"Weird to think that the entire history of the Roman Empire was tomato-free"
via @simongerman600 and @Civixplorer
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"Weird to think that the entire history of the Roman Empire was tomato-free"
via @simongerman600 and @Civixplorer
@infobeautiful Wild. I've just always assumed that bananas and coffee were native to S. America. 🤔
@infobeautiful That disease trade-off didn’t go fairly though!
A weird coloring. Looks like none of the products came from South America, which is BS.
@infobeautiful no Spagetti Bolognese
No pizza
I wonder, if rome was already in Italy at those times
@infobeautiful I wonder if they roasted sunflower seeds and/or crushed them into a spread (like peanut butter)?
My conquistador went to the New World and all I got was this lousy syphilis.
@infobeautiful mad to think there was a time in Europe before potatoes, whole civilisation rose and fell in fact...yet no potato
@infobeautiful Not only tomato, which now is typically everywhere, also potatoes and corn, widely used now. The interesting fact is about how all of them have become the main ingredients of many (now) typical recipes.
It should teach how something new, unusual, in a couple of centuries may become a key tradition.
@infobeautiful @pozorvlak The Roman Empire was also, apparently, eggplant-free, which I find bizarre because they are native to Asia.
Tobacco and syphilis 👍
😄