actually itβs me, @featherandbone.bsky.social!
actually itβs me, @featherandbone.bsky.social!
DID I CORRECTLY PERCEIVE YOU STUDY FOOD HISTORY ALSO I CAN SAY THIS ELSEWHERE IF YOU PREFER I HAVE TROUBLE SOCIALING
Overall history and classics section of my zillion books library.
i LOVE how varied this is!! how is the middle eastern one?
It has been a long time to be honest. I got hugely into Mesopotamian mythology, history and culture a long time ago (was using that to write some fiction, which I got bogged down in), land then other mythologies and ancient histories in the area. Had another cookbook I think I made a dish from?
I remember making a savory dish with dates in it? Very tasty from my memory.
asking as a lebanese person :) salt was great!
Salt is a top tier book. And very cool. π
THATS OK I DO NOT HIDE MY INTERESTS AND YOU ARE CORRECT
AHHHHHHHSOME. I got really into cooking right before the pandemic started and took like 30 or so cooking class sessions. And have long had an interest in history. Times I have dived into food history I have loved it. Admittedly not a ton! Can I ask like a particular area of food histiry?
shifting this here so i can nerd out properly! i started research on irish food in undergrad and then started building a digital database for nyu of global irish diaspora recipes as well as pulling food mentions from the national folklore collectionβs archives - plus a blog!
there are thousands of pages of oral histories recorded in the 1930s by folklorists and school children (37-39) as part of a governmental effort and βfoodβ was one of the assigned topics. many of these pages are in irish and have yet to be transcribed
most of the accounts come from older folks (the very oldest born at the tail end of the Famine) who become an alternative primary source on food culture in the 19th century as well as during the Famine period
while not a traditional source there is so much rich regional nuance and data in these archives (all available ad duchas.ie, much is transcribed but there are tons that are either just scanned or still not uploaded, primarily the irish language documents)
one thing i noticed was the ubiquitousness of oats alongside the expected potatoes, and well outside of the expected northern regions known for its production. i also noticed references to an oat food called sowans, flummery and bull-milk in both english and irish in every county represented
it was SO present in almost every district that i was surprised i had never heard of it after several years of studying traditional texts! so thatβs when i dived in :)
I am going to reply to all of these really cool things you are sharing once I am more awake. π§‘
That sounds fascinating and very cool! My dadβs side is directly Scottish via his momβs parents, and on his dadβs side thatβs where we have all the Drummond Clan fancy historyβ¦ which is via the north of Ireland. Oldest traced relative born 1798, first came to Canada around 1820s I think?