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      Scientists revive old Bulgarian recipe to make yogurt with ants

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 3 October 2025 • 1 minute

    Fermenting milk to make yogurt, cheeses, or kefir is an ancient practice, and different cultures have their own traditional methods, often preserved in oral histories. The forests of Bulgaria and Turkey have an abundance of red wood ants, for instance, so a time-honored Bulgarian yogurt-making practice involves dropping a few live ants (or crushed-up ant eggs) into the milk to jump-start fermentation. Scientists have now figured out why the ants are so effective in making edible yogurt, according to a paper published in the journal iScience. The authors even collaborated with chefs to create modern recipes using ant yogurt.

    “Today’s yogurts are typically made with just two bacterial strains,” said co-author Leonie Jahn from the Technical University of Denmark. “If you look at traditional yogurt, you have much bigger biodiversity, varying based on location, households, and season. That brings more flavors, textures, and personality.”

    If you want to study traditional culinary methods, it helps to go where those traditions emerged, since the locals likely still retain memories and oral histories of said culinary methods—in this case, Nova Mahala, Bulgaria, where co-author Sevgi Mutlu Sirakova's family still lives. To recreate the region's ant yogurt, the team followed instructions from Sirakova's uncle. They used fresh raw cow milk, warmed until scalding, "such that it could 'bite your pinkie finger,'" per the authors. Four live red wood ants were then collected from a local colony and added to the milk.

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    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagancient recipes tagancient recipes tagancient recipes tagants tagants tagants tagants are awesome tagants are awesome tagants are awesome tagbioculture tagbioculture tagbioculture tagfermentation tagfermentation tagfermentation tagfood science tagfood science tagfood science tagyogurt tagyogurt tagyogurt tagscience tagscience tagscience tagancient recipes tagancient recipes tagancient recipes tagants tagants tagants tagants are awesome tagants are awesome tagants are awesome tagbioculture tagbioculture tagbioculture tagfermentation tagfermentation tagfermentation tagscience tagscience tagscience tagancient recipes tagancient recipes tagancient recipes tagants tagants tagants tagants are awesome tagants are awesome tagants are awesome tagbioculture tagbioculture tagbioculture tagfermentation tagfermentation tagfermentation tagfood science tagfood science tagfood science tagyogurt tagyogurt tagyogurt tagfood science tagfood science tagfood science tagyogurt tagyogurt tagyogurt

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Scientists revive old Bulgarian recipe to make yogurt with ants

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 3 October 2025 • 1 minute

    Fermenting milk to make yogurt, cheeses, or kefir is an ancient practice, and different cultures have their own traditional methods, often preserved in oral histories. The forests of Bulgaria and Turkey have an abundance of red wood ants, for instance, so a time-honored Bulgarian yogurt-making practice involves dropping a few live ants (or crushed-up ant eggs) into the milk to jump-start fermentation. Scientists have now figured out why the ants are so effective in making edible yogurt, according to a paper published in the journal iScience. The authors even collaborated with chefs to create modern recipes using ant yogurt.

    “Today’s yogurts are typically made with just two bacterial strains,” said co-author Leonie Jahn from the Technical University of Denmark. “If you look at traditional yogurt, you have much bigger biodiversity, varying based on location, households, and season. That brings more flavors, textures, and personality.”

    If you want to study traditional culinary methods, it helps to go where those traditions emerged, since the locals likely still retain memories and oral histories of said culinary methods—in this case, Nova Mahala, Bulgaria, where co-author Sevgi Mutlu Sirakova's family still lives. To recreate the region's ant yogurt, the team followed instructions from Sirakova's uncle. They used fresh raw cow milk, warmed until scalding, "such that it could 'bite your pinkie finger,'" per the authors. Four live red wood ants were then collected from a local colony and added to the milk.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagancient recipes tagancient recipes tagancient recipes tagants tagants tagants tagants are awesome tagants are awesome tagants are awesome tagbioculture tagbioculture tagbioculture tagfermentation tagfermentation tagfermentation tagfood science tagfood science tagfood science tagyogurt tagyogurt tagyogurt tagscience tagscience tagscience tagancient recipes tagancient recipes tagancient recipes tagants tagants tagants tagants are awesome tagants are awesome tagants are awesome tagbioculture tagbioculture tagbioculture tagfermentation tagfermentation tagfermentation tagfood science tagfood science tagfood science tagyogurt tagyogurt tagyogurt tagscience tagscience tagscience tagancient recipes tagancient recipes tagancient recipes tagants tagants tagants tagants are awesome tagants are awesome tagants are awesome tagbioculture tagbioculture tagbioculture tagfermentation tagfermentation tagfermentation tagfood science tagfood science tagfood science tagyogurt tagyogurt tagyogurt

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Scientists revive old Bulgarian recipe to make yogurt with ants

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 3 October 2025 • 1 minute

    Fermenting milk to make yogurt, cheeses, or kefir is an ancient practice, and different cultures have their own traditional methods, often preserved in oral histories. The forests of Bulgaria and Turkey have an abundance of red wood ants, for instance, so a time-honored Bulgarian yogurt-making practice involves dropping a few live ants (or crushed-up ant eggs) into the milk to jump-start fermentation. Scientists have now figured out why the ants are so effective in making edible yogurt, according to a paper published in the journal iScience. The authors even collaborated with chefs to create modern recipes using ant yogurt.

    “Today’s yogurts are typically made with just two bacterial strains,” said co-author Leonie Jahn from the Technical University of Denmark. “If you look at traditional yogurt, you have much bigger biodiversity, varying based on location, households, and season. That brings more flavors, textures, and personality.”

    If you want to study traditional culinary methods, it helps to go where those traditions emerged, since the locals likely still retain memories and oral histories of said culinary methods—in this case, Nova Mahala, Bulgaria, where co-author Sevgi Mutlu Sirakova's family still lives. To recreate the region's ant yogurt, the team followed instructions from Sirakova's uncle. They used fresh raw cow milk, warmed until scalding, "such that it could 'bite your pinkie finger,'" per the authors. Four live red wood ants were then collected from a local colony and added to the milk.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagancient recipes tagancient recipes tagancient recipes tagants tagants tagants tagants are awesome tagants are awesome tagants are awesome tagbioculture tagbioculture tagbioculture tagfermentation tagfermentation tagfermentation tagfood science tagfood science tagfood science tagyogurt tagyogurt tagyogurt tagscience tagscience tagscience tagancient recipes tagancient recipes tagancient recipes tagants tagants tagants tagants are awesome tagants are awesome tagants are awesome tagbioculture tagbioculture tagbioculture tagfermentation tagfermentation tagfermentation tagscience tagscience tagscience tagancient recipes tagancient recipes tagancient recipes tagants tagants tagants tagants are awesome tagants are awesome tagants are awesome tagbioculture tagbioculture tagbioculture tagfermentation tagfermentation tagfermentation tagfood science tagfood science tagfood science tagyogurt tagyogurt tagyogurt tagfood science tagfood science tagfood science tagyogurt tagyogurt tagyogurt

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