Draft:FERMENTANTS
It represents a linguistic and conceptual evolution of the phrase ‘fermented foods.'
New page
'''FERMENTANTS'''
'''"FERMENTANTS"''' is a neologism introduced by author and researcher Tonia Mavrommati as a term related to fermented foods. It combines ''f'''erment-''''' (referring to metabolic processes driven by microorganisms) with the suffix '''''-ants''''', indicating microbial activity and collective biological systems. The term appears in Mavrommati’s book ''The Holy and the Grail: An Epigenetic Codex'' (2026), where it is associated with fermentation as a biological process involving microbial activity in food systems and food fermentations.
'''Etymology and Meaning of the word''' '''"FERMENTANTS"'''
The term FERMENTANTS replaces the phrase “fermented foods” in some contexts. It is used to describe fermented food systems in relation to microbial activity and ecological interactions.
It is associated with descriptions of:
* microbial agency in fermentation processes, emphasizing microbes as active participants, rather than inert ingredients.
* proliferation and ecological networks of microorganisms; the suffix "-ants" evokes abundance in microbial matter.
* interactions between microbial life, food matrices, and human biology. Dismantling anthropocentric language that separates humans from microbial ecosystems.
It is distinguished from terms such as ''probiotics'' and ''synbiotics'', which are used in nutritional science to describe specific microbial or dietary interventions.
Unlike terms like ''probiotics'' or ''symbiotics'', '''"FERMENTANTS"''' frames fermented matter as a '''''living continuum''''', where microbial life, food matrices, and human biology intersect.
'''Scientific Context'''
While not yet adopted in peer-reviewed literature, the term aligns with emerging microbiome research:
* Studies confirm fermented substrates enhance gut biodiversity (''Sonnenburg et al., Cell, 2016'').
* Fermentation metabolites (e.g., short-chain fatty acids) regulate epigenetic expression (''Krautkramer et al., Nature, 2021'').
* The term has been proposed as a conceptual framework intended to reflect complexity in fermented food systems, in contrast to static terms such as ‘functional foods.'
'''Fermentants are linked to:'''
* '''Epigenetic fluidity''': How fermented nutrition signals gene expression.
* '''Cultural memory''': Fermentation as ancestral technology.
* '''Ecological ethics''': Food systems honoring microbial collaboration. The concept assigns significant importance to microbial ecosystems within human biological and nutritional systems.