My Botanical Blend No. 2: Meadow Blend launched this week, and so too did my new book, 10 Minute Sourdough. It’s been a busy week – not just for me but for most people, with the new school year beginning. It is also the last week before applications close for our one-year online Sourdough Diploma. So this is a ‘sit down with a cup of tea’ kind of feature. It’s a ‘think about your everyday bread’ article that delves deep into the latest research and thinking about bread and how eating decent bread might just save your life… and now there is absolutely no excuse not to make it, either.
Welcome to baking season…
What is in sourdough?
You can thank the live microbes in sourdough starters for the bread’s uniquely delicious taste. But those teeming microbes don’t only create wonderful flavours.
Sourdough’s fermentation process helps to break down the flour, making it more easily digestible, and also increases the bio-availability of nutrients, making the bread more nutritious. In addition, the fermentation process means the bread does not require any artificial ingredients or preservatives.
Fibre is key to good gut health
We encourage a wide diversity of ingredients in our bakes – some of our bread recipes contain 20–30 different ingredients, some freshly milled, some as inclusions. The end product, also high in fibre, is not just food for you, but an excellent source of ‘food’ for the different good bacteria in your gut. We always advise eating your sourdough with some ‘probiotic’ foods, such as kimchi or sauerkraut, or any other live and fermented foods to help supply even more good bacteria to your gut.
A host of new scientific studies shows that by feeding your gut microbes with a healthy and diverse diet, you can improve the strength of your gut microbiome, which in turn can help to optimise your body’s vital immune defences. That should mean you have less risk of contracting viral and bacterial infections. But the benefits don’t stop there. Having a healthily functioning immune system means your body is less likely to develop chronic body-wide inflammation, which is a critical culprit in common diseases such as heart disease, type 2 diabetes and cancer.
The Immune system is more complex
As Dr Suzanne Cassel, an immunologist at the highly respected Cedars-Sinai health research organisation in Los Angeles, says: ‘You actually don’t want your immune system to be stronger, you want it to be balanced. Too much of an immune response is just as bad as too little response.’
Our bodies need to keep the immune response healthily reined back, otherwise, our immune defences can become over active and attack our bodies, causing diseases such as arthritis, inflammatory bowel disease and other autoimmune conditions. So we need to keep our defences not only strong but also under control. But how? Scientific opinion increasingly points to one answer: it’s all about the bacteria living in your gut. And that’s exactly where sourdough can help.
Why Gut health matters
There are about as many individual bacteria living inside you as there are human cells. They comprise around 10,000 different species, which can be both good and bad. Together, they carry about 1,000 times as many genes as you do. The bacteria in your gut aren’t just sitting there, living independently. They play a crucial role in breaking down your food so you can absorb it. They also interact with our bodies and brains through chemical signals. Studies show that these can help or hinder the immune system’s regulation. Numerous reputable scientific reports agree that having a richly diverse and healthily balanced population of bacteria in our guts can support our immune-system defences’ constant fight against infection. To quote an international study in the journal Frontiers in Immunology in 2013: ‘The intestinal microbiota play an important role in pathogen resistance, both by direct interaction with pathogenic bacteria and by influencing the immune system.’
Conversely, gut-bacteria populations that are low in diversity and high in infectious bugs that produce toxic substances are strongly associated with immune-related diseases such as asthma, inflammatory bowel disease and type 2 diabetes. One particular danger of having high levels of toxin-producing bacteria in the gut is that they can weaken the stomach’s walls, allowing toxic substances to leak into the bloodstream. This, in turn, causes chronic inflammation throughout the body, which then continually damages our cells, as well as organs such as the heart. Fermented sourdough may help us to prevent all of this, according to an important new study by investigators at the Stanford University Prevention Research Centre in California.
Their study of 36 healthy adults over ten weeks, published in July 2021 in the journal Cell, concluded that ‘a diet rich in fermented foods enhances the diversity of gut microbes and decreases molecular signs of inflammation’. The more fermented foodstuffs people ate, the better the results. One of the study’s authors, Dr Justin Sonnenburg, an associate professor of microbiology and immunology, says: ‘This is a stunning finding. It provides one of the first examples of how a simple change in diet can reproducibly remodel the gut microbes in a cohort of healthy adults.’
