How to make 2,000-year-old-bread

How to make 2,000-year-old-bread

In AD 79, a baker put his loaf of bread into the oven. Nearly 2,000 years later it was found during excavations in Herculaneum. The British Museum asked Giorgio Locatelli to recreate the recipe as part of his culinary investigations for the cinema production Pompeii Live from the British Museum.\rbr\rbrIn response to the many interesting, thoughtful and sometimes amusing comments weve received for this video, weve asked Paul Roberts, the curator of our Pompeii exhibition Life and Death in Herculaneum, to give us the academic background: \rbr\rbrIt was one of the Romans great boasts at table that they could serve white flour bread at fine banquets (at normal tables they might well have eaten poorer grades of wheat or other grains, such as spelt or barley, and even beans, lentils or chestnuts.) \rbr\rbrYou will see that Giorgio scores the loaf: Ive examined lots of the loaves and I am convinced that they are scored. Its important to remember that the loaves survived because they were carbonised. They have, in effect, shrunk somewhat from their original form, because of the loss of liquid on exposure to the sudden blast of heat form Vesuvius – conservatively estimated at 400 degrees centigrade. All other foodstuffs – figs, beans, grain etc are noticeably smaller than they ought to be – and there is no reason the same shouldnt be true of bread.\rbr\rbrThis could explain why the scoring and the stamp seem implausibly clear – in effect they may have contred to a smaller (and in the case of the stamp, more legible) form. This carbonisation must, I think, be taken into account and means the loaves when complete and fresh from the oven may have looked very different from how we see them now – not just in colour.


User: Siric

Views: 1

Uploaded: 2017-09-30

Duration: 06:52

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