Culinary archeology....4,000 year old recipes!!

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VenomJockey

Ancient AH Pilot, Retired CWO W4.
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Dec 31, 2017
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3,847
Lamb stew anyone?

http://www.bbc.com/travel/story/20191103-the-worlds-oldest-known-recipes-decoded

Excerpt: "The instructions for lamb stew read more like a list of ingredients than a bona fide recipe: “Meat is used. You prepare water. You add fine-grained salt, dried barley cakes, onion, Persian shallot, and milk. You crush and add leek and garlic.” But it’s impossible to ask the chef to reveal the missing pieces: This recipe’s writer has been dead for some 4,000 years. Instead, a team of international scholars versed in culinary history, food chemistry and cuneiform (the Babylonian system of writing first developed by the ancient Sumerians of Mesopotamia) have been working to recreate this dish and three others from the world’s oldest-known recipes. It’s a sort of culinary archaeology that uses tablets from Yale University’s Babylonian Collection to gain a deeper understanding of that culture through the lens of taste."
 
our ancient ancestors used to eat 2000 or more different foods, modern people eat less than 200 different foods, some a lot less than that.

I had a school mate that ate 10 foods at the most. One of those was potato chips and another candy.

She died at 55 with a brain tumor and I've always wondered if there was a correlation?
 
I had a school mate that ate 10 foods at the most. One of those was potato chips and another candy.

She died at 55 with a brain tumor and I've always wondered if there was a correlation?
that's why i'm so particular about what I eat when I see what junk other people eat.
 

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