The divine spirit of bees. A note on honey and the origins of yeast-driven fermentation
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Keywords

bees
honey
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
yeast
Neolithic

How to Cite

Nigro, L., & Rinaldi, T. (2023). The divine spirit of bees. A note on honey and the origins of yeast-driven fermentation. VICINO ORIENTE, (XXIV). Retrieved from http://www.vicino-oriente-journal.it/index.php/vicino-oriente/article/view/273

Abstract

One of the earliest domesticated organisms is perhaps the eukaryote microorganism known as
Saccharomyces cerevisiae, or more simply “the yeast”. Its role in triggering fermentation as a
process useful for agricultural products preservation and transformation into food, though known
from the Palaeolithic in the ancient Near East, became decisive in the Neolithic Period. The earliest
agriculturalists of the Fertile Crescent triggered fermentation with the addition of honey to fruits
juices, as attested to in the archaeological record. The yeast, that lives inside the guts of bees and
wasps, is apparently responsible for this fermentation process. Honey contains both yeast and sugar
that facilitates yeast growth generating fermentation. The productive capability of the bees let these
insects to be credited of a divine spirit

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