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Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Wissenschaftlicher Name: Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Brauerei-, Bäckerei- und Weinhefe — der domestizierteste Mikroorganismus der Menschheitsgeschichte, der Zucker in Ethanol und CO₂ umwandelt

Mitglieder 25
Typ Einzelne Art
Bedeutung Grundlegend
Übersetzungshinweis

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Über diese Kultur

Saccharomyces cerevisiae is the most consequential single microorganism in human food and drink history. Bread leavening, beer brewing, wine fermentation, sake production, cider fermentation, kombucha (one component of the SCOBY) — every one depends on S. cerevisiae or its close relatives. The name literally translates to 'sugar fungus of beer' (Latin cerevisia), reflecting the species' nineteenth-century isolation from brewing yeast.

The biochemistry that makes S. cerevisiae so useful is glucose → 2 ethanol + 2 CO₂ via the Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas pathway, followed by pyruvate decarboxylation and alcohol dehydrogenase activity. The pathway produces approximately 18 grams of ethanol per 100 grams of fermented sugar, with the CO₂ as a byproduct that either escapes the vessel or remains dissolved as carbonation (bottled beer, champagne, naturally-carbonated cider). The Crabtree effect describes S. cerevisiae's preference for fermentation over respiration even when oxygen is present — when sugar concentration exceeds ~9 g/L, the yeast ferments anyway, producing ethanol that would be otherwise unnecessary in a respiring organism.

Millennia of human selection have produced an enormous diversity of S. cerevisiae strains. Ale yeasts (top-fermenting, 15-25°C optimum), lager yeasts (now classified as S. pastorianus, bottom-fermenting, 8-12°C), sake yeasts (cold-tolerant, 6-15°C, producing the characteristic light sake aromatics), wine yeasts (alcohol-tolerant to 16%+, with regional traditions), baker's yeast (selected for fast CO₂ production), champagne yeasts (selected for cold tolerance and rapid secondary fermentation in bottle), and dozens more. Each strain has been bred or selected for specific fermentation characteristics, but all are functionally S. cerevisiae.

For home fermenters, S. cerevisiae is universally available — dry packets, liquid cultures, sourdough starters, kombucha SCOBYs, and wild fermentation all bring it into substrates that contain it naturally. The species is GRAS-status, non-pathogenic, and present in the human gut as a transient commensal in many individuals. S. cerevisiae is also the model organism for eukaryotic genetics research; the entire genome was sequenced in 1996 (the first eukaryote sequenced) and thousands of papers have been published on its biology.

The relevant distinction for fermenters is the difference between *selected/cultured strains (commercial dry yeast packets, specific brewing yeasts) and wild-fermentation populations (mixed S. cerevisiae + Brettanomyces* + non-Saccharomyces yeasts present in natural environments, on fruit skins, in cellar walls). Wild fermentations are more flavor-complex but less predictable; cultured strains are reliable but flatter in profile.

Mikrobiologische Klassifikation

Domain Eukarya Kingdom Fungi Phylum Ascomycota Class Saccharomycetes Order Saccharomycetales Family Saccharomycetaceae Genus Saccharomyces Species S. cerevisiae. Sister species (also commercially relevant): S. pastorianus (lager), S. bayanus (wine), S. uvarum (cold-tolerant brewing).

Wichtige Stoffwechselmerkmale

Glucose → 2 ethanol + 2 CO₂ via Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas + pyruvate decarboxylation. Crabtree-positive: ferments preferentially even with oxygen present at high sugar concentrations. Produces secondary metabolites including esters (fruity flavors), higher alcohols, and acetic acid in small amounts. Some strains produce killer toxins active against competing yeasts.

Optimale Bedingungen

Temperature: 18-32°C optimal depending on strain (ale yeasts 18-22°C; sake/lager yeasts 8-15°C; baker's 28-32°C). pH: 4.0-6.5 optimal, tolerates 3.0-7.0. Oxygen: facultative anaerobe (ferments preferentially per Crabtree). Alcohol tolerance: 8-16% depending on strain; some champagne yeasts to 18%.

Fermente, die diese Kultur verwenden

Arbeiten mit dieser Kultur

  1. Pitch correct yeast strain for the target ferment — ale yeasts produce different flavors than wine yeasts; using the wrong strain produces unintended results.
  2. Pitch at the target fermentation temperature — pitching hot yeast into a cold wort or vice versa shocks the yeast and produces off-flavors.
  3. Use adequate yeast quantity — a 20-liter beer batch needs 100+ billion cells; underpitching produces stuck or off-flavored fermentation.
  4. Provide some oxygen at pitching — S. cerevisiae needs initial oxygen for sterol synthesis before switching to fermentation; aerating wort before pitching helps yeast health.
  5. Allow secondary aging — most S. cerevisiae-fermented beverages improve over 2-8 weeks of post-primary conditioning.

Häufige Fehler

  1. Pitching at the wrong temperature — high heat kills yeast; cold pitching produces stuck fermentation.
  2. Reusing yeast indefinitely — strains drift, mutate, and accumulate stress damage. Most commercial brewers limit reuse to 5-7 generations.
  3. Confusing S. cerevisiae with other Saccharomyces species — S. pastorianus (lager) and S. bayanus (wine) have different temperature and alcohol tolerance profiles.
  4. Using bread yeast for beer or beer yeast for bread — both work superficially but produce off-flavors; strain selection matters.
  5. Skipping the rehydration step for dry yeast — directly sprinkling on cold liquid shocks the yeast; rehydrate in warm water 10-15 minutes first.

Querverweise