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When baking with yeast it needs to rise for A long period of time, think it is overnight. I know that when using fast acting yeast, if you do not let it sit for a while it still retains the bacteria after it is cooked.

 

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Judith

12/10/05 22:06:13

herbal remedies

Herbal Remedies - yeast

when you bake with yeast, does it kill the bacteria? I know when you let the bread rise..once you bake it, it quits rising, so the bacteria is then dead?

 

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Judith <sr1216

>

> when you bake with yeast, does it kill the bacteria? I know when you let

> the bread rise..once you bake it, it quits rising, so the bacteria is then

> dead?

 

Please. I don't mean to keep going on about this, but yeast (the kind we make

bread with) is a fungus, NOT a bacteria. Here are just a few quick references I

pulled off the web.

 

As to whether or not baking kills the fungus, I believe so, but I can't find any

references to back that up.

 

-------

S C I E N C E L E S S O N K – 3

Yeast: A Helpful Fungus

Yeast is what causes bread to rise. Yeast is a fungus in the same major

microbial group as mold,

mildew and mushrooms. Sometimes fungi grow plant-like root systems and resemble

plants, but

they have no chlorophyll and cannot produce their own food. Yeast is found

naturally in the air.

Sugar can act as food for yeast, since the yeast can change it into

alcohol, causing the release of carbon dioxide gas and

 

-------

Yeast

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Jump to: navigation, search

Yeasts constitute a group of single-celled (unicellular) fungi, a few species of

which are commonly used to leaven bread , ferment alcoholic beverages, and even

drive experimental fuel cells. Most yeasts belong to the division Ascomycota. A

few yeasts, such as Candida albicans, can cause infection in humans. More than

one thousand species of yeasts have been described. The most commonly used yeast

is Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which was domesticated for wine, bread, and beer

production thousands of years ago.

 

-------

Fungus

 

One would be surprised to find out that one-fifth of earth's organisms are

fungi. Many of these fungi live right in our homes. Unlike plants fungi do not

have specialized cells or tissues. They are usually a mass of many celled

threadlike tubes. Fungi can be very useful to other organism especially humans.

Fungi is used in food, yeast and medicine such as penicillin.

 

 

 

--

_

Play 100s of games for FREE! http://games.mail.com/

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Can you please explain the "bacteria" supposedly in Yeast which is a plant that releases carbon dioxide.

 

LoveBob

Adageyudi Staya Udanvti

 

-

Christina

herbal remedies

Sunday, December 11, 2005 5:01 AM

Re: Herbal Remedies - yeast

 

 

 

 

When baking with yeast it needs to rise for A long period of time, think it is overnight. I know that when using fast acting yeast, if you do not let it sit for a while it still retains the bacteria after it is cooked.

 

----

 

 

Judith

12/10/05 22:06:13

herbal remedies

Herbal Remedies - yeast

when you bake with yeast, does it kill the bacteria? I know when you let the bread rise..once you bake it, it quits rising, so the bacteria is then dead?

 

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herbal remedies , " Judith " <sr1216@d...> wrote:

>

> when you bake with yeast, does it kill the bacteria? I know when

you let

> the bread rise..once you bake it, it quits rising, so the bacteria

is then

> dead?

 

Yeast is not a bacteria. It is a single cell plant (a fungus) and

when exposed to sugar it digests the sugar to produce carbon dioxide

bubbles and alcohol (yes, even in bread). This is what makes bread

rise and increase in volume. The yeast is killed off by the high

heat of the oven which also evaporates any left over alcohol.

 

Mitsy

>

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I'm coming late here and am probably missing the point of the

discussion, but if you're worried about yeast bread affecting a

systemic yeast infection ... from my experience only ... it's not

the bread (at least not to a unmanageable degree), it's the sugar

and the acidic conditions of the body that allows the yeast to grow

out of control in the first place and keeps it growing. When things

are out of balance, even beneficial or benign bacteria and fungi

become a problem.

 

 

 

herbal remedies , maddress@m... wrote:

>

> -

> Judith <sr1216@d...>

> >

> > when you bake with yeast, does it kill the bacteria? I know

when you let

> > the bread rise..once you bake it, it quits rising, so the

bacteria is then

> > dead?

>

> Please. I don't mean to keep going on about this, but yeast (the

kind we make bread with) is a fungus, NOT a bacteria. Here are just

a few quick references I pulled off the web.

