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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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Bob (this one) extrapolated from data available...
> > I'll give you honey, but vanilla is a stretch for being a sweetener. > Tell Jennings that Ole Moctezuma probably had about 10,000 nekkid maidens (tribal tribute, bound for the altar and the dinner table) out at Xochimilco straining the sweet nectar out of the banks of honeysuckle along the road. Shoot, if it's fiction, make it colorful. I do want to try chocolate in atole which was sort a national dish/soup/porridge of the region, a corn kernel starchy pulp belnd which would have been at least semisweet for a short period in each corncob's life cycle. The modern horchata and the popular "liquados", fruit shakes, of mexico provide some concept ofg the availabilities for Aztec dining (beyond tribute tribesfolk, solving the local protein deficiency. TMO |
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