L. Reuteri
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@CrumblingCookie I've been making L. Reuteri yogurt without the inulin or any other added prebiotic and it comes out great. I also make some batches with raw milk and it tastes just the same as the batches where I heat the milk. I'm not sure why people heat the milk to 180 F for 30 minutes. Bringing it up to 165 F for 15 seconds should be good enough to kill competing bacteria, 180 F for 10 denatures the protein and makes it set thicker, though my raw milk gets thick enough. I use goats milk.
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@Sippy
Thanks for your feedback sippy!
So both the inulin and the use of half-and-half are both non-essential to culturing reuteri, but mainly part of Dr. William Davis' complementary ideology / therapeutic approach of high-fat diets and prebiotics?
I've finished two batches now. The latest one I ran at a slightly lower temperature of about 36°C/97°F and it tastes sweeter (from the added dextrose) than the previous batch which I ran at about 38°C/100°F. So it could be that the slightly lower temp led to less duplications.
One the other hand I wasn't being very accurate in measuring equal relative amounts of dextrose to both batches. I reckon 12grs of dextrose per liter/quart or even half of that are well enough. That will be my benchmark for the next batch.
Maybe I'll add half a gram of l-glutamine if that may help the reuteri to survive and duplicate even when not competing with other bacteria.After cooling down in the fridge, it scoops like thick icecream.
If I added vanilla extract before fermentation I could really confuse myself and others for thinking it's vanilla ice cream, yet not frozen (mind-boggling).
I used non-homogenized cream and milk, so there's an extra firm and almost crust-like layer on top of the content. I imagine that if the fat content were to be equally distributed by using homogenized milk and cream it would make the yoghurt set more evenly.Good info on the goats milk! In my prior experimentations with sheeps milk I've also noticed that it reliably sets with cultures which yield inconsistent, mostly liquid results with cows milk.
Have you noticed any benefits already? -
D DavidPS referenced this topic on
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I've made my first secondary batch, using two table spoons of liquid whey /l from the BioGaia tablets batch:
(cow milk full fat, this time without cream. Again no inuline or starch. 12grs dextrose/l)
No whey separated at all.
The whole product is almost like a watery emulsion. Like almost liquid jello.
There's no particular smell. No particular taste. Very neutral. Totally different from my primary BioGaia tablet batches with their strong separation and tangy, cheesy flavor.
It made me wonder if there was any L.reuteri in the whey I had used.
Is this normal?The pH is ≤4.0. So there's clearly been production of lactic acid.
Maybe I'll add half a gram of l-glutamine if that may help the reuteri to survive and duplicate even when not competing with other bacteria.
Accidentally, whilst looking for GABA-producing microbacteria (L. reuteri does not contribute, the small amount it produces merely helps its acid resistance. But it feeds of glutamine for that, much more than off glutamate),
The pH of the jars in which I had added 1g/l L-Glutamin is also ≤4.0.
Tastewise the L-Glut supplemented yoghurt is distinctly more sour! -
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Anybody tried to make the L. Reuter "stick" as a permanent colony instead of taking it as a sort of pseudo supplement?
Since it's constantly producing Reuterin, an antibiotic it itself is immune to, it should in effect permanently reduce the amount of bacteria in the gut, leading to increased gut health and way more robust digestion. In fact I think many of the observed effects from L. Reuteri can simply be explained by the reduced bacterial load. Like a guard dog (beneficial bacterium) protecting you from wolves (hostile bacteria).
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any idea how to prevent die off sickness i get every time i take it.
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@pittybitty only problem is that it lacks certain features like biofilm production and immune reaction avoidance other bacteria tag it (mark it) causing our immune response which attacks what's left of the supplementation
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Ooh... so the other bacteria try to kill the "guard dog" and that's why it's never permanent, that's a very interesting problem to solve.
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@lobotomize-me Have you tried lowering the dose and building up?
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@rpc I was doing 1 cap of 1b cfu back then the only way to lower the dose was to open the cap which is built to survive stomach acid.(on that note opening it will cause it to be less resistant
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@lobotomize-me - This video might help you understand the adverse reactions.
Have you had adverse effects from L reuteri or SIBO Yogurt?
Youtube Video -
Where do you guys buy the L.Reuteri?
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@heyman - At the time this thread was started it was believed that only the patented species of reuteri worked. It has subsequently been determined that there is no need to use the patented species. Reuteri can be found online in most of the usual places the sell other probiotics.
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Thanks for your answer, I bought the biogaia Osfortis since it was the cheapest (its from where I live). But buying the powder seems to be the best thing.
https://bulkprobiotics.com/products/lactobacillus-reuteri-probiotic-powder?variant=31588010786914
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Note that different strains have different attributes and effects. They might all be suitable, but I wouldn't buy a product that doesn't mention which strain it is.
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@DavidPS lovely stuff