The Handshake: The Baker's Skin Microbiome
Your hands are not sterile tools. They are a thriving ecosystem, a landscape of ridges and valleys populated by millions of bacterial residents. When you knead a loaf, you are not just shaping structure; you are performing a biological handshake. You are introducing your own microbial signature to the dough.
Meet Your Baker: F. sanfranciscensis.
Meet the rod-shaped bacterium with a name that barely fits on a label: Fructilactobacillus sanfranciscensis. This organism is the engine of the sourdough ecosystem. And its history is stranger than you think.
Ghost Probiotics: Why Dead Bacteria Still Talk
If you view probiotics solely as "live microorganisms," then sourdough is a barren wasteland. It is sterile. But emerging research into the gut-brain axis suggests something profound: bacteria do not need to be alive to speak to your body.