Comments
DiceCubed1460 t1_ixm8nj9 wrote
TLDR:
British food is blander than prehistoric humans
DarkestDusk t1_ixmjf9h wrote
To some of it, certainly. Though the UK does have some amazing options available if you know where to look!
Bluffz2 t1_ixmk1ze wrote
Yes, if you know where to look you can find some great foreign food!
EmotionalAccounting t1_ixmpccm wrote
“London has the top ten restaurants in the world”
“And what kind of food do they make?”
“French”
Channel250 t1_ixo87ec wrote
I don't normally care for John Taffer, but that line always makes me laugh.
seenameangreenbean t1_ixmknm9 wrote
Fish and chips with vinegar is good, other than that…..
T_ja t1_ixmvajb wrote
I mean aren’t cottage and chicken pot pies either English or Irish? It falls under the beige food trope but it isn’t bland.
seenameangreenbean t1_ixmvp04 wrote
Shepard’s pie too now that I think about it. And Steak and Kidney pie. The British are good at pies.
T_ja t1_ixmwnda wrote
And various cheeses as well.
OnlyNeverAlwaysSure t1_ixn2hjc wrote
Wait, what cheese is British?
T_ja t1_ixn3fcd wrote
Various cheddars if I’m not mistaken
ImReverse_Giraffe t1_ixn4bku wrote
And that sauce no one can pronounce.
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Moneia t1_ixnd62g wrote
Worcestershire, pronounced Woost'r-sheer.
And it was based on an Asian fish sauce, it starts with fermented anchovies
InterPunct t1_ixor87n wrote
Garum is a fermented fish sauce first brought to England by the Romans, who got it from the Phoenicians:
ImReverse_Giraffe t1_ixnjhhs wrote
It was a joke dude
the_incredible_hawk t1_ixo5ale wrote
Wensleydale. Double Gloucester.
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wisteriacake t1_ixp4z5r wrote
There are over 700 types of British cheese. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_British_cheeses
SeeTreeMe t1_ixomgkw wrote
Chicken pot pies took some inspiration from English culinary styles, but it was made in the US (Dutch Pennsylvania).
Fiyanggu t1_ixp0425 wrote
Sunday roast is excellent.
hablandochilango t1_ixozq74 wrote
Beef Wellington is one of the most delicious things I’ve ever had anywhere
melmoth_to_a_flame t1_ixn56nh wrote
Didn't all those shops get replaced by curry shops? Not that I am complaining, just haven't visited for a long while.
Frescanation t1_ixnc3tn wrote
Just lay off the mushy peas
DemSocCorvid t1_ixn4x7r wrote
Yeah, all the Indian restaurants. Butter chicken is a classic British dish.
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floin t1_ixmkp3j wrote
>>if you know where to look!
Meaning the local curry take-away?
Reddit_Hitchhiker t1_ixp349u wrote
Indian is spicy!
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kryptosthedj t1_ixppq57 wrote
I came here to see this exact comment
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QueenRooibos t1_ixogiyp wrote
How do we know it was for seasoning? Couldn't the plants/herbs/minerals etc. have been used for medicinal purposes such as preventing/lessening food poisoning or indigestion? Bitter herbs are especially useful for this according to old herbalist handbooks.
Raichu7 t1_ixpvy57 wrote
The assumption that people 70,000 years ago would only eat a single type of food at a meal seems rather crazy to me. Where were they getting enough of it to feed the whole tribe? The idea that they gathered whatever meat and plants they could find and then cooked them all together makes a lot more sense.
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PelosiGalore t1_ixls37o wrote
As a foodie and amateur historian, I find this fascinating!! I enjoy making dishes that go back….oldest one was a Babylonian stew going back 4,000 years. Thank you for the post!!!
2meterrichard t1_ixltout wrote
You'd dig Tasting History on YouTube. Dude finds old ass recipes and talks about the history involved. Then makes it himself. Or at least the closest facsimile he can of it.
Dorangos t1_ixmeapx wrote
That ol' hootenanny?
Troooper0987 t1_ixmp0d3 wrote
Share it on /r/oldrecipies !
PelosiGalore t1_ixn4f4j wrote
For some reason, I was unable to post there. Here is a link.
Troooper0987 t1_ixn5i2t wrote
I spelled it wrong it’s /r/old_recipes apparently
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FaeryLynne t1_ixlvckd wrote
I'm gonna guess you've seen Ancient Recipes with Sohla on YouTube?
PelosiGalore t1_ixm0n7c wrote
Haven’t seen that one. I do watch “Early American” and “Townsends.” Thank you for the tip!!
