Scientist shares home-made yeast recipe after supermarkets sell out (2024)

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By Jo Tweedy For Mailonline 14:20 31 Mar 2020, updated 16:23 31 Mar 2020

Scientist shares home-made yeast recipe after supermarkets sell out (1)

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  • Scientist Sudeep Agarwala, from Boston, shared the easy-to-follow recipe on Twitter after reading reports that frustrated bakers couldn't find yeast anywhere
  • He shared a thread detailing how to make your own yeast safely at home
  • Revealed that dried fruits such as apricots or raisins mixed with water and flour make the raising agent that helps bakers make bread
  • Supermarkets have been selling out of yeast as people turn to home-baking during lock-down - with Amazon also out of stock
  • 112,000 people on Twitter have since liked the biologist's thread

A biologist has revealed how people who can't get hold of yeast for baking can create their own at home - using just a little water and some flour and dried fruit.

ScientistSudeep Agarwala, from Boston, shared his makeshift recipe to help bakers after yeast became one of the ingredients to fly off the shelves in supermarkets when people began preparing for lock-down. Sachets of the baker's essential has also sold out on Amazon in recent days.

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Writing on Twitter under the handle@shoelaces3,Agarwala penned his own step-by-step guide to making yeast that can then be used to bake bread.

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He told his followers: 'Friends, I learned last night over Zoom drinks that ya'll're baking so much that there's a shortage of yeast?! I, your local frumpy yeast geneticist have come here to tell you this: THERE IS NEVER A SHORTAGE OF YEAST.'

The scientist then unleashed a thread revealing how to make your own yeast using dried fruits, flour and water - with a good dash of time thrown in.

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He instructed people to 'scour' their kitchen for fruits such as apricots, raisins, grapes and prunes.

'Take your fruit (or, if using fresh fruit skins - please use your judgement), pop it into a jar, and add a little bit of water to it. 2 or 3 tablespoons (30-40 mL) is more than enough. If you stir the fruit around, you'll notice the water gets slightly cloudy. That's the yeast!'

THE BIOLOGIST'S RECIPE: MAKING YOUR OWN YEAST USING FRUIT

  • Put some dried fruit, raisins, apricots or prunes, for example, into a jar with 30 to 40ml of cold water
  • When the water turns cloudy, add 30 to 40 grams of flour to the mixture
  • Leave somewhere warm for 12 hours to allow the yeast bubbles to grow
  • Take some of your mixture and repeat the water and flour process, adding 30 to 40 ml of cold water and 30, 40 grams of flour - leave for 24 hours
  • Your yeast - now very bubbly - should be ready to use in baking

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After that,Agarwala advised people to add an 'equal mass' of flour to the mixture - any type will do, before writing: 'And then you wait. You'll want to keep this warm (but not hot).

'Hug it while you binge Netflix. Cuddle it while you yearn for human touch once again. Or put it on the counter while your dishwasher is running. Do it right and after 12 hours you'll see bubbles. These will grow.'

After another day of waiting, he advises to 'take a tiny bit of the fruit/flour/water mix, and add it to 30-40mL of water, add flour, and repeat. This time, it should come to life and those bubble should pop up much quicker.'

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And, ta da, bakers should be able to rise a loaf using the mixture, although he warns the technique might take some practise.

He also suggested dregs of beer in near-empty bottles could make yeast, as could sugar-heavy water from boiled potatoes.

He signed off his educational lesson, which has already been liked by 112,000 people: 'Yeast is everywhere! Also: please wash your hands and stay away from other people. <3, your local frumpy yeast geneticist.'

Share or comment on this article: Scientist shares home-made yeast recipe after people moan they can't bake their own bread

Scientist shares home-made yeast recipe after supermarkets sell out (2024)

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