yogurt
yogurt
Simply placing as few as four live ants into a container of milk provides enough microbes, enzymes and acids to kickstart the fermentation process that creates yogurt.
Today, most yogurts are produced by fermenting milk using commercially made starters. However, the industrialisation of the process has meant that countless traditional fermentation practices from around the world are overlooked.
The rest is paywalled.
86 0 ReplyTIHI
36 0 ReplyI'm sure my imagination is worse than reality, but I'm afraid to read the article and find out.
I assume it's either ant vomit, feces, or something that's fermented... Possibly all three.
12 0 ReplyIt’s not that bad. A traditional yogurt-making practice is to put a couple ants into some milk. The microorganisms and enzymes that the ants introduce helps kick off the fermentation of the milk, turning it into yogurt.
25 0 Reply
Shelve it with that animal shit coffee
7 0 ReplyAre we putting it on the castoreum shelf or the one with the big lump of ambergris?
2 0 Reply
Thanks, ants.
31 0 ReplyThants.
25 0 ReplyThants
18 0 ReplyThants
14 0 ReplyThants.
14 0 ReplyThants.
13 0 ReplyThants.
12 0 ReplyThants.
5 0 ReplyThants.
5 0 ReplyThanos
4 0 ReplySurely not TheAntOS!
4 0 ReplyThanatos
3 0 ReplyOh snap
2 0 Reply
Will there be fruit on the bottom? Or did the ants eat all the fruit?
21 0 ReplyThe ants are the fruit. They're nature's raisins!
25 0 Reply
i'm hungry now. where ant yogurt
17 0 ReplyWould alien ants work? I know there used to be farms
16 0 ReplySmooth.
5 0 ReplySpoons for yogurt!
Forks? Turn em into a Mohawk
1 0 Reply
Fortunately, Ender and Bean handled that for us.
1 0 Reply
I'm a little upset no one told me ants were making the yogart this whole time.
14 2 ReplyThey say knowing about the food you're going to eat makes it more delicious... is yogurt more delicious for you after knowing this information?
5 0 ReplyThe world is full of magic
7 1 Reply
Do they have to be Greek ants?
12 0 ReplyAunt is Thea in Greek
2 0 ReplyAunt is Thea in Greek
Theía (Θεία) is “aunt”
Theá (Θεά) is “goddess”
So obviously yoghurt comes from goddesses.
2 0 Reply
Neat.
8 0 Reply"Simply placing as few as four live ants into a container of milk"
Sweetened by screams of four drowning ants
4 0 ReplyYeah, that’s gonna be a ‘no’ from me, dog.
5 1 ReplyYogurt model of Ant OS
4 0 ReplyHappy Cakeday! 🍰🎂
4 0 Reply
Oh, the ants are an ingredient. I was hoping to learn they had somehow trained ants to manufacture yogurt.
3 0 Reply