Review: YouTuber Max Miller Is Recreating Historical Recipes
From parmesan ice cream to pumpkin spice lasagna

What did the concession stand serve at Roman gladiator fights? Dates stuffed with walnuts and drizzled in honey, apparently.
The online cooking show Tasting History with Max Miller tries to reconstruct recipes mentioned in historical texts, from hieroglyphs and clay tablets to Nostradamus' cookbook (yes, he really wrote one) and cruise ship menus from the Titanic era. Some of Miller's insights are surprising. Ancient Roman food tasted almost Southeast Asian, with fish sauce and pippali peppers. Early ice cream was made with parmesan, and the first recorded recipe for guacamole had molasses in it.
Miller's jaunt through culinary history inadvertently demonstrates the ways that globalization has made life better. Anything with tomatoes and onions together—or cocoa and sugar—was possible only with long-distance trade across continents. Not that the premodern palate was bland; the ancients enjoyed some interesting flavor combinations that are now out of fashion, such as pumpkin spice lasagne or almond milk with wine. It's fun to learn how Julius Caesar or Catherine de' Medici ate, and to realize that in the past even monarchs couldn't enjoy the range of flavors the average person does today.
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Miller's jaunt through culinary history inadvertently demonstrates the ways that globalization has made life better.
If you were right in front of me right this minute, I'd punch you so hard that George Soros would be sucking your teeth out of your anus.
He is talking about food, and only food. Combinations that couldn't exist before the New World was discovered by Europeans.
What a goombah. Go find a cop story and make excuses for their bad behavior. You certainly have no excuses for your own.
That might be true if he'd said "one way."
But he didn't. He said "the ways."
Don't think that wasn't on purpose.
Years ago the Tate Gallery Restaurant (now gone, I think) used to have plenty of old (16C/17C) dishes on the menu. Mostly they consisted of strange cuts of meat, offal, and interesting pies. both sweet and savoury - or both.
Garum isn't fish sauce and the ancient Romans didn't have peppers.
Pippali pepper is a pepper like black pepper, not a chili. Chilis would have to wait for Columbus.
Fish sauce is about as close as we get...but you're right. By all accounts, garum was clear and ideally not pungent. I note that "umami" is not the plural of "umamus". 🙂