Yes, you can make alcohol from Vegemite, but ...
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Vegemite has been in the news of late for all the wrong reasons. It all started when Minister for Indigenous Affairs Nigel Scullion said he'd heard the yeast extract was being used in dry communities to brew alcohol.
There is a precedent for implicating Vegemite in alcohol production in marginalised communities. In 2007, the breakfast spread came under fire in Victorian prisons as part of the sly-grog supply chain. In 2013 both Vegemite and Ribena were linked to homebrew systems in Indigenous communities with alcohol management plans in place.
In the United Kingdom in 2009, when assaults by prisoners increased reportedly due to hooch, access to fruit (including fresh apples and pears, tinned fruit, fruit juices and syrups) was prohibited or restricted.
The short answer is "yes," sort of. But then again, you can make alcohol from just about any food by adding the right type of yeast at the right time.
Fermentation is the process of converting sugars to acids, gases or alcohol using a variety of microbial organisms, including yeast and bacteria. Many nonalcoholic foods use fermentation in the production process, including bread, chocolate and pickled foods (for example, sauerkraut or kimchi).
Naturally occurring alcohol predates human history, and has been discovered by animals on a number of occasions. The earliest fermented alcoholic beverage has been reported from what is now China, and dated around 7000BC.
Modern brewing techniques combine knowledge from the natural world and early human history with recent technological advances in food safety and quality.
Baker's yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, is a fungus that lives naturally on every continent. This single celled organism may have already smuggled itself to Antarctica and into space, stowing away on its usual home: the surface of fruit.
The fungus is so ubiquitous and hardy, it can be found almost anywhere.
It's ironic that one of the key byproducts of beer fermentation is yeast. Much of this yeast goes to animal feed or other food products, but some cultures have developed the habit of further processing this thick yeasty paste.
Salt is added and the mixture is heated, which causes the yeast cells to burst open. Any remaining cellular material is removed manually by filtration to produce the deliciously smooth local delicacy we call Vegemite.
The salt and heat kill pretty much everything - almost certainly including yeast - so that makes it no good as a source of yeast for brewing. The yeast would have to be added back in just as you would with any food to make a fermented product (like alcohol, or bread). The same is true for any food: all you need is a sugar source and the right microorganism to ferment food.
But we are scientists who use yeast in our research, so why take it for granted that there's no live yeast in Vegemite when we can run an experiment and see if it's true?
So we bought fresh, unopened jars of Vegemite, and tried to grow anything at all from the contents. Nothing grew. You can see for yourself in the photos below.
Should Vegemite be banned in Indigenous communities?
The World Health Organization reported a quarter of alcohol consumed worldwide in 2010 was unrecorded (homebrew).
The Global Status Report on Alcohol and Health shows Australia's unrecorded alcohol consumption increased from an average of 0.1 litres per person in 2003-2005 to 1.8 litres per person from 2008-2010. The amount of recorded alcohol remained the same during both periods.
Even though there is no active yeast in Vegemite, it can still be used as a substrate for other microorganisms that could ferment the sugars and, ultimately, produce alcohol. That's true of any sugar-containing food, including fruit and fruit juices.
Science tells us alcohol can be made from just about any food that contains sugar, in the presence of the right naturally occurring microorganisms. That doesn't mean fresh fruits, or everyone's favourite breakfast spread, should be prohibited.
Limiting access to fresh fruits, as the UK has done, is counter intuitive from a public health perspective. This would be especially damaging for Indigenous Australians, who have diabetes at three times the rate of non-Indigenous Australians.
Evidence-based, community-led, practical solutions should prevail to address complex challenges. Simply blaming a breakfast spread is not the solution.