Toward a Minor Tech:MagdaTC 500

From creative crowd wiki
Revision as of 17:02, 19 January 2023 by Magda (talk | contribs) (added text)
Jump to navigation Jump to search


Fermenting Data or what does it mean for data to have a life?

Jar is a broad-mouthed container, usually cylindrical and made of glass or earthenware, says the dictionary. I look at my jars of different shapes and sizes, made of glass. I use bigger ones to start the process of fermentation and smaller jars for storage of ferments, until I open them to eat.

My fermenting jars contain fermenting plant matter, usually variety of cabbages but also other vegetables and plants such as carrots, garlic, variety of onions, daikon radish, and ramson leaves. There are also various spices, seeds and roots: ginger, turmeric, fennel seeds, gochugaru powder. Salt and water are always present. I add salt. Water comes from the vegetables in krauts. I take it from a tap, boil it and wait to cool before adding to the jar to submerge the veg.

These fermenting jars are locations. Sites of life-sustaining chemical reactions that generate energy. You can watch how cabbages, while hosting increasing amount of microbes, become part of a fermentation progresses. Salt insures that this is a non-hostile environment for good bacteria to proliferate. We can’t see these microscopic organisms with a naked eye, but we know they are there. In millions. I can smell the change they provoke. Soon enough it is possible to taste it too. Strong, sour, with familiar odour hitting my nostrils briefly as I opening the jar to release the gas. Later, I can smell its Once eaten, their work moves to my gut supporting my digestion, boosting bioavailability of nutrients, and my body’s healthy inflammatory response.

What could be the good work that can be done while living the good life supported by microbes?

Fermentation defines a metabolic process where under specific conditions (in this case no oxygen) microbes create energy, alcohol and lactic acid from sugar and starch. Some say that in its most basic fermentation is a controlled decay. Lyn Margulis, a scientist and a researcher of microbial forms, defined fermentation as a microbial invention, an unprecedented feat that humanity has not matched. Together with photosynthesis, oxygen breathing and removal of nitrogen from the air, fermentation is a miniature chemical system that has been part of the making of this planet.

Plant, minerals, microbes and I. We create patterns, in time, in bodies, in places. We inhabit each other while also being part of other configurations. At home, at work or school, on the street, in a jar, in the garden, in the city, on social media platforms. What are the patterns of good life there? What is the good work that is done there? Who does it and under what conditions? And for whom?

See: https://fermentingdata.net/