Biology, asked by princedba, 1 year ago

can yeast be an edible fungi??


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Answers

Answered by siasword
2
Yes, the 700 known yeasts really are fungi, although their colonies often look more like those of bacteria. ... The cells of most yeasts can be regarded as asexual propagules, and they produce more of the same by a variety of methods similar to those found in moulds.

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Answered by hackerlol77
2
Yeasts are single-celled fungi. ... These include edible mushrooms available at the supermarket, common baker'syeast used to leaven bread, molds that ripen blue cheese and the molds that produce antibiotics for medical and veterinary use. Many consider edible yeast and fungi to be as natural as fruits and vegetables.


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