Ernesto Di Maio grew up in Naples, Italy—the birthplace of pizza. Unfortunately, the chemist is allergic to one of pizza’s key ingredients: yeast. So Di Maio set out to create a crust without these tiny microbes.
Yeast feeds on sugars in flour and releases bubbles of carbon dioxide (CO2 ) as waste. This type of chemical reaction is called fermentation. “The texture, taste, and smell of pizza crust has a lot to do with those bubbles,” says Di Maio, who works at the University of Naples Federico II.