Browsing in the Merck Index, I am informed that HCl is used "as a gaseous flux in babbitting operations". Can't find any details on the web about how that is done. I had the idea that flux literally carried the oxide off the metal surface, which HCl gas seems like it would have a hard time doing. But maybe that's not it. Anyhow, gaseous fluxes and babbitting are just an endearing pair of technologies.
http://www.thesoydailyclub.com/SFC/dairy48.asp
http://www.rwood.com/Articles/Kefir_Fil_Mjolk_and_Viili.htm
I was reminded of viili and piima by the buttermilk I grew, which has a not entirely dissimilar texture. More clabbery than I was expecting -- and tasting more like yogurt; the commercial dehydrated buttermilk I've used had more diacetyl-type scent to it. I wonder if they add that.
http://www.thesoydailyclub.com/SFC/dairy48.asp
First, the term "piima" is often used generically to refer to all of the many Finnish cultured milk products. Second, viili traditionally referred to the choice, rich, creamy layer that formed on the top of a bowl of piima; the less rich, bottom portion, specifically called piima, was often served as a refreshing drink. Today, however, viili and piima are generally made separately; viili is thicker and more stretchy. Finally, there are a number of similar or slightly different cultured milk products, which have various names in different parts of Finland. For example, viili is stretchy in west and north Finland, but not in east Finland.
In viili a significant proportion of these microorganisms are slime/capsule formers; microscopic analysis shows that many of the individual organisms, composed of chains of bacteria (streptococci), form a thin jellylike capsule around them. Moreover, in viili, a surface-growing milk mold (Oospora lactis or Geotrichum candidum) is usually present; it forms a prized, velvet-like layer on the surface of the unhomogenized milk.
http://www.rwood.com/Articles/Kefir_Fil_Mjolk_and_Viili.htm
I made viili a few times but then let the culture slip into oblivion. Although its flavor was pleasurable, I didn't take to its texture which can be imagined from the following story. A friend poured a cup of viili and unintentionally filled it a drop over the brim. The ringing phone distracted him and, upon return, he found an empty cup in a thick puddle of viili. The overfull drop had oozed down the cup's side and, like a slinky, had emptied it.
I was reminded of viili and piima by the buttermilk I grew, which has a not entirely dissimilar texture. More clabbery than I was expecting -- and tasting more like yogurt; the commercial dehydrated buttermilk I've used had more diacetyl-type scent to it. I wonder if they add that.