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  2. History of bread - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_bread

    In the Deipnosophistae, the author Athenaeus (c. 170 – c. 230 AD) describes some of the bread, cakes, and pastries available in the Classical world. [20] Among the breads mentioned are griddle cakes, honey-and-oil bread, mushroom-shaped loaves covered in poppy seeds, and the military specialty of rolls baked on a spit.

  3. 8,600-year-old bread — oldest of its kind — found near oven ...

    www.aol.com/8-600-old-bread-oldest-165933972.html

    “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 ...

  4. ‘World’s oldest bread,’ dating back 8,600 years, discovered ...

    www.aol.com/news/world-oldest-bread-dating-back...

    Archeologists in Turkey say they have discovered the world’s oldest known bread, dating back to 6600 BC. ‘World’s oldest bread,’ dating back 8,600 years, discovered in Turkey Skip to main ...

  5. List of ancient dishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ancient_dishes

    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.

  6. Khubz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khubz

    Among the breads popular in Middle Eastern countries are "pocket" pita bread in the Levant and Egypt, and the flat tannur bread in Iraq. The oldest known kind of bread, found by archaeologists in the Syrian Desert (modern-day southern Syria and northern Jordan), dates back 14,000 years. It was a sort of unleavened flatbread made with several ...

  7. Bread - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bread

    The Old English word for bread was hlaf (hlaifs in Gothic: modern English loaf) which appears to be the oldest Teutonic name. [1] Old High German hleib [2] and modern German Laib derive from this Proto-Germanic word, which was borrowed into some Slavic (Czech: chléb, Polish: bochen chleba, Russian: khleb) and Finnic (Finnish: leipä, Estonian: leib) languages as well.

  8. Sourdough - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sourdough

    In the Encyclopedia of Food Microbiology, Michael Gaenzle writes: "One of the oldest sourdough breads dates from 3700 BCE and was excavated in Switzerland, but the origin of sourdough fermentation likely relates to the origin of agriculture in the Fertile Crescent and Egypt several thousand years earlier", [3] and "Bread production relied on the use of sourdough as a leavening agent for most ...

  9. Timeline of food - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_food

    ~3900 BCE: In Mesopotamia (Ancient Iraq), early evidence of beer is a Sumerian poem honoring Ninkasi, the patron goddess of brewing, which contains the oldest surviving beer recipe, describing the production of beer from barley via bread. [36] ~3600 BCE: Date of the oldest definitive known evidence for popcorn, discovered in New Mexico, United ...