>

> As to whether or not baking kills the fungus, I believe so, but I

can't find any references to back that up.

>

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" Whether the Yeast is a Bacteria or a Fungus...Baking does destroy

it. I belive that Yeast is a Bacteria not a Fungus I could be wrong. "

herbal remedies , " zengirl04 " <zengirl04>

wrote:

>

> I'm coming late here and am probably missing the point of the

> discussion, but if you're worried about yeast bread affecting a

> systemic yeast infection ... from my experience only ... it's not

> the bread (at least not to a unmanageable degree), it's the sugar

> and the acidic conditions of the body that allows the yeast to

grow

> out of control in the first place and keeps it growing. When

things

> are out of balance, even beneficial or benign bacteria and fungi

> become a problem.

>

>

>

> herbal remedies , maddress@m... wrote:

> >

> > -

> > Judith <sr1216@d...>

> > >

> > > when you bake with yeast, does it kill the bacteria? I know

> when you let

> > > the bread rise..once you bake it, it quits rising, so the

> bacteria is then

> > > dead?

> >

> > Please. I don't mean to keep going on about this, but yeast

(the

> kind we make bread with) is a fungus, NOT a bacteria. Here are

just

> a few quick references I pulled off the web.

> >

> > As to whether or not baking kills the fungus, I believe so, but

I

> can't find any references to back that up.

> >

>

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Yeast is a small single-celled fungus that ferments (chemical changes due to specific enzymes) sugars and other carbohydrates and reproduces by budding.

Yeasts in general are widespread in nature, occurring in the soil and on plants.

They are mostly used industrially in a wide range of fermentation processes; medicinally, as a source of B-complex vitamins and thiamine.

Pure yeast cultures are grown in a medium of sugars, nitrogen sources, minerals, and water. When a batch of yeast for baking, medicinal, or food purposes is risen properly and baked, the medium in which the yeast was grown is discarded.

 

----

 

 

Staya Udanvti Bob Butler

12/12/05 02:52:07

herbal remedies

Re: Herbal Remedies - yeast

 

Can you please explain the "bacteria" supposedly in Yeast which is a plant that releases carbon dioxide.

 

LoveBob

Adageyudi Staya Udanvti

 

-

Christina

herbal remedies

Sunday, December 11, 2005 5:01 AM

Re: Herbal Remedies - yeast

 

 

 

 

 

When baking with yeast it needs to rise for A long period of time, think it is overnight. I know that when using fast acting yeast, if you do not let it sit for a while it still retains the bacteria after it is cooked.

 

----

 

 

Judith

12/10/05 22:06:13

herbal remedies

Herbal Remedies - yeast

when you bake with yeast, does it kill the bacteria? I know when you let the bread rise..once you bake it, it quits rising, so the bacteria is then dead?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Hi Christina!

 

I knew this about yeast but you called it a bacteria if not let set overnight. I thought I was missing something.

 

When yeast is baked the temperature above 180° kills the plant or fungus that causes the release of carbon dioxide. Therefore the yeast being used dies.

 

LoveBobAdageyudiStaya Udanvti

 

-

Christina

herbal remedies

Monday, December 12, 2005 5:59 AM

Re: Herbal Remedies - yeast

 

 

 

 

Yeast is a small single-celled fungus that ferments (chemical changes due to specific enzymes) sugars and other carbohydrates and reproduces by budding.

Yeasts in general are widespread in nature, occurring in the soil and on plants.

They are mostly used industrially in a wide range of fermentation processes; medicinally, as a source of B-complex vitamins and thiamine.

Pure yeast cultures are grown in a medium of sugars, nitrogen sources, minerals, and water. When a batch of yeast for baking, medicinal, or food purposes is risen properly and baked, the medium in which the yeast was grown is discarded.

 

----

 

 

Staya Udanvti Bob Butler

12/12/05 02:52:07

herbal remedies

Re: Herbal Remedies - yeast

 

Can you please explain the "bacteria" supposedly in Yeast which is a plant that releases carbon dioxide.

 

LoveBob

Adageyudi Staya Udanvti

 

-

Christina

herbal remedies

Sunday, December 11, 2005 5:01 AM

Re: Herbal Remedies - yeast

 

 

 

 

 

When baking with yeast it needs to rise for A long period of time, think it is overnight. I know that when using fast acting yeast, if you do not let it sit for a while it still retains the bacteria after it is cooked.

