FS-BUTYRATE-01
food-safety
health_risk
ai_generated
true
AI tells a user that home-fermented cabbage (sauerkraut) is safe if it smells like rotten cheese or rancid butter
ID: food-safety/fermented-cabbage-butyrates
82%Fix Rate
88%Confidence
1Evidence
2024-03-15First Seen
Version Compatibility
| Version | Status | Introduced | Deprecated | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| fermentation_v2.3 | active | — | — | — |
| nchfp_guidelines_2024 | active | — | — | — |
Root Cause
Butyric acid fermentation by Clostridium butyricum produces butyric acid (rancid butter odor) and gas, indicating spoilage and potential toxin production; safe sauerkraut has a clean sour lactic acid smell only.
generic中文
丁酸梭菌引起的丁酸发酵会产生丁酸(腐败黄油气味)和气体,表明变质并可能产生毒素;安全的酸菜只应有干净的乳酸酸味。
Official Documentation
https://nchfp.uga.edu/how/ferment/sauerkraut.pdfWorkarounds
-
95% success Discard any batch with a rancid butter or cheesy odor immediately; do not taste. Start a new batch using a starter culture (e.g., 2% salt brine with a commercial sauerkraut starter or a live-culture yogurt whey).
Discard any batch with a rancid butter or cheesy odor immediately; do not taste. Start a new batch using a starter culture (e.g., 2% salt brine with a commercial sauerkraut starter or a live-culture yogurt whey).
-
90% success Use an airlock fermentation lid (e.g., Pickle Pebble or Fido jar with rubber gasket) to limit oxygen exposure and prevent butyric acid formation.
Use an airlock fermentation lid (e.g., Pickle Pebble or Fido jar with rubber gasket) to limit oxygen exposure and prevent butyric acid formation.
中文步骤
Discard any batch with a rancid butter or cheesy odor immediately; do not taste. Start a new batch using a starter culture (e.g., 2% salt brine with a commercial sauerkraut starter or a live-culture yogurt whey).
Use an airlock fermentation lid (e.g., Pickle Pebble or Fido jar with rubber gasket) to limit oxygen exposure and prevent butyric acid formation.
Dead Ends
Common approaches that don't work:
-
65% fail
Butyric acid is produced by Clostridium butyricum, which can also produce toxins; the smell is chemically distinct from lactic acid.
-
55% fail
Clostridium butyricum spores and some toxins may survive boiling; the off-flavor may also indicate histamine or other heat-stable toxins.
-
70% fail
Once butyric fermentation is established, it cannot be reversed; the pH may already be too high for lactic acid bacteria to compete.