The World Of Interiors, November 2013. Photo - Bill Batten

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@archa30l0gy
The World Of Interiors, November 2013. Photo - Bill Batten
here’s my small festive drawing for Chanukkah. i hope you’re all having a happy celebration! ✨🕎🔯
There’ll be a welcome (by Darling Starlings)
Winter of 1911, Moscow, Yuli Yulevich Klever, 1911
Sandro Botticelli La Primavera (c. 1482) tempera on panel. Uffizi Gallery, Florence.
“Eighty four years ago, after the sun set, my grandmother took out her camera before lighting the candles of Chag Chanuka and took a picture of her Chanukia facing a Nazi flag. I have the original picture and menorah. On the back of this picture my grandmother wrote in German, “Judea will live forever, thus respond the lights.” I have donated the menorah to Yad Vashem under one condition; Yad Vashem will only have it for 51 weeks in the year. Every year, during the week of Chanuka, I take the menorah that is in this box and re-light my grandmother’s Chanukia.“ Beezrat Hashem the light of this Chanuka will be lit for all the years to come. Chag Chanuka Sameach!
“Juda verrecke” die Fahne spricht “Juda lebt ewig” erwidert das Licht” “Death to Judah” So the flag says “Judah will live forever” So the light answers
humansoftherova
“Judea will live forever, thus respond the lights.”
just because I spend some time doing nothing doesn’t mean I’m relaxing. I have not once relaxed
me when i go to barnes n noble and spend $38.78
Me when my dog does something bad and my whole family starts getting mad at him
Crunch munch
makes me think of @embersign
So freaking adorable
Every time I send my advisor an edited draft of my thesis proposal I’ve started adding a different plague meme at the bottom for incentive
Victor Esposito’s house on Ibiza, Balearic Islands, Spain
Charred crumbs found in a middle-eastern desert show that bread-making dates back 14,000 years.
“Jordanian bread recipe from 14,000 years ago
Make flour from wild wheat and wild barley
Pound tubers (roots) of wild plants that grow in water (sedges or club- or bull-rushes) to a dry pulp
Mix together with water to make a batter or dough
Bake on hot stones around a fire.
The people living in the area at the time were hunter gatherers. (…) This happened before the advent of farming, when people started growing cereal crops and keeping animals. (…)
Our ancestors may have used the bread as a wrap for roasted meat. Thus, as well as being the oldest bread, it may also have been the oldest sandwich. “This is the earliest evidence we have for what we could really call a cuisine, in that it’s a mixed food product,” Prof Dorian Fuller of University College London told BBC News. “They’ve got flatbreads, and they’ve got roasted gazelle and so forth, and that’s something they are then using to make a meal.“”
@copperbadge ancient bread!
I wonder what the tubers did – I would guess they add flavor and possibly some elasticity? Mainly I wonder because while the crumbs apparently clearly indicate flatbread, I know that one way to grow wild yeast is to let mashed potatoes sit out for a while. So I wonder if the tubers aren’t some kind of cross-pollination with someone who had semi-leavened bread.
Gastropod had a podcast a while back about mustard which indicated that very early people were combining foods and flavors in a very chef-like fashion, so I think it’s good to remember that hunter-gatherers weren’t just eating food, they were intentionally cooking food and doing culinary experiments!
I’m also intrigued by the tubers. Here’s my baseless theory: they were a byproduct of using the leaves and reeds for other things. Because when I think of bullrushes, I think about how the cattails are fantastic tinder for fires. And when I think of a lot of other water plants I think about them being dried and woven into every possible useful thing like baskets and mats and ropes and shoes. So what do you do with the tubers before you’ve learned about planting and regrowing? Eat ‘em, obviously. And hey, they’ve got flavors. Apparently sedge tubers taste like black pepper!
Anyway ancient foods are always a prime interest of mine. This is great stuff. I love the idea of folks getting together and making bread for a party, how that’s something that’s been in us since before we were us.
Reblogging for these good additions!