@thee_divinelez: I need to feel something 🥵❤️‍🔥 #fyp

Divine Lez
Divine Lez
Open In TikTok:
Region: US
Wednesday 27 August 2025 02:14:00 GMT
119
4
0
0

Music

Download

Comments

There are no more comments for this video.
To see more videos from user @thee_divinelez, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

I find it incredible that baker’s yeast can be desiccated and still be alive for years! . To make active dry yeast, cultures of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae are dried, and the dry yeast cells get packed together in tiny pellets. As you can see in the video, each of these tiny pellets contains incredible amounts of Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells. These cells are alive but since they have been desiccated, they enter into a state of ‘suspended animation’ that can last years. In fact, the dry yeast I used in this video was purchased at least 5 years ago!  . To revive the yeast cells I used sugar water. The water will hydrate the yeast and the sugar will provide a food source for the yeast cells to initiate fermentation. Fermentation is the reason why yeast is so appreciated. When yeast cells ferment sugars, they will generate the ATP energy that they need for the cell to function, and as byproducts of fermentation they will generate carbon dioxide gas and alcohol. . Apparently, this type of granulated active dry yeast that can last for so long without refrigeration was developed by scientists during World War II for the United States armed forces so that the US field infantrymen could bake fresh bread in their camps.  . By the way, did you see some of the yeast cells budding to produce new yeast cells? How many budding yeast cells did you see in the video? Let me know in the comments!  . Biology is amazing! . For this video I used an Olympus CX31 microscope at 40x, 100x, 200x, 400x, and 600X magnification.  #microscopy #microscope #microscopio #biology #biologia #fungi #yeast #saccharomyces #bakersyeast #levadura #saccharomycescerevisiae #biology #biologia #drbioforever
I find it incredible that baker’s yeast can be desiccated and still be alive for years! . To make active dry yeast, cultures of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae are dried, and the dry yeast cells get packed together in tiny pellets. As you can see in the video, each of these tiny pellets contains incredible amounts of Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells. These cells are alive but since they have been desiccated, they enter into a state of ‘suspended animation’ that can last years. In fact, the dry yeast I used in this video was purchased at least 5 years ago! . To revive the yeast cells I used sugar water. The water will hydrate the yeast and the sugar will provide a food source for the yeast cells to initiate fermentation. Fermentation is the reason why yeast is so appreciated. When yeast cells ferment sugars, they will generate the ATP energy that they need for the cell to function, and as byproducts of fermentation they will generate carbon dioxide gas and alcohol. . Apparently, this type of granulated active dry yeast that can last for so long without refrigeration was developed by scientists during World War II for the United States armed forces so that the US field infantrymen could bake fresh bread in their camps. . By the way, did you see some of the yeast cells budding to produce new yeast cells? How many budding yeast cells did you see in the video? Let me know in the comments! . Biology is amazing! . For this video I used an Olympus CX31 microscope at 40x, 100x, 200x, 400x, and 600X magnification. #microscopy #microscope #microscopio #biology #biologia #fungi #yeast #saccharomyces #bakersyeast #levadura #saccharomycescerevisiae #biology #biologia #drbioforever

About