Third Eye Bar opening hours: Tue-Thu: noon-11pm, Fri-Sat: noon - midnight

by Kaajal Modi

Fermenting wild geographies: Part 1: Fermenting

Sat 6 April 2024

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An overhead view of a jar filled with pink organic material growing and fermenting.

Maya Hey

Fermenting wild geographies: exploring microbial inheritance through the senses

In this two part event we will consider microbes as heirlooms that are passed down intergenerationally from our ancestors. This can take the form of both vertical genetic inheritance, and the stories, foods and cultural practices that we inherit through which we can trace the ways humans have been entangled with microorganisms. Human bodies are holobionts composed of a host and trillions of microorganisms whose collective functioning keeps the whole alive. As ancestors, allies, and symbiotes, microbes have lived alongside us as long as we have lived. Human symbioses with microorganisms are an important adaptation and survival strategy that have shaped us and the world around us in important and meaningful ways. Yet, like many forms of biodiversity, global microbial biodiversity is under threat from climate change and an increasingly industrialised food system and a loss of land-based knowledge about heritage food practices.

Food allergies

Please share any food allergies when booking, and we will accommodate where possible. Participants with high histamine levels or a histamine intolerance can take part in the fermenting activity, but are strongly discouraged from tasting any of the outcomes.

Part 1: Fermenting

In the first workshop, you will learn how to make sowans, a traditional Scottish probiotic porridge and oat drink that is made through a process of wild lactic fermentation. Lactic fermentation is a process used in cuisines around the world. It works by creating an environment in which lactic bacteria, necessary for human health and digestion, can thrive. We will create an acidic mixture and then add some spices and seasonings from other parts of the world to see how this affects the fermentation process.

This will be followed by Part 2: Dinner and Tasting on Friday 12 April. Please book seperately.

This event is part of the live programme for life-bestowing cadaverous soooooooooooooooooooot a research exhibition collated by Rae-Yen Song 宋瑞渊.

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Details

Event Type

Talks & Events

Location

Gallery

Time

4:00pm — 6:00pm

Ages

All ages

Ticketing

Free but ticketed

Tickets no longer available