lactis ssp. lactis, Lc. lactis ssp. cremoris, Lc. lactis ssp. lactis biovar diacetylactis, and Leu. mesenteroides ssp. dextranicum, Str. thermophilus, Lb. delbrueckii ssp. bulgaricus, Lb. acidophilus, Lb. helveticus, Lb. kefir, |
Yoghurt (Kisle Milako) Bulgria | Cow’s or ewe’s milk fermented by Str. thermophilus and Lb. bulgaricus | |
Yoghurt Turkey 800 AD | Custard like sour fermented milk | Lb. delbrueckii ssp. bulgaricus, Str. thermophilus |
Bulgrian Milk Bulgria 500 AD | Very sour milk fermented by Lb. bulgaricus alone or with Str. Thermophilus | Lactobacillus delbrueckii ssp. bulgaricus |
Trahana Greece | Traditional Balkan fermented milk; fermented ewe’s milk mixed with wheat flour and then dried | |
Churpi Nepal | Fermented milk is churned and the buttermilk remaining is heated to form a solid curd; may be further dried | |
Airan Central Asia ,Bulgria 1235-1255 AD | Cow’s milk soured by Lb. bulgaricus, used as refreshing beverage | |
Yakult Japan 1935 AD | Highly heat treated milk fermented by Lb. casei strain Shirota; beverage and health supplement | Lb. paracasei ssp. casei |
Nutritional and Health Benefits of Fermented Foods
Beneficial Effect | Possible Causes and Mechanisms |
Improved digestibility | Partial breakdown of proteins, fats and carbohydrates |
Improved nutritional value | Higher levels of B-vitamins and certain free amino acids, viz. methionine, lysine and tryptophan |
Improved lactose utilization | Reduced lactose in product and further availability of lactase |
Antagonistic action toward enteric pathogens | Disorders such as diarrhoea, mucous colitis, ulcerated colitis; prevention of adhesion of pathogens |
Anticarcinogenic effect | Reduction of carcinogen-promoting enzymes; inhibitory action toward cancers of the gastrointestinal tract by degradation of precarcinogens; stimulation of the immune system |
Hypocholesterolaemia action | Production of inhibitors of cholesterol synthesis; use of cholesterol by assimilation and precipitation with deconjugated bile salts |
Immune modulation | Enhancement of macrophage formation; stimulation of production of suppressor cells and -interferon |
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