Bacillus subtilis var. natto
学名: Bacillus subtilis var. natto (a specifically-selected variant of Bacillus subtilis, the hay bacillus)
纳豆菌 — 选育出可产生聚谷氨酸(粘丝)与纳豆激酶的 Bacillus subtilis 变种,亦参与韩国与中国的豆类发酵
本页正文在 v1 版本中仅以英文提供。界面与元数据已翻译为中文。v2 将进行专业编辑翻译。
关于此菌种
Bacillus subtilis var. natto — informally called natto-kin (納豆菌) — is one of the most unusual organisms in commercial fermentation. It is a selected strain of the common soil bacterium Bacillus subtilis (also called the hay bacillus because it was first isolated from hay infusions), bred specifically for natto production through centuries of Japanese tradition. The bacterium is one of the few non-LAB, non-yeast, non-mold organisms central to a major food category.
The defining metabolic feature is *polyglutamic acid (γ-PGA) production. B. subtilis var. natto secretes large quantities of this glutamate polymer when grown on cooked soybeans, producing the characteristic stringy mucilage that defines natto. When natto is stirred vigorously with chopsticks or a spoon — the traditional 50-100 stir count — the polymer chains develop and produce the visible strings (neba*, ねば) that lift off the spoon. Polyglutamic acid is the same compound used in the cosmetics industry as a humectant; in natto it provides texture and is thought to contribute to nutrient absorption.
B. subtilis var. natto also produces several other bioactive compounds: *nattokinase (a fibrinolytic enzyme that has been studied for cardiovascular benefits — research is mixed but ongoing); vitamin K2 (MK-7 form) in substantial amounts (natto is one of the world's richest dietary sources of K2-MK7, which is poorly available in Western diets); various proteases and amylases that pre-digest the soybeans; and dipicolinic acid* (a heat-stable spore component that allows the bacterium to survive harsh conditions). The K2-MK7 content makes natto a serious nutritional consideration for K2-deficient populations.
Beyond natto, B. subtilis (the broader species) contributes to several other fermented foods. In Korean *doenjang (fermented soybean paste), wild B. subtilis on the meju bricks contributes to the 'barnyard' aromatic notes that distinguish doenjang from Japanese miso. In Chinese doubanjiang (Pixian Sichuan paste), the outdoor wild fermentation includes B. subtilis alongside other organisms. Douchi (Chinese fermented black beans) also shows B. subtilis contribution. These cross-tradition appearances of Bacillus* are part of why the Cultures dimension is structurally valuable — a reader viewing this culture sees the same organism connecting natto, doenjang, doubanjiang, and douchi across four distinct culinary traditions.
The organism is significantly different from most fermentation organisms in being *aerobic and thermophilic. Natto production requires 38-42°C (100-107°F) incubation for 18-24 hours — significantly hotter than most ferments. The bacterium also requires oxygen exchange during fermentation; sealed containers prevent proper development. Traditional Japanese practice used rice straw (which carries wild B. subtilis* on its surface) wrapped around cooked soybeans, providing both inoculum and the appropriate slightly-aerobic environment. Modern home and commercial production uses purified natto-kin starter for consistency.
For home fermenters: making natto requires (1) fully-cooked whole soybeans, (2) inoculation with purified natto-kin starter (or a small amount of commercial natto as starter), (3) 38-42°C incubation for 18-24 hours, (4) refrigerated aging for 12-24 hours before eating. The aroma develops strongly during incubation — the characteristic ammonia notes are normal; over-fermentation produces harsh ammonia and bitter flavors.
微生物分类
最佳条件
使用此菌种的发酵食品
使用此菌种的方法
- Fully cook the soybeans — pressure-cook 30+ minutes or simmer 4-5 hours until very soft and easily mashable. Under-cooked beans produce poor texture.
- Inoculate while still hot (~80°C) — gives natto bacteria a thermal advantage over competing organisms during cool-down.
- Incubate at 38-42°C for 18-24 hours — a yogurt maker, sous-vide bath, or warming drawer all work. Lower temperatures slow development; higher temperatures produce harsh ammonia.
- Allow oxygen exchange — loosely cover with cloth or use breathable container. Sealed containers prevent proper development.
- Refrigerate 12-24 hours after incubation — chilling lets the flavor mature and the texture develop. Fresh-out-of-incubator natto is under-finished.
常见错误
- Incubating too cold (under 35°C) — produces underdeveloped natto with weak strings.
- Incubating too hot or too long — produces harsh ammonia and bitter flavors.
- Sealing containers — natto bacteria are aerobic and fail in closed environments.
- Skipping the post-incubation refrigerated rest — the flavor and texture aren't complete without the 12-24 hour chill.
- Confusing the strong aroma with spoilage — natto's ammonia/cheesy smell is intentional and a sign of good fermentation; truly spoiled natto smells putrid.