The Peak (Singapore)

A CURE THING

Cooks are getting into pretty pickles these days, and for good reason.

- TEXT CHRISTOPHE­R TAN

Cooks are getting into pretty pickles these days, and for good reason.

It gives bubbly its fizz, stilton its funk, Sauternes its noble sweetness. It instils umami in soya sauce and suavity in the tobacco of your postprandi­al cigar. It raises bread, knits tempeh together, detoxifies buah keluak, and exalts your cup of tea, coffee or cocoa far beyond muddy brown water. It also happens inside you – in fact, you wouldn’t be able to live a normal life without it.

We’re talking about fermentati­on, of course. As global gastronomy trends continue their current swing towards sustainabl­y and traditiona­lly produced foods, home and restaurant cooks are readopting and retooling ancient culinary practices – and prime among these, for age, diversity and sheer effectiven­ess, is microbial fermentati­on.

Cooks mostly work at a macro level, herding and kludging handfuls of ingredient­s into submission. The modernist kitchen, with its thermomete­rs and centrifuge­s, allows a tad more precision. In comparison, microbes employ enzymes to manipulate flavour and texture on a far more complex and fine-grained level, needing no extreme temperatur­es or conditions – just time. It’s no wonder cooks have befriended them since antiquity.

It is these millennia of coexistenc­e and co-evolution with humans and their culinary activity that have led – science is not yet sure how – friendly microbes to “turn off ” the genes coding for lethal toxins, unlike their geneticall­y very close cousins which still give us food poisoning. A few hundred species have become so “domesticat­ed” that they live and thrive inside us, composing what doctors call the gut microbiome. Though far from giving us a final map of the microbiome, research heavily implicates it as having far-reaching influences on our immune system, metabolism, longevity and even brain functions.

INVISIBLE ALCHEMY

Fermentati­on unlocks flavours, aromas and nutritive compounds otherwise inaccessib­le. Indeed, noted French chef Yannick Alleno believes that terroir – the rootedness of flavour in geographic­al and cultural origin – is most profoundly expressed by fermentati­on. In their recent book Terroirs: Reflection­s of a Chef, Alleno and co-author Marie-

Claire Frederic, a fermentati­on expert, point out that many French foods depend on microbial action for their terroir-specific signature flavours: wines, cheeses, cured meats, sourdough breads.

Alleno ferments vegetables, cooks them sous vide, then concentrat­es their juices with various lowtempera­ture methods, obtaining essences with extended “caudalie” – the persistent duration of aroma on the palate – and what he calls “wavelength”, an extra depth and resonance of flavour. In his view, fermentati­on “reveals all the textures and tastes of a terroir’s living material”, providing “nouns” acted on by the “verbs” of precise cooking.

Among the most ubiquitous and industriou­s “noun” generators are the lactobacil­lus species, found naturally in or on many ingredient­s. They add zip to everything from lambic beers and Shaoxing wine to cacao, yogurt and the It garnishes of the moment: kimchi and other lacto-fermented pickles now starring at a restaurant near you. Lactobacil­li create an acidic, anaerobic environmen­t hostile to “bad” microbes but favourable to friendly species, for the net result of shelf-stable pickles playing bright and sustained chords of sourness.

Another microbe, Aspergillu­s oryzae, is grown on cooked rice to make koji, the traditiona­l starter for many Asian rice and legume ferments. Over the past decade, a salted koji slurry called shio koji has become hugely popular among Japanese cooks: it tenderises, deeply seasons and bestows umami on whatever it touches, as its enzymes break down proteins, carbs and fats to respective­ly liberate amino acids, sugars and fatty acids.

OHIO CHEF JEREMY UMANSKY GROWS GHOSTLY-WHITE KOJI CRUSTS ON MEAT AND SEAFOOD CUTS, WHICH ATTAIN CHARCUTERI­E-LIKE TENDERNESS AND TASTE INTENSITY IN JUST DAYS.

Many chefs are capitalisi­ng on koji’s power in intriguing ways. Momofuku’s David Chang uses it to make nut- and lentil-based miso analogues he has christened (and trademarke­d) “hozon”. Ohio chef Jeremy Umansky grows ghostlywhi­te koji crusts on meat and seafood cuts, which attain charcuteri­e-like tenderness and taste intensity in just days. Other pioneers are using koji to transform protein sources such as cheese and eggs into wholly new foods and condiments.

It’s a safe bet that whole undiscover­ed countries of fermentati­on lie somewhere out there, given that microbes are the earth’s most abundant type of life form by several orders of ten, with new species being discovered all the time. This is really their world, and we’re just living in it – and reaping the delicious benefits.

 ??  ?? KIMCHI POTS
Lactobacil­lus doing its work on one of the It garnishes of the moment.
KIMCHI POTS Lactobacil­lus doing its work on one of the It garnishes of the moment.
 ??  ?? MICRO FRIENDS The microbe Aspergillu­s oryzae is grown on cooked rice to make koji, a starter for ferments.
MICRO FRIENDS The microbe Aspergillu­s oryzae is grown on cooked rice to make koji, a starter for ferments.

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