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fermentation
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fermentation

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Black grapes on the vine at Chateauneuf-du-Papes, France. During the pressing process the yeast on the skin of the grape converts the sugar content of the grape juice into ethanol (ethyl alcohol).

Breakdown of sugars by bacteria and yeasts using a method of respiration without oxygen (anaerobic). The enzymes in yeast break down glucose to give two products: ethanol (alcohol) and carbon dioxide. Fermentation processes have long been utilized in baking bread, making beer and wine, and producing cheese, yogurt, soy sauce, and many other foodstuffs.

In bread baking, the bubbles of carbon dioxide trapped in the dough make the bread rise. In the brewing process, complex sugars, such as sucrose, are first broken down by yeast into simple sugars, such as glucose. Glucose is then further decomposed into ethanol and carbon dioxide. The ethanol produced is the alcohol in alcoholic drinks, such as beer and wine; the carbon dioxide puts bubbles into beers and champagne.

The word equation for fermentation is: glucose → ethanol + carbon dioxide. The symbol equation is:

C6H12O6 → 2C2H5OH + 2CO2

Many antibiotics are produced by fermentation; it is one of the processes that can cause food spoilage.



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Modern production begins with unfermented grape juice which goes through a variety of stages that gradually makes the juice become more concentrated and acetic.
There was a time when people in the entire world and also in Asia were not used to consume unfermented soybean foods.
This process, known as mutage, arrests the fermentation and allows the wine to retain its natural sweetness from unfermented grape sugars.
 
 
 
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