{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/8b9264c0-ea6a-41c3-84cd-9d7b350986e2/69fca1712b71c054a34df1e1?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"How a passion for baking fermented a fresh career move","description":"<p>Baking bread&nbsp;during Covid-19 lockdowns&nbsp;provided&nbsp;Chantle&nbsp;Edillor&nbsp;with&nbsp;some&nbsp;career&nbsp;inspiration.&nbsp;“I knew I wanted to do&nbsp;something&nbsp;different&nbsp;and&nbsp;an&nbsp;exploration in&nbsp;sourdough&nbsp;presented an opportunity that I felt uniquely able to pursue,” she says.&nbsp;</p><p><br></p><p>In 2022, after completing&nbsp;PhD&nbsp;research&nbsp;into&nbsp;metabolic diseases at the University of&nbsp;California&nbsp;Los Angeles,&nbsp;Edillor&nbsp;began&nbsp;a postdoc there, where she&nbsp;researched&nbsp;the&nbsp;anti-inflammatory properties of&nbsp;fermented&nbsp;foods.&nbsp;</p><p><br></p><p>She now works&nbsp;as a&nbsp;fermented food scientist&nbsp;at&nbsp;Microcosm Foods, a non-profit research organization that maps connections between fermented foods, microbes and human health, a role she combines with&nbsp;assay development at the Astera Institute,&nbsp;a&nbsp;similar&nbsp;non-profit based in&nbsp;the Bay Area, San Francisco.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p><p><br></p><p>In the third episode of a six-part podcast series about creativity in science,&nbsp;Edillor&nbsp;says&nbsp;fermentation techniques re-ignited a childhood interest in cooking:&nbsp;“I have early memories of sitting and watching&nbsp;the&nbsp;Food Network with a metal bowl full of egg whites&nbsp;in my lap, holding a&nbsp;whisk and attempting to make stiff peak&nbsp;meringue,&nbsp;but also&nbsp;to&nbsp;understand how proteins capture air to create volume and texture.”&nbsp;</p><p><br></p><p>Edillor’s&nbsp;culinary and scientific creativity extends to adding&nbsp;kombucha to leftover dinner party wine to&nbsp;make red wine&nbsp;vinegar, and&nbsp;making miso from blue&nbsp;tortillla&nbsp;chips. “Because the chips had been deep fried and fat does not necessarily ferment super well, it had this off&nbsp;flavour,&nbsp;kind&nbsp;of&nbsp;oxidized fat.&nbsp;I​​​​​​​’ll&nbsp;not&nbsp;be commercializing that anytime soon.”</p><p><br></p><p>Summing up her career to date, she says: “I​​​​​​​’m&nbsp;a human geneticist masquerading as a yeast geneticist,&nbsp;masquerading as a microbiologist.&nbsp;There are&nbsp;certain areas of science that are less competitive and more collaborative.&nbsp;Those are the spaces I like to occupy.”</p>","author_name":"Nature Careers"}