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Grimgrains

[mirror] Plant-based cooking website <https://grimgrains.com/>
commit: a0be7c5af30a2ef9617309a7e2b3ba3401a085c0
parent bcbd2ed3773301ceca28c13fee6547d7a38abd98
Author: rekkabell <rekkabell@gmail.com>
Date:   Thu, 21 Oct 2021 18:06:21 -0700

*

Diffstat:

Msite/lactofermentation.html2+-
Msrc/inc/lactofermentation.htm2+-
2 files changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)

diff --git a/site/lactofermentation.html b/site/lactofermentation.html @@ -64,7 +64,7 @@ <p>Non-chlorinated water is ideal, because chlorine is antiseptic. Filter the water, or let it rest on the counter for a few hours to permit the chlorine to evaporate. Using chlorinated water doesn't mean the ferment will fail, but it can slow the process.</p> -<p>I've had luck with using water straight from our tank, but if you want to guarantee results it may be best to leave the water to stand a while first. Also, check that your water supply doesn't contain chloromines, a stable form of chlorine that doesn't evaporate at ambient temperature, and that can't be boiled out. It's possible to filter out chloromines with a good filter (berkey filters do this).</p> +<p>I've had luck with using water straight from our tank, but if you want to guarantee results it may be best to leave the water to stand a while first. Also, check that your water supply doesn't contain chloromines, a stable form of chlorine (mix of ammonia and chlorine) that doesn't evaporate at ambient temperature, and that can't be boiled out. It's possible to filter out chloromines with a good filter (berkey filters do this).</p> <p>Chlorinated water won't necessarily stop fermentation from happening, but it can make it sluggish.</p> diff --git a/src/inc/lactofermentation.htm b/src/inc/lactofermentation.htm @@ -64,7 +64,7 @@ <p>Non-chlorinated water is ideal, because chlorine is antiseptic. Filter the water, or let it rest on the counter for a few hours to permit the chlorine to evaporate. Using chlorinated water doesn't mean the ferment will fail, but it can slow the process.</p> -<p>I've had luck with using water straight from our tank, but if you want to guarantee results it may be best to leave the water to stand a while first. Also, check that your water supply doesn't contain chloromines, a stable form of chlorine that doesn't evaporate at ambient temperature, and that can't be boiled out. It's possible to filter out chloromines with a good filter (berkey filters do this).</p> +<p>I've had luck with using water straight from our tank, but if you want to guarantee results it may be best to leave the water to stand a while first. Also, check that your water supply doesn't contain chloromines, a stable form of chlorine (mix of ammonia and chlorine) that doesn't evaporate at ambient temperature, and that can't be boiled out. It's possible to filter out chloromines with a good filter (berkey filters do this).</p> <p>Chlorinated water won't necessarily stop fermentation from happening, but it can make it sluggish.</p>