1st Edition

Fermentation Biotechnology for Functional Foods

Edited By Kalidas Shetty, Lena Gálvez Ranilla Copyright 2025
496 Pages 101 B/W Illustrations
by CRC Press

496 Pages 101 B/W Illustrations
by CRC Press

Fermentation-based processing advanced with global food systems as humanity started to organize the domestication of agriculture from plant and animal sources. These advances emerged across regions of the world from river valley civilizations in Asia (Mesopotamia, India and China) and Africa (Egypt) to Meso-American civilizations. As food crops and animal foods emerged from domestication to... Read more

Chapter 1. Introduction 

Kalidas Shetty and Lena Gálvez Ranilla  
  
Chapter 2. Diversity of Traditional Fermented Foods in Algeria and their Microbial Ecosystems  

Zahia Benmouna and Houari Benamar  

  

Chapter 3. Fermented Sweet Potato Products: Production, Health Benefits and Utilization  

Joy Ehiwuogu-Onyibe and Kolawole Banwo  

  

Chapter 4. Moroccan Fermented Foods and their Potential Health Benefits 

Tarik Lakhlifi, Samia El Oirdi, and Abdelhaq Belhaj  

  

Chapter 5. Tempeh: Indonesia’s Indigenous Health-Promoting, Sustainable, and Affordable Fermented Food 

Amadeus Driando Ahnan-Winarno, Lorraine Cordeiro, Wida Winarno, Florentinus Gregorius Winarno, and Hang Xiao  

  

Chapter 6. Biotechnology for Functional Foods with Focus on Traditional Fermented Foods and Beverages of Iran 

N. Davati and S. Hesami  

  

Chapter 7. TERASI: Biotechnology of The Indigenous Fishery Fermented Products of Indonesia 

Widya Agustinah, Saraswati, and Nuri Andarwulan  

  

Chapter 8. Fermentation Biotechnology and Bioactive Compounds of Douchi, a Chinese Traditional Salt-Fermented Soybean Product 

Siyu Yao, Anqianyi Tu, Minghuang Chen, Chenxin Zhou, Siyong You, Zhenhui Pan, Yue Zhang, Caili Fu, and Jie Xu  

  

Chapter 9. Soybean Based Fermented Foods of Northeast India: Microbiology, Nutritional value and Health benefits 

Kirti Rai and Kriti Ghatani  

  

Chapter 10. Fermentation Biotechnology of Food and Beverage Products in Malaysia 

Yu-Hsuan How, Nor Khaizura Mahmud Ab Rashid, Seng-Joe Lim, Lee-Sin Chang, and Liew-Phing Pui  

  

Chapter 11. Traditional Fermented Foods of North East India: Microbial Diversity and Functionality 

Shankar Prasad Sha and Kriti Ghatani  

  

Chapter 12. Lactic Acid Bacteria and Biotechnology of Cereal and Legume-based Fermented Foods from India 

Pooja Singh, Ram Kulkarni, Kalidas Shetty, and Vinay Rale  

  

Chapter 13. Microbial Diversity for Novel Fermented Foods and Perspectives from Pakistan 

Uroosa Ejaz and Muhammad Sohail  

  

Chapter 14. Recent Advances and Future Perspectives in the Development of Healthier Yu-lu, a Chinese Salt-Fermented Fish Sauce 

Chenxin Zhou, Wenshuang Xue, Minghuang Chen, Jing Zhou, Ying Li, Huijie Liu, and Ruichang Gao  

  

Chapter 15. Tea Plantation and Processing to Traditional Products with Potential Health Benefits in Laos PDR 

Somsay Phovisay, Kridsada Unban, Kalidas Shetty, Saisamorn Lumyong, and Chartchai Khanongnuch  

  

Chapter 16. Korea Indigenous Fermented Soy Products 

Dae Young Kwon, Kim Soon-Hee, Kyung Rhan Chung, Dai-Ja Jang, Su-Jin Jung, and Kalidas Shetty  

  

Chapter 17. Worldwide Fermented Non-Meat Sausages and Their Importance for Health  

Inês Azevedo, Joana Barbosa, Helena Albano, and Paula Teixeira  

  

