LAB Serum
Learn how to make Lactobacillus serum in a clean premium flow. This module covers the logic, the process, the separation stages, and how to turn a simple fermentation into a living input for soil and plant systems.
What is LAB serum?
LAB stands for lactic acid bacteria. In KNF it is used as a living microbial input, not as some random trend bottle.
LAB serum is a cultured liquid full of lactic acid bacteria. These microbes are selected first from rice wash water and then expanded with milk.
In simple language, you are capturing, feeding, separating, and preserving useful bacteria that can support biological processes in soil and organic systems.
The point is not magic. The point is microbial dominance. You create conditions where the right bacteria multiply and the wrong stuff gets pushed back.
Good LAB work is about clean stages, timing, smell, and observation. Sloppy fermentation gives weak or contaminated inputs.
Feed the right biology
Rice wash gathers microbes. Milk expands the lactic acid bacteria that can actually dominate.
Watch the separation
The visual layers tell you when the culture is moving in the right direction.
Preserve the serum
You want the yellow serum, not the curds. The serum is the useful fraction for storage and dilution.
Dilution matters
LAB is powerful in small amounts. More is not automatically better.
What you need
Clean setup. Simple gear. No unnecessary bullshit.
Rice + water
Used to make the first wash water that captures wild local microbes.
Glass jars
Use clean jars with enough room for fermentation and layer formation.
Milk
Milk feeds the selected bacteria and drives the second stage culture.
Cloth cover
Protect the culture while still allowing gas exchange.
Patience
LAB is timing and observation. Rushing it gives trash.
Step by step system
Hover or tap a stage. The panel updates live and gives you dedicated image placeholders you can swap later.