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| Historic (rec.food.historic) Discussing and discovering how food was made and prepared way back when--From ancient times down until (& possibly including or even going slightly beyond) the times when industrial revolution began to change our lives. |
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chick peas boiled all day with lots of garlic and some Mediterranean green
leaf cabbage. flat bread made with stone ground flour (with bits of stone mixed in with the flour), with some cheese (something like Philadelphia cream cheese again flavored with garlic. A thick wine with a slightly burnt flavor mixed with water to thin it out and sweetened with honey. Fish was a big one, as well as some sort of sauce. "Olivers" wrote in message ... Dr muttered.... ACTUALLY, , , , , , If you research the acient ROMAN foods, the will be much the same as early GREEK food. The Romans captured Greeks, and made them slaves anfd they cooked for the Romans, therefore, Roman food IS Greek food. One memorable difference, apparently....or at least rumored. Unusually, Roman soldiers on field duty apparently became quite restive and even mutinous when their meat ration was high, while their favorite and best accepted ration were cooked grains, apparently a sort of multi-grain cooked cereal/gruel, not conventional bread. Historians seem to have established that "ordinary" Roamns ate little meat (and didn't seem to want much more). One could certainly assume that the historical "track" runs on through time to polenta and mammaglia (and that the original pastas could well have been dried versions stabilized for portability and easy to "reconstitute?). Somehow, although I'm fond of Nuoc Mam, I rarely use it in my Cream of Wheat or Oatmeal. Did the Romans use garum to flavor porridge? TMO |
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