SmileAndLaughrica t1_ixme0k3 wrote
You’d like English Heritage’s The Victorian Way YouTube videos! They even did a crossover episode with Townsend.
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snarfsnarfer t1_ixmi3vg wrote
Townswnds is so fun! I’m stoked to check all these other channels out.
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carlitospig t1_ixm9owt wrote
Sohla is the best. #ripbonappetit
PenguinSaver1 t1_ixmnsd2 wrote
Hopefully the ingredients weren't 4000 years old
ubermeisters t1_ixndixo wrote
honey is still fine
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Paltenburg t1_ixlzps3 wrote
Isn't the big reveal that they already ate bread?
Moont1de t1_ixmbkwv wrote
Paleo diet cultists in shambles
koebelin t1_ixm2s6n wrote
I too am very surprised. They mashed up seeds and made a bread? I guess when your only tech is fire you eventually cook everything and find out what works.
TheGreat_War_Machine t1_ixm6b2l wrote
Bread is such a basic item that you'd be surprised by how little you actually need to make it. Sure, you may not get a product that's like what you'd find on the store shelf, but it offers the same benefits for paleolithic peoples.
ensalys t1_ixmf01h wrote
Yeah, crush up the seeds of certain kinds of grasses, mix it well with some water, add some heat, and you have the simplest kind of bread. Of course, it won't be a nice fluffy (you'll need fungi farts for that) bread with a crispy crust, but it's bread.
madarbrab t1_ixmjoic wrote
Just leave the mash out for a few days, it'll pick up some wild yeast
TheGreat_War_Machine t1_ixmoo7f wrote
And that's how settled peoples discovered beer...also moldy bread.
Bladelink t1_ixn3dah wrote
It probably wouldn't take long to go from some yeasty bread to a sourdough, where you realize you can just keep using the same dough.
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rich1051414 t1_ixmh0yt wrote
Grass is the most successful plant on the planet. Grass has seeds. Those seeds can be crushed and mixed with water and cooked for cheap and easy food.
jungles_fury t1_ixos445 wrote
I thought that had already been established? That and traces of starchy vegetables have been found at multiple sites
Paltenburg t1_ixpmc7v wrote
Maybe I was confused with the oldest forms of cultivated grain.
dumnezero t1_iy03uy2 wrote
Domestication of grains required existing use and knowledge of grains. You can't assume that there were government funded research projects on plant breeding to direct a long-term plan for making grains bigger and better.
jennej1289 t1_ixm4wfn wrote
I kind of feel like well naturally they did. They were gatherers. They probably found a way to smoke and preserve food to some degree as well. They were the Earth’s first survivalist. The ones who could not figure it out died.
TotalWarspammer t1_ixm7cnh wrote
In the end the survivalist Neanderthals also died. :(
T_ja t1_ixmwacy wrote
I’ve seen theories that it’s less of a died out and more like they bred themselves out of existing by interloping with modern humans.
houseman1131 t1_ixnpz7s wrote
Death by snu snu.
CallFromMargin t1_ixq7c3k wrote
I mean yeah, their DNA is in all human population, except for sub-saharan Africa. There definitely was interbreeding. Devisovians are another interesting sub-species, and we have found remains of individual with neanderthal and devisovian parents.
kocf1945 t1_ixmjblt wrote
Now I’m curious about this. I don’t think we know what happened but I need to go look up some well reasoned hypothesis as to why they went extinct
TotalWarspammer t1_ixmjvy0 wrote
I read that in the end humans as we know them now were just more resourceful and more competitive and Neanderthal numbers slowly dwindled to unsustainable pockets of populations... although of course they did mate with us and pass on some DNA!
surle t1_ixmnabx wrote
As far as I understand (not an expert) the "out competed by homo sapiens" theory is just the most likely logical explanation everyone goes along with for the convenience of having a sensible premise and is not something that has been strongly supported with evidence. It's quite possible some fascinating discovery just around the corner of another site like this one could provide the solid bit of evidence needed to properly strengthen that theory, or turn it on its head. All the more reason to support organisations that fund such research, and probably another good reason to oppose the idea of dropping a lot of bombs everywhere.
CallFromMargin t1_ixq7gsu wrote
Also homo sapiens almost went extinct 70 000 ish years ago.
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TotalWarspammer t1_ixmv111 wrote
Of course it's not "just convenience" that scientists think that. What else would you think would cause the species to go completely extinct? There is no evidence that they was a disease specific to Neanderthals or that they were hunted by other men. The evidence suggests the dwindled gradually into smaller groups and then finally faded away. They were not as adaptable or as resourceful as we were.