The study reports that eating fermented food in particular seems to reduce the activity of a potentially harmful type of immune cell called interleukin 6. This has been linked to both chronic inflammation and conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis, type 2 diabetes and chronic stress. What’s the magic in fermented sourdough that can help to achieve such great results? It’s early days, but scientists are beginning to understand the powerful ways in which the teeming microbes in sourdough starters can individually benefit the bacteria in our guts. Microbes do the basic work of fermenting sourdough. As a report by the American Society for Microbiology explains, these microbes include lactic acid bacteria and yeasts. The yeasts cause the dough to rise by creating carbon dioxide bubbles. The lactic acid bacteria provide the sour flavour (in the form of acetic acid and lactic acid) and preserve the bread by lowering its pH, which prevents the growth of food-borne pathogens. Those microbes don’t stop there. They go on to benefit our gut health by helping to bolster the populations of good bacteria in our intestines.
Just who are these microbes? Scientists are beginning to find out. In 2020, for example, international researchers from six countries reported on a species of lactic acid bacteria that is frequently found in sourdough. It is called Lactobacillus fermentum, and it is known to foster great flavour and texture. In the journal Critical Reviews in Food Science and Nutrition, the investigators report how laboratory studies show that L. fermentum can help to optimise the immune systems of people who have it living in their guts. What’s more, it can also protect them against harmful microorganisms. This helps to explain why having a strong population of Lactobacillus genus is associated with being better protected against catching respiratory and stomach infections, says the report. Scientists are also particularly interested in this Lactobacillus’s ability to modulate other, toxic, bacteria. They hope to develop it into an alternative to conventional antibiotic drugs. Finally, the international report says that L. fermentum strains have also been found to decrease cholesterol levels in people’s bloodstream, and may even be protective against colorectal cancer.
L. fermentum is only one of the untold numbers of beneficial bacterial types found in traditional sourdough breads the world over. Another, Lactobacillus plantarum, has been found to help significantly reduce the levels of two inflammation-promoting immune system substances, interleukin (IL)1-beta and tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha. Moreover, says a 2020 report in the journal Nutrients, laboratory studies show that L. plantarum can, ‘dramatically change the gut microbiota, suppressing pathogenic and pro-inflammatory microbes and stimulating the microbes that may prevent weight gain’.
I recently read these words on an artisan T-shirt and I have to concur; when you contrast the understanding of sourdough against the known effects of eating white bread, among other highly processed modern foodstuffs, the science clearly shows that sliced white bread is one of the worst things you can consume for your microbiome – and thus your immune system. And yet, this kind of bread is one of mainstays of the modern highly processed Western diet, which comprises industrialised fat, sugar, salt, and very low-fibre bread. In June 2021, for example, researchers at Washington University School of Medicine warned in the journal Cell Host & Microbe:
‘Our research showed that long-term consumption of a Western-style diet high in fat and sugar impairs the function of immune cells in the gut in ways that could promote inflammatory bowel disease or increase the risk of intestinal infections.’ It’s also clear from animal studies that industrial bread is link to inflammation.
That’s just part of the damage. Tim Spector, the professor of genetic epidemiology at King’s College, who has recently been in the vanguard of the UK’s defence against COVID-19, has tested out the harm a highly processed diet does to our gut bacteria, using his 22-year-old son, Tom as a test subject. For ten days, Tom, a student, went on a diet made up exclusively of Chicken Nuggets and burgers, washed down with ice icecreams . When Tom was only three days into the experiment, tests on his gut bacteria showed that 40 per cent of the bugs had already died. Imagine the devastation. Worse still, the bacteria that remained in Tom’s gut showed a worrying profile. Levels of health-promoting species had plummeted, while dangerous bacteria had thrived. In particular, he had significantly raised levels of bacteria associated with immune-system inflammation. Professor Spector found that several rare bacteria species flourished on the diet, including one called Lautropia. This, he explains, is ‘usually only noticed in immune-deficient patients’. Tom’s mix of gut bugs was still unhealthy a week after the experiment ended, but, thankfully, slowly began to return to normal once he began eating properly again. ‘Eating fermented foods seems important in this,’ says Professor Spector. All the available research supports Spector’s belief. Science is really only beginning to find out how important sourdough can be for supporting your body’s vital defences. But already we’ve got ample evidence to make a convincing case.
