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Fermentation Speaker Series

Fermentation Speaker Series

Elisa Caffrey, David Zilber, and Justin Sonnenburg

13 episodesEN

Show overview

Fermentation Speaker Series launched in 2023 and has put out 13 episodes in the time since. That works out to roughly 15 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a roughly quarterly cadence, with the show now in its 2nd season.

Episodes typically run an hour to ninety minutes — most land between 1h and 1h 8m — and the run-time is fairly consistent across the catalogue. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-language Science show.

The catalogue appears to be on hiatus or wound down — the most recent episode landed 1.8 years ago, with no new episodes in over a year. Published by Elisa Caffrey, David Zilber, and Justin Sonnenburg.

Episodes
13
Running
2023–2024 · 1y
Median length
1h 4m
Cadence
Quarterly-ish

From the publisher

The Center for Human Microbiome Studies at Stanford University School of Medicine presents Fermentation and Health Speaker Series, led by Elisa Caffrey, David Zilber, and Dr. Justin Sonnenburg. The goal of this series is to create space to have nuanced conversations around the current understanding and knowledge gaps of fermented food research, and act as a platform to define and promote future fermented food and health projects.

Latest Episodes

S2 Ep 7Microbial shaping of arctic foodways: A conversation with Aviaja Hauptmann

We spoke with Dr. Aviaja Hauptmann, an Associate Professor in the Institute of Health & Nature and Head of the Department of SILA (Scientific and Indigenous Teachings on Life in the Arctic). Her work explores the interaction between microbiology, diet, and the environment, focusing on Inuit food microbiomes and Indigenous food sovereignty. She is examining gastrophagy as a way of connecting animal gut, food, and human gut microbiomes.Join our conversation on hybrid fermentation, probiotics, and the open questions in health and fermentation studies.

Jul 30, 20241h 8m

S2 Ep 6Fermented Foods, Probiotics, and Lactic Acid Bacteria: A conversation with Maria Marco

Lactic acid bacteria (LAB) play a central role in many fermented foods, including sourdough, kimchi, pickles, olives, zha cai, kefir, ogi, and cheese, among others. These microbes produce lactic acid, which acidifies the fermented food, making it both safe and tasty. Specific LAB strains have also been characterized as probiotics. But how do LAB found in fermented foods differ from probiotics? And what exactly defines a probiotic?We spoke with Dr. Maria Marco, a Professor in the Department of Food Science and Technology at the University of California, Davis. Her lab primarily focuses on lactic acid bacteria in food systems and the mammalian digestive tract. She has authored and collaborated on numerous important papers covering fermentation and health, probiotics, and the future of the fermented food field.Join our conversation on hybrid fermentation, probiotics, and the open questions in health and fermentation studies.

Jul 6, 20241h 6m

S2 Ep 5Symbiotic yeast in fermentation: A conversation with Chantle Swichkow

Dr. Chantle Swichkow, a postdoc in Leonid Kruglyak’s lab at UCLA, has been exploring the role of yeast in these symbiotic interactions. By applying her background in mouse genetics to yeast, she studies how yeast strain diversity impacts microbial community composition and the final organoleptic properties of wine, bread, and kombucha.Join our conversation on the history of Saccharomyces, strain diversity in fermented food production, blue Takis, and the power of Reddit.

Jun 4, 20241h 7m

S2 Ep 4Exploring microbial metagenomes: A conversation with Paul Cotter

One way to characterize fermented foods is based on where the fermentation microbes come from: either spontaneously acquired from the environment (also known as wild fermentation), from a previous ferment (back-slopping), or from a commercial starter community. But how do we identify which microbes are involved in this process in the first place?Paul Cotter, an Adjunct Professor at University College Cork and Head of Food Biosciences, as well as a Senior Principal Research Officer at Teagasc Food Research Centre, has spent his career addressing this question through tool development, collaborating with a global team of scientists, and exploring the diversity of the fermented food landscape.Join our conversation on mapping fermented food metagenomes, personalized fermented foods, and lab kefir.