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Entity-2019 t1_ixmwk79 wrote
Given our known history, I am leaning toward systematic continental genocide as a probable explanation. Maybe the Neanderthals "worshiped the wrong god", or even worse, "worshipped the same god, the wrong way".
CallFromMargin t1_ixq8b5t wrote
Yeah, no. For starters, both human and neanderthal population dropped significantly at around 70 000ish years ago, probably due to some kind of cataclysmic event (a supervulcano eruption was long suspected but it might not have been the cause). Human population recovered, neanderthal population didn't.
But even if it did, would you be able to tell neanderthal apart from modern humans?
EDIT: also the last known neanderthal population seem to have died out during time of periodic climate change that would have fucked with their food supply.
frickin-bats- t1_ixol64l wrote
Neanderthals were adapted to the cold and for hunting big game, they thrived during the last ice age. As the climate warmed and a lot of big game died out, their physical traits and way of life weren’t as advantageous/sustainable, and for whatever reason they were unable to adapt to keep up with the environmental changes. Competition with early modern humans probably didn’t help, and as some other people mentioned they interbred with early modern humans, so they may have just been gradually absorbed into the human population
mouse_8b t1_ixnexgv wrote
Probably not because they couldn't feed themselves
jungles_fury t1_ixoscpr wrote
Eventually but they survived for hundreds of thousands of years, not too shabby
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one-more-thingy t1_ixlw0ye wrote
Kinda makes sense. You don't take up a whole planet though ice ages and worse without being a funking master of your environment.
It's later then we think.
HighOnGoofballs t1_ixlt0q5 wrote
I’m not that surprised they did this 70,000 years ago but I’d be curious as to how it changed over time since people first started cooking over fire ~800,000 years ago
IamreallynotaNPC t1_ixlv2wv wrote
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41559-022-01910-z
For reference.
I would also like to know if they used something on the fish.
DrunkOnLoveAndWhisky t1_ixnfrtz wrote
Same here. I saw the "oldest charred food remains ever found" and instantly thought this would be about that fish.
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nikstick22 t1_ixmm28f wrote
So, this study adds to the existing body of work by noting that the bitter alkaloids in the shells of the cooked seeds were soaked and/or boiled rather than deshelled completely. The authors suggest that deshelling would be easier and more efficient at removing the bitter and astringent compounds and conclude that this indicates that the ancient people preparing this food intentionally used the less effective method in order to retain the bitter flavor.
The title is not referring to any additional seasoning in this body of work, only that the bitter flavors in the food fragments studied were not completely removed.
DMAN591 t1_ixngzk0 wrote
I mean, it could be someone that just sucked at cooking and/or preparing food. It's not like they could search up recipes on Google back then.
QueenRooibos t1_ixogvym wrote
Bitters are good for digestion according to centuries of traditional herbal medicine --- now we can just update that knowledge to "since paleolithic times".
dchallenge t1_ixlw5h1 wrote
In related news; Sriracha, found to be a 75,000 year old company.
mouse_8b t1_ixnf2xk wrote
Just learned recently that Cholula is one of the oldest cities in Mexico
animal_moth3r_ t1_ixods2d wrote
Ancient Apocalypse?
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PelosiGalore t1_ixm12b2 wrote
Always found it amazing that there are a finite number of spices, fruits and vegetables in the world. By just varying proportions, you can make the same ingredients taste completely different. I love that!
yoortyyo t1_ixmd7mx wrote
Many herbs have antibiotic & anti microbial properties. We are finding even animals eat certain plants that offer medicinal value. I’m saying why can’t we have been eating & utilizing herbs before cooking happend?
nygdan t1_ixmcvn0 wrote
This is also how you get over the millenia long "usefulness" gap between wild food and fully domesticated crops. People sometimes ask "how was agriculture useful in the stages where the food wasn't nutritious enough". They grew it for spices and seasoning.
Liar_tuck t1_ixnn8n5 wrote
And possibly beer.
TheDennisQuaid t1_ixmfl1s wrote
Tens of thousands of years old and still more flavor than British food.
TheGreat_War_Machine t1_ixm6tyn wrote
I noticed in the article that much of the evidence of culinary practice was found in southwest Asia. Could it be reasonably presumed, based on human migrations, that paleolithic peoples who found their way to the Americas also utilized seasoning?
carlitospig t1_ixm9xep wrote
I’d be curious if they did it for flavor or if they did it for its medicinal properties. Back then they were likely already connecting the dots between herbs and health.