Chapter 18. Traditional Fermented Meat Products from Portugal 

Luís Soares, Joana Gomes, Teresa Bento de Carvalho, Mónica Oliveira, Lourenço Pinto de Rezende, Irene Martín, Joana Bastos Barbosa, and Paula Teixeira  

  

Chapter 19. Innovative Potential of Traditional Greek Lactic Acid Fermented Vegetables for Functional Foods 

Spiros Paramithiotis  

  

Chapter 20. Traditional Turkish Fermented Beverages and their Health Benefits 

Hasan Tanguler and Hande Baltacioglu  

  

Chapter 21. Traditional Turkish Fermented Foods and Their Health Benefits 

Hande Baltacioglu and Hasan Tanguler  

  

Chapter 22. Fermented Foods from Chile and Health Benefits 

M. Carolina Henríquez  

  

Chapter 23. Biotechnological Advances in Diverse Brazilian Fruit Fermentation 

Carolina Saori Ishii Mauro, Maria Thereza Carlos Fernandes, Paulo Terumitsu Saito, Fernanda Silva Farinazzo, Deepak Kumar Verma, and Sandra Garcia  

 

Chapter 24. Food Fermentation in Brazil: Historical Aspects, Production Processes and Health-Relevant Importance 

Francieli Begnini Siepmann, Leidiane Andreia Acordi Menezes, and Cristina Maria Zanette  

  

Chapter 25. Traditional Andean Potato Based Fermented Foods and Their Potential for Health 

Lena Gálvez Ranilla  

  

Chapter 26. Cacao Fermentation Process in Mexico and Targeting Functional Food Products 

María J. Paris, Leonor Lastra-Vargas, Enrique Palou, Emma Mani-López, and Aurelio López-Malo  

  

Chapter 27. Traditional Fermented Foods of Mexico and Potential Functional Benefits 

Emma Mani-López and Aurelio López-Malo  

Biography

Dr. Kalidas Shetty is Professor of Plant Sciences at North Dakota State University, Fargo, USA. Dr. Shetty's research interests focus on the critical role of cellular and metabolic basis of oxygen biology for advancing new innovations in Life Sciences and especially Agricultural and Food Innovations to advance global food security and health in a sustainable environment. This has relevance to advance scientific, educational and policy strategies to develop climate resilient health-targeted food security solutions including malnutrition and hunger challenges. He has published over 260 manuscripts in peer-reviewed journals and over 50 as invited reviews and in conference proceedings with H-Index of 82 on Google Scholar. In 2004, he was selected by the US State Department as the inaugural Jefferson Science Fellow to advise on scientific issues as it relates to International Diplomacy and International Development. Dr. Shetty has widely traveled presenting lectures and seminars in the areas of Food Biology, Climate Resilient Healthy Food Systems for Food Security & Health, and Food Safety in over 50 countries in Asia, Europe, Africa, and the Americas. His current passion is to advance research, education capacity building and policy on “sustainable and ecological basis for climate resilient healthy food systems and food diversity to drive global food security. This vision is based on crops and food diversity, indigenous wisdom, traditional fermentations, and new technology innovations in ethnic and indigenous food systems integrating understanding of comparative cellular biochemistry of plant and animal systems and their interactions with microbial systems in diverse ecologies.

Dr. Lena Gálvez Ranilla is a Professor of Universidad Catolica de Santa Maria, Arequipa, Peru. Dr Galvez has a PhD in Food Science by the University of Sao Paulo, (Brazil) with a sandwich doctoral research at the University of Massachusetts (Department of Food Science, USA). Currently, she leads the Laboratory of Research in Food Science at Universidad Catolica de Santa María (Peru). She received the prize of L'Oréal-UNESCO-National Council for Science and Technology (Peru)-National Academy of Sciences (Peru) for Women in Science. Dr. Galvez research has been focused on the study of the Latin-American food biodiversity as a potential source of bioactive compounds with health-relevant functional properties. She has led research projects funded by Peruvian and International institutions aimed at valorizing crop diversity with focus on native grains. Currently, Dr. Galvez group is aimed at applying omic-based technologies for the characterization and value addition of Peruvian crop diversity from Andean food systems, and with relevance for health and food security.