19

Mar 2025

Invited Seminar

Biotechnology & bread making: developing better and healthier bread for the 21st century

Presenter
Dr. Vimac Nolla-Ardevol
Date
19 Mar, 2025
Time
01:00 PM – 02:30 PM

Host: Professor Kyle Lauersen

Abstract:
Bread is one of most ancient man-made foods and is considered as one of the major worldwide staple foods. Throughout history, bread making has evolved from the traditional hand mixing of water and flour to today’s modern industrialized process in which several technical aids are used to produce breads in a more fast and efficient way. In recent years however, consumers are more and more opting for healthier products with less additives. It is in this context that biotechnology can contribute to make bread healthier again by replacing additives with new enzymes and new metabolites that can bring back the traditional taste of breads while maintaining quality and scalable production. In this presentation, I will guide you through the production of enzymes for industrial bread making, the development of artisanal tailor-made sourdough solutions, and even how we plan to produce bread on Mars.

Bio:
Dr. Nolla-Ardevol graduated in Biotechnology and MSc in Environmental Microbiology in Barcelona (Spain). In 2011, he was awarded a doctorate scholarship from the Cluster Industrial Biotechnology (CLIB-GC) at Bielefeld University (Germany) to pursue a PhD in anaerobic digestion of microalgae at extreme conditions in the group of Prof. Marc Strous and Prof. Olaf Kruse. From 2015 to 2018 he was a Postdoctoral researcher at the Soil and Water Management in the group of Prof. Dirk Springael in KUL (Belgium) where his research focused on the ‘omics characterization of bacterial communities for space exploration under the umbrella of the MELiSSA project from the European Space Agency. In 2018 he left academia to join Puratos, a Belgian B2B ingredients company in the field of bakery, patisserie and chocolate, where he joined the sourdough fermentation team as R&D manager in metabolomics. In this role, he uses a combination of omics and classical microbiology techniques to explore and identify new bacterial strains, new enzymes and new metabolites to create healthier breads and new functional sourdoughs.

Event Quick Information

Date
19 Mar, 2025
Time
01:00 PM - 02:30 PM
Venue
Zoom