Thermal Death Curves: What Happens at 60°C?
When you slide a loaf into a 250°C oven, you are subjecting the microbial city inside to a rapid climate change. For the first few minutes, the yeast and bacteria actually work faster (the "Oven Spring"). But as the internal temperature rises, they hit a wall. This is the Thermal Death Curve.
The Peacemaker: Levilactobacillus brevis
While other microbes are busy fighting for sugar, L. brevis is quietly performing a chemical conversion that has profound implications for the human brain. It takes Glutamate—an excitatory molecule—and transforms it into GABA, the molecule of calm.
Microbial Ecology: The Lifecycle of Your Starter (And Why It Smells)
When you mix flour and water for the first time, you are not just making dough; you are terraforming a new world. You are initiating a biological sequence known as Ecological Succession. This process is violent, chaotic, and predictable. It involves a war for resources, a "Great Extinction" event, and finally, the establishment of a stable civilization.