TheGreat_War_Machine t1_ixmpekh wrote
At least in the context of this article, they said seasoning was likely for flavor purposes given that the seeds the paleolithics used still had their husks, which gave the end product a bitter taste.
Papancasudani t1_ixn1565 wrote
Seems like the premise for a Far Side cartoon:
Hey Thag. What go good with mammoth flank?
MagicSPA t1_ixmyi00 wrote
I'd love to see that scenario captured in a Gary Larson cartoon.
"Ugg! What doing with tarragon?! It clearly rosemary that go with unidentified rodent!"
mrsbundleby t1_ixoi04o wrote
Hunter gatherers were better cooks than my mother in law
pt101389 t1_ixnawl8 wrote
They are obviously not talking about the white hunters. (I'm white it's a harmless stereotype joke)
jungl3j1m t1_ixng8r3 wrote
That long ago h. Sapiens were all black.
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Flip86 t1_ixlsowx wrote
Gotta make it taste good.
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linkdude212 t1_ixmako4 wrote
I wonder how they heated water without pots.
moons_of_neptarine t1_ixmrvs9 wrote
Heat rocks and drop them into a container of water
linkdude212 t1_ixnlgab wrote
What was the container?
moons_of_neptarine t1_ixnu5xu wrote
Animal bladder, bark, anything that could hold water, I imagine
surle t1_ixmofvp wrote
Concave stone, hard wood, bamboo/coconut, etc.
damon459 t1_ixnddsz wrote
Animal skins were commonly used as pots for boiling and simmering liquids.
jimsmoments89 t1_ixmom6e wrote
Probably rocks with odd shapes that are good enough to hold water maybe
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LivermoreP1 t1_ixmhtqn wrote
Salt Bae dates back 70,000 years
elmo_knows t1_ixmmsa3 wrote
The real question is if it tastes good
SilverJaw47 t1_ixmy47b wrote
My god. Paleo humans had more refined pallets than British people.
standardtrickyness1 t1_ixn5b4e wrote
Next you'll be telling me primitive man first ignited mastodon flatulence to heat his cave.
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vferrero14 t1_ixnmbdl wrote
Probably more spices then my Caucasian mother uses on chicken
Fuzzy_Logic_4_Life t1_ixnvhw6 wrote
My family’s recipe of secret herbs and spices are 70,000 years old.
Can’t top that can you! Oh wait, you can? Oh, we’re related awesome!
ILovePornAndDrugs t1_ixofqqc wrote
damn wonder what palaeolithic cooking tasted like when thanksgiving rolled round
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KeybladeMasterAqua t1_ixowbjg wrote
They weren’t total savages. They probably knew what they liked to eat.
Doctor_Box t1_ixowpx6 wrote
The paleo anti plant crowd is in shambles.
Jazzlike-Principle67 t1_ixp6tog wrote
Can't imagine why this seems like a surprise.
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uniquelyavailable t1_ixpdcma wrote
Nothing quite like Mastadon leg and old bay
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bluejays-beak1281 t1_ixmzu4e wrote
Well of course, nobody but the modern English like unseasoned food.
Biff_Malibu_69 t1_ixlxueo wrote
Hmmm. So they were Cultured Swine?
marketrent OP t1_ixlo175 wrote
Ceren Kabukcu, 23 November 2022.
>My team’s analysis of the oldest charred food remains ever found show that jazzing up your dinner is a human habit dating back at least 70,000 years.
>Imagine ancient people sharing a meal. You would be forgiven for picturing people tearing into raw ingredients or maybe roasting meat over a fire as that is the stereotype.
>But our new study showed both Neanderthals and Homo sapiens had complex diets involving several steps of preparation, and took effort with seasoning and using plants with bitter and sharp flavours.
>This degree of culinary complexity has never been documented before for Palaeolithic hunter-gatherers.
>
>We examined food remains from two late Paleolithic sites, which cover a span of nearly 60,000 years, to look at the diets of early hunter gatherers. Our evidence is based on fragments of prepared plant foods (think burnt pieces of bread, patties and porridge lumps) found in two caves.
>At both sites, we often found ground or pounded pulse seeds such as bitter vetch (Vicia ervilia), grass pea (Lathyrus spp) and wild pea (Pisum spp).
>The people who lived in these caves added the seeds to a mixture that was heated up with water during grinding, pounding or mashing of soaked seeds.
Antiquity, DOI 10.15184/aqy.2022.143