17 of the strangest foods throughout history
Food for thought
Ancient Egypt: fesikh
Ancient Egypt: fesikh
The Iron Age: bog butter
The Iron Age: bog butter
Ancient Rome: dormice
Ancient Rome: dormice
Ancient Rome: garum
Ancient Rome: garum
The Aztecs: human flesh
The Aztecs: human flesh
Imperial China: eggs soaked in boys’ urine
Imperial China: eggs soaked in boys’ urine
The Middle Ages: cockentrice
The Middle Ages: cockentrice
The Tudors: live bird pie
The Tudors: live bird pie
The Restoration: whale poo
The Restoration: whale poo
The Georgians: turtle soup
The Georgians: turtle soup
As demand grew, the soup was increasingly made with tinned or dried turtle, or substituted with mock turtle (boiled calves’ heads and brains). Lewis Carroll later immortalised the mock turtle as a fantastical hybrid creature in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.
The Georgians: mercury
The Georgians: mercury
The Regency period: parmesan ice cream
The Regency period: parmesan ice cream
Pioneer Era: vinegar pie
Pioneer Era: vinegar pie
Native Americans: pemmican
Before the advent of energy bars there was pemmican, a Cree Indian concoction made from ground dried meat and fat. Fruit or berries were also sometimes added. It was commonly made to preserve food and provide sustenance.
Native Americans: pemmican
Indigenous Australians: grubs
Indigenous Australians: grubs
The Victorians: toast sandwiches
The Victorians: toast sandwiches
There's a recipe for toast sandwiches in the Victorian culinary bible, Mrs Beeton’s Book of Household Management. It was served with salt and pepper and deemed a light meal “tempting to the appetite of an invalid”.
WWII: paraffin cake
WWII: paraffin cake
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