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Rooted

Deep journeys through food and drink culture. A boostable publication

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A Love Letter to Fermentation— Our Shared Legacy

6 min read3 hours ago

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Kitchen counter while baking sourdough bread
Photo by on

There’s a corner of my kitchen I call the Fermentation Station — a name inspired by Bon Appétit (yes, I was a fan before the racism ).

It’s where King James, my sourdough starter, reigns supreme in a glass jar, bubbling quietly beside a SCOBY-laced vat of kombucha. The space smells like life — tangy, earthy, a bit wild. In this tiny universe, Lactobacillus — the bacteria responsible for fermentation — is queen.

What is it about this smell that drives me wild? It awakens my palate, singes my nose, waters my mouth. I feel ready to devour.

This humble bacterium is the magic behind some of my favorite foods: dosai, yogurt, pickles, sourdough bread. It tangs, it transforms, it preserves. It is ancient, silent, and deeply loyal.

But for years, it was only an unacknowledged presence in my life.

My love affair with it began out of necessity, in a cold New Hampshire kitchen thousands of miles from home.

How I fell in love with a bacterium

The first sourdough I ever ate was the one I baked.

Rooted
Rooted

Published in Rooted

Deep journeys through food and drink culture. A boostable publication

Saumya Sharma
Saumya Sharma

Written by Saumya Sharma

Former management consultant turned social impact advocate. I explore feminism, existential freedom and the darker intricacies of the mind through my writing.

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