Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The thin yellow strands were found in an upturned pot in 2005 and radiocarbon dated to around 4,000 years ago (c. 2000 BCE). [10] They were originally thought to be made from a combination of foxtail and broomcorn millet , [ 11 ] but subsequent experiments have showed millet alone could not have formed noodles, and that the Lajia noodles must ...
Beer is recorded in the written history of Mesopotamia and ancient Egypt and is one of the world's oldest prepared beverages. [75]Kykeon was a common beverage of sustenance in ancient Greece, most often consisting mainly of a barley gruel mixture with various additives, sometimes written as having psychoactive properties associated with religious visions.
Sometimes artifacts and (very rarely) actual preserved foodstuffs are discovered. In October 2005, the oldest noodles yet discovered were located at the Lajia site near the upper reaches of the Yellow River in Qinghai. The site has been associated with the Qijia culture. Over 4,000 years old, the noodles were made from foxtail and broomcorn ...
If a bowl of soup strikes you as the ultimate in comfort, you’ve got plenty of company. Here are 20 of the world’s best soups – from Mexico to Thailand – to fill stomach and soul.
The earliest written record of noodles is found in a book dated to the Eastern Han period (25–220 CE). [1] Noodles made from wheat dough became a prominent food for the people of the Han dynasty. [4] The oldest evidence of noodles was from 4,000 years ago in China. [1]
The world of Asian noodles is expansive—there are rice noodles and wheat noodles; flat, wide and round noodles; and noodles made from root vegetables, just to name a few. ...
“This finding in Çatalhöyük is the world’s oldest bread,” the head of the excavation, Ali Umut Turkcan, told Anadolu Agency, a Turkish state-run newspaper. The 8,600-year-old bread found ...
The oldest archaeological evidence of noodles shows that they came from China and were made from millet, which is an indigenous crop to northern China. [6] In 2005, a team of archaeologists reported finding an earthenware bowl that contained 4000-year-old noodles at the Lajia archaeological site . [ 22 ]