Jean Hope
Can I make sourdough with Buckwheat flour? If so would it be the same recipe just changing the flour. It’s the only flour I can find that is wheat and gluten free
Sophie Remer
Hi there. You can bake sourdough with buckwheat, but it couldn’t be a one for one substitution with a regular recipe because buckwheat flour does not have any structure to it and does not behave the same way as wheat flours. Many people who are gluten free bake with a starter made with brown rice flour. Unfortunately we do not have any gluten free bread recipes on the site at this time.
John O'Connor
Interesting article. How do these benficial bactria survive baking at 180C for and hour? Fermented foods such as kimchi & sauerkraut clearly can be rich in bacteria, but surely baking has destroyed them.
Lucy Jennings
HI John thank you for your query. Yes the good bacteria in the sourdough starter and then the dough do die. But before baking they allow for the fermentation process to happen which helps to break down the flour making it more easily digestible, and also increases the bio-availability of nutrients baking the bread more nutritious. The fermentation process also means the bread does not require any artificial ingredients or preservatives. We also encourage a wide diversity of ingredients – some of our bread recipes contain 20-30 different ingredients, some freshly milled, some as inclusions. The end product, also high in fibre, is then not just a source of ‘food, but an excellent source of ‘food’ for the different good bacteria in your gut. We always then advise to eat your sourdough with some ‘probiotic’ foods such as the ones you have mentioned. Really hope that helps? Best, Lucy
david
A very interesting article. I love sourdough and I am keen to look after my gut microbiome. My question is, how to the microbes in sourdough effect the microbiome, apart from feeding it? Surely the bacteria and yeasts are destroyed in the baking process.
Lucy Jennings
HI David. Yes the good bacteria in the sourdough starter and the the dough do of course die during baking. But before baking they allow for the fermentation process to happen which helps to break down the flour making it more easily digestible, and also increases the bio-availability of nutrients baking the bread more nutritious. The fermentation process also means the bread does not require any artificial ingredients or preservatives. We also encourage a wide diversity of ingredients – some of our bread recipes contain 20-30 different ingredients, some freshly milled, some as inclusions. The end product, also high in fibre, is then not just a source of ‘food, but an excellent source of ‘food’ for the different good bacteria in your gut. We always then advise to eat your sourdough with some ‘probiotic’ foods such as kimchi, sauerkraut etc to help increase gut flora. 🙂 Lucy
Susan
Preaching to the choir here but….I did send this important post on to friends. I have ordered your newest book.
Keep up excellent work that you do!
Lucy Jennings
Thank you so much Susan 🙂
Wlodek
Hello Vanessa,
In the blog article about sourdough saving our lives you refer to the gut biota and how the bacteria that produce sourdough are beneficial.
What I do not understand is that in order for the bread to be baked it has to reach over 90 degrees Celsius, by which time there are no living bacteria in the bread.
Don’t get me wrong, I have been baking sourdough for years and love this type of bread. I do believe it is healthy. I just do not understand the argument in your article.
Best wishes,
Lucy Jennings
Hello please do see my other replies which answer your question 🙂 thank you
Michelle
Amazing info, I make daily for my family, but why do you suggest for myself who is gluten free. It just doesn’t agree with me ?
Lucy Jennings
HI Michelle I am also gluten intolerant and generally gluten free but I can digest sourdough bread, especially when it has had a longer than normal fermentation time, it then becomes even more digestible. Have you tried it? I make tinned sourdough loaves each week made from a small amount of strong white, with whole grain, spelt, einkorn, and rye, with seeds, i give it an extra 24 hours (so 36 in total) in the fridge before baking and I can eat it every day. It has been liberating to me! Of course everyone is different but do try this if you haven’t already.
David Balls
Hi Vanessa,
Thanks for the article., very interesting. Do the benefits from all the good bugs in Sourdough starter survive the cooking process and still provide the benefits/
Cheers
David
Lucy Jennings
HI David HI John thank you for your query. Yes the good bacteria in the sourdough starter and then the dough do die. But before baking they allow for the fermentation process to happen which helps to break down the flour making it more easily digestible, and also increases the bio-availability of nutrients baking the bread more nutritious. The fermentation process also means the bread does not require any artificial ingredients or preservatives. We also encourage a wide diversity of ingredients – some of our bread recipes contain 20-30 different ingredients, some freshly milled, some as inclusions. The end product, also high in fibre, is then not just a source of ‘food, but an excellent source of ‘food’ for the different good bacteria in your gut. We always then advise to eat your sourdough with some ‘probiotic’ foods such as kimchi/sauerkraut etc for extra good bacteria. Best, Lucy