 

----

 

 

Judith

12/10/05 22:06:13

herbal remedies

Herbal Remedies - yeast

when you bake with yeast, does it kill the bacteria? I know when you let the bread rise..once you bake it, it quits rising, so the bacteria is then dead?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Hi Bob,

 

I did not call yeast a bacteria, I was simply responding to a message that someone asked a question about, then after several posts from people saying that it was a fungus or bacteria, ect. I sent off the post to explain to those what yeast is made of that were not aware of what it is.

 

 

 

Sincerely,

 

Christina

 

 

www.soothingtouch.us

----

 

 

Staya Udanvti Bob Butler

12/12/05 20:10:29

herbal remedies

Re: Herbal Remedies - yeast

 

Hi Christina!

 

I knew this about yeast but you called it a bacteria if not let set overnight. I thought I was missing something.

 

When yeast is baked the temperature above 180° kills the plant or fungus that causes the release of carbon dioxide. Therefore the yeast being used dies.

 

LoveBobAdageyudiStaya Udanvti

 

-

Christina

herbal remedies

Monday, December 12, 2005 5:59 AM

Re: Herbal Remedies - yeast

 

 

 

 

 

Yeast is a small single-celled fungus that ferments (chemical changes due to specific enzymes) sugars and other carbohydrates and reproduces by budding.

Yeasts in general are widespread in nature, occurring in the soil and on plants.

They are mostly used industrially in a wide range of fermentation processes; medicinally, as a source of B-complex vitamins and thiamine.

Pure yeast cultures are grown in a medium of sugars, nitrogen sources, minerals, and water. When a batch of yeast for baking, medicinal, or food purposes is risen properly and baked, the medium in which the yeast was grown is discarded.

 

----

 

 

Staya Udanvti Bob Butler

12/12/05 02:52:07

herbal remedies

Re: Herbal Remedies - yeast

 

Can you please explain the "bacteria" supposedly in Yeast which is a plant that releases carbon dioxide.

 

LoveBob

Adageyudi Staya Udanvti

 

-

Christina

herbal remedies

Sunday, December 11, 2005 5:01 AM

Re: Herbal Remedies - yeast

 

 

 

 

 

When baking with yeast it needs to rise for A long period of time, think it is overnight. I know that when using fast acting yeast, if you do not let it sit for a while it still retains the bacteria after it is cooked.

 

----

 

 

Judith

12/10/05 22:06:13

herbal remedies

Herbal Remedies - yeast

when you bake with yeast, does it kill the bacteria? I know when you let the bread rise..once you bake it, it quits rising, so the bacteria is then dead?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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  • 6 months later...
Guest guest

Resveratrol kills infectious human fungi (yeast) Resveratrol displayed potent

anti-fungal activity against human pathogenic fungi (disease-causing yeast).

Resveratrol's ability to kill Candida albicans, the yeast that causes monilial

infections in humans was confirmed under electron microscopy. These results

suggest that Resveratrol could be employed as a therapeutic agent to treat

fungal infections in humans. The study is published in the journal Archives of

Pharmaceutical Research.

 

Jerry Mittelman, DDS, FAPM

 

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address for your free copy of

The Holistic Dental Digest PLUS, now in

its 27th year and helping people on

5 continents. jmittelman

 

 

 

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  • 2 years later...

The antibiotics they proscribe do this all the time.

Yes the quantities in meats and dairy products are great enough to make kids go threw puberty at 8 years old. Eat only Organic.

Eat Garlic for the Yeast infections and by all means don't take the poisons the MDs give you. Eat plain Organic Yogurt.

Stay off the sugar. Big results will come from a grand change. Knocking out just one bad habit will still have wonderful results just not as noticeable as a eating all raw or something of that sort.

 

Yep... lots of Garlic.

 

~B

 

 

On Wed, 2009-01-14 at 16:12 +0000, missygal1970 wrote:

 

I've had yeast infections since taking antibiotics a few mos ago. One

thing I had not thought about is that antibiotics are present in meats,

milk, cheese, etc. Are the quantities great enough that I should start

eating only organic meat & dairy products?

 

Also, I've read of countless cures for yeast infections (it's all so

confusing). Is there a good remedy that works????

 

I'm following the no sugar diet as closely as possible & feel good

about that (but I just don't see the results I had hoped for). Ideas??

 

Thank you.

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