May 17, 20241h 4m

S2 Ep 3Demystifying microbial communities: A conversation with Ben Wolfe

The microbiome of fermented foods, like any microbiome, is a multi-species microbial community and can include a rich mixture of bacteria, fungi, and yeast all in the same fermented food. The presence of a specific microbe cannot always predict the final quality, safety, or flavor of a fermented food, but studying their interactions gives a richer understanding of these community dynamics. Ben Wolfe, an Associate Professor in the Department of Biology at Tufts University has been exploring these microbial ecologies. Using models such as cheese rinds, sterile baby cabbages, and kombucha, his lab investigates the origins of these fermentation community members, how they interact with each other, and how these communities can evolve and diversify over time.Join our conversation on microbial onramps, phage resistance, and purple cheese…

Apr 15, 20241h 9m

S2 Ep 2The future of culinary mycology: A conversation with Vayu Hill-Maini

Along with bacteria and yeast, fungi play an important role in fermentation. We primarily think of Aspergillus oryzae and Rhizopus oryzae, but there are a number of other fungi that are used in food production, including Aspergillus sojae, Monascus purpureus. We wanted to talk to Dr. Vayu Hill-Maini, postdoctoral Fellow at the Joint Bioengineering Institute at University of California Berkeley, working in the lab of Jay Keasling, who has been approaching research into filamentous fungi in two ways.

Mar 26, 20241h 14m

S2 Ep 1In search of yogurt: a conversation with Sevgi Mutlu Sirakova, Dr. Veronica Sinotte, and David Zilber

One of the most well recognized microbes in food fermentation is Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus, used to produce most yogurts today. Originally named Bacillus bulgarian, the name plays homage to Bulgaria where it was first isolated in 1905. But before we isolated this microbe and cultured it to use as a starter, how was yogurt made?With the help of Sevgi’s family and insight from the rest of the community, Sevgi, Veronica and David traveled to Nova Mahala, Bulgaria to explored how rituals around yogurt making impacts the microbial community and final flavor of yogurt.

Mar 14, 20241h 10m

S1 Ep 6Dr. Rob Dunn: What can microbes teach us about human history?

Dr. Rob Dunn is an an evolutionary biologist, currently a professor at both the Center for Evolutionary Hologenomics at the University of Copenhagen and in the Department of Applied Ecology at North Carolina State University, where he holds the title of Senior Vice Provost for University Interdisciplinary Programs. He discusses the evolution of flavor and fermentation practice.

Jun 23, 202359 min

S1 Ep 5Dr. Maya Hey: What are the social, rhetorical, philosophical dimensions to studying ferments and (gut) health?

Dr. Maya Hey is a researcher at the Centre for the Social Study of Microbes, based in the University of Helsinki. She has been studying fermentation and health for the past 15 years and holds degrees in nutrition, food studies, and communications.

Jun 7, 20231h 0m

S1 Ep 4Alex Hozven: What can we learn from 25 years of fermentation practice?

Alex Hozven has been fermenting and innovating at The Cultured Pickle Shop in Berkeley for over 25 years with her husband, Kevin Farley. Her experience gives her keen insight into how consumer perception of fermented foods has changed, where the field is going, the regulatory landscape for smaller producers, and how fermented foods can be used to build community.

Apr 20, 202358 min

S1 Ep 3Dr. Joshua Evans: What is the connection between fermentation, flavor innovation, and biodiversity?

Dr. Evans is a Senior Researcher and Leader of the Sustainable Food Innovation Group at the Center for Biosustainability at the Technical University of Denmark. His multidisciplinary group uses culinary research & development to make flavorful, sustainable, often fermented foods, scientific methods to study their flavor, ecology and evolution, and social science and artistic practice to understand and experiment with how they might fit into food culture.In his talk, Dr. Evans shares some of his work on how the pursuit of new flavors through fermentation can lead to novel microbial ecologies and evolutionary histories, and how bringing together art, science, and cooking through fermentation can invite closer relationships to our bodies and to the planet.

Mar 29, 202359 min

S1 Ep 2Dr. Suzanne Devkota: What is the role of fermented foods in clinical practice?

Dr. Devkota is an Associate Professor at the Cedars-Sinai Division of Gastroenterology and the Director of Microbiome Research at the F. Widjaja Foundation Inflammatory Bowel and Immunobiology Research Institute. Her research investigates the relationship between diet and the gut microbiome, with a particular focus on IBD. Dr. Devkota offers a valuable perspective on the current role of fermented foods in a clinical setting, addressing important questions such as which fermented foods are most beneficial, how they should be consumed, and whether certain patients will benefit more than others.

Mar 16, 20231h 1m

S1 Ep 1David Zilber: How should we think about fermentation and health?

In this first talk, David Zilber presents a framework through which to consider fermentation and health research.

Jan 25, 20231h 1m
Elisa Caffrey 2023