โ How was bread invented?โ
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โ Source: National Academy of Sciencesโ |
The earliest evidence of bread-making, dating back 14,400 years, was recently discovered in the Black Desert in Jordan. Archaeologists uncovered two structures each containing a stone fireplace, along with several charred breadcrumbs.
Under the microscope, these primitive breadcrumbs have a structure that shows signs of grains being ground, sieved, and kneaded into dough.
โ Source: National Academy of Sciencesโ |
These Stone Age bakers likely made bread by harvesting wild wheat and barley, mixing them with crushed up plant roots and water, and baking the dough on a hot flat stone or in fireplace ashes.
This evidence shows that early humans were making unleavened bread with fire over 14,000 years ago. We still had a long way to go from the soft rolls, crusty baguettes, and pillowy naan we know today, but this ancient flatbread would have been a huge breakthrough for our ancestors since cooked bread is easier to transport and digest (and enjoy) than uncooked mixes of grains and water.
Evidence of primitive baking suggests bread may have been one of the driving forces behind the invention of agriculture. Wild wheat and barley were already part of the diet, but processing them into flour required laborious dehusking and grinding.
Dehusked barley (left) and wheat (right) grains.
Left: "Barley Seeds" (modified) by Sanjay Acharya is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. Right: "เฆเฆฎ Wheat เงจเงฆเงจเงฆ-เงงเงจ-เงจเงจ เฆ" by เฆเฆพเฆ เฆถเงเฆญเงเฆจเงเฆฆเง is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0.
Because of that effort, bread likely held special value and finding ways to cultivate and domesticate these grains could have sparked the move toward agriculture.
Starting around 9500 B.C.E., we have found evidence of some of the earliest crops grown in an area in the Middle East and Northern Africa, named the Fertile Crescent due to the shape of this rich early agricultural zone on a map. These early crops included wheat, barley, rye, lentils, chickpeas, and flax.
The Natufians, the earliest known agricultural society, would have baked unleavened flatbread with ground domesticated grains over hot coals or stones by a fire.
Before the Beastie Boys fought for your right to party, the Yeastie Boys fought for your right to eat leavened bread.
Yeast is a microorganism that eats sugar and produces carbon dioxide, leading bread to rise over time. Determining precisely when we started adding yeast to bread is a difficult venture seeing as it's a transformative biological process, hence the wide time range in this section.
But the very earliest yeast + bread combos likely happened by accident by some early baker leaving uncooked dough lying around for a while. The natural airborne yeast would have started to feast on the dough and cause it to rise.
Source: Necmettin Erbakan Universityโ |
We actually have uncovered evidence of this accidental sourdough at an archaeological dig site in Turkey. A small, round, spongy artifact dated to 8,600 years ago was identified as a piece of fermented, uncooked dough.
But scholars generally agree that the first intentionally leavened yeast breads originated in Egypt. Around 3000-2500 B.C.E., Egyptians became leavened bread bakers and beer brewers, which both involve yeast.
It's unclear whether beer or bread came first. Some believe bread might have been made by skimming foam from beer and adding it to the dough. Others think bakers could have added some sourdough starter to the beer mash to speed fermentation.
We do know that the Egyptians' earliest leavened breads were sourdough. They likely saved a piece of dough each day to mix into the next batch, much like how bakers still keep their sourdough starters alive today.
Our next crusty innovation came when humans started baking bread with ovens. This breakthrough seemed to happen in multiple places around the world, with our earliest evidence found in Egypt from around 3000-2500 B.C.E.
โ Source: Ancient Egypt Research Associatesโ |
Ancient Egyptian texts mention more than 30 kinds of bread, which means there was a lot of baking going on. From tomb scenes, we find that they seemed to bake using cone-shaped, mud-brick bowls called bedjas that they would pre-heat over fire. Once hot, workers would fill the bedja with batter and then place another hot bedja on top, creating a mini oven.
We've also found evidence of early ovens dated around 2450-2300 B.C.E. from the Indus Valley Civilization. In the ancient city of Kalibangan located in the modern Indian state of Rajasthan, archaeologists uncovered what looks to be early tandoor ovens.
โ Source: Harappa.comโ |
Among other crops, the residents of Kalibangan grew wheat and likely used these clay ovens similarly to how present-day tandoor ovens are used. There would have been a fire at the bottom of the cylinder which created intense, long-lasting heat. Flat bread dough would have been placed on the inner walls to bake and peeled off when they were done.
Our last stop in our early oven tour is in Ancient Greece. Dated around 500 B.C.E., the earliest pre-heated oven that opened at the front is likely a Greek innovation.
โ "Female baker oven Louvre MNE1333" by Marie-Lan Nguyen is licensed under CC BY 2.5. |
Some scholars believe these Greek ovens even had a door which would have allowed for more heat control and efficiency with baking.
While we didn't see pre-sliced bread for about 2,000 years, bread was sold to the masses in Greece and Rome in the last centuries of B.C.E.
With their oven innovations, commercial Greek bakers began to sell bread in the agora (marketplace). But true mass production scaled up in Rome around 168 B.C.E., when a Collegium Pistorum (bakersโ guild) was founded to regulate the trade.
โ Source: het MOTโ |
Rome's urban bakeries used rotary mills to grind grains and large brick ovens to bake hundreds or thousands of loaves every day. The Romans also started to specialize their bread varieties, baking light breads for upper classes and darker breads for lower classes. By the height of the Roman era, bread had become an industry feeding entire cities.
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โSources for this week's newsletterโ
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"Fool's Gold is a sandwich made by the Colorado Mine Company, a restaurant in Denver, Colorado, United States. It consists of a single warmed, hollowed-out loaf of bread filled with the contents of one jar of creamy peanut butter, one jar of blueberry jam, and one pound (454 g) of bacon....
According to The Life and Cuisine of Elvis Presley, Presley and his friends took his private jet from Graceland, purchased 22 of the sandwiches, and spent two hours eating them and drinking Perrier and champagne before flying home."
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