koumiss
From: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
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Date: 2008
koumiss : see fermented milk .
Author not available, KOUMISS.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
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... therapeutic values in the treatment of pollution, radiation, and junk food-induced disorders, cancer and aging. In the Soviet Union, koumiss, a fermented mare's milk, is prescribed in the treatment of tuberculosis. Fermented foods' putative nutritional and therapeutic ...
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Cultured milk, internationally speaking.
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... and carried to the East where new varieties were developed to suit the climate of these regions. Ancient records date Russian koumiss back to 4th century B.C., and Turkish yogurt to 8th century A.D. The fermenting techniques arrived in Japan at the same time ...
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... traveling; sheep stomach salted and dried in the wind; and koumiss and other fermented milk dishes. From the Turkic and Islamic ... mead from the northern forests, rice beer from China, and koumiss, the drink of the Mongols themselves, represented the empire ...
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... honey wine or mead, but its introduction seems to have occurred relatively late (probably Tang). Mare's-milk wine or koumiss was known to the Chinese as early as the Han, but achieved widespread acceptance only with the coming of the Mongols ... identification of the problematic word luo [TEXT NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ...
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... blood-sucking insect was responsible. Despite the trouble, Ewan said: 'Kazakhstan and Russia have been the most interesting countries on our route. We have been treated to koumiss, fermented horses' milk and meat.' CAPTION(S): TRYING TIME: McGregor
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... grave,' he would growl, kicking his warriors awake under their camel-hair blankets. Many would be groggy from drinking too much koumiss the night before the potent drink favoured by these nomads, made from fermented mare's milk. But as they vaulted up easily ...
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New Straits Times; 9/16/2007; Rajen M.; 935 words;
... products is found in the Bible, Quran and the sacred books of Hinduism. Soured milks and cultured dairy products, such as kefir, koumiss, leben and dahi, were often used therapeutically before the existence of micro-organisms were recognised. Elie Metchnikoff ...
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... Nines (b c Royal Applause - Jugendliebe), strikes me as a nice type who should do well. Black Belt Shopper (b f Desert Prince - Koumiss) finished very strongly on her debut when beaten a neck by Polar Force at Newbury, but missed the break when unplaced at Bath ...
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Living it up for dinner. (probiotic bacteria in human diet)(Cover Story)
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... bacteria were recognised, and fermented foods were quite common. Many of these traditional fermented foods, such as leben, koumiss and lassi, are still available today. At the beginning of the 20th century, the Nobel laureate Elie Metchnikoff proposed a ...
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... title of this show). VUG: A cavity in rock, often with a different mineral lining than surrounding rock; from the Cornish. KOUMISS (the alternative spelling is KUMIS): Fermented camel (or mare's) milk; from Central Asian languages. QAIMAQAM (alternative ...
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... grandfather's encampment, and the news that Gerel and I, his English ... flocking from over the horizon. News travels fast on the grasslands ... immense girth offered bowls of koumiss, fermented mare's milk churned ... tired of urban dislocation. News-papers hint at the medieval ... smoke-hole hissed on ...
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