I recently watched my grandmother make bread in her clay oven, a technique passed down through generations in our family. This simple yet profound moment sparked my curiosity about how ancient cooking ...
Something fascinating is happening in kitchens around the world. While everyone was busy perfecting their sourdough starters during quarantine, a much bigger food revolution was quietly brewing.
Women living around the 7th-century Muaro Jambi temple complex in Sumatra, Indonesia, have revived ancient ingredients and cooking techniques to serve one-of-a-kind meals to visitors. Their dishes are ...
The ancient method of feeding many mouths with one pot is as old as cooking itself. "That's the way most people ate way back when," said Paul Wolfert of Sonoma, author of "The Food of Morocco" and an ...
Archaeologists have used new techniques to study the ancient equivalents of modern kitchen tools used by Native Americans thousands of years ago. Today, we have the mortar, pestle and cutting board.
Those old recipes, seemingly left behind in the dust of history, have roots in truly ancient cooking. While wild game and the "three sisters" (corn, beans, squash) were staples in diets of indigenous ...
From social media-driven reinventions of classic dishes to immersive dining experiences in the wilderness, food traditions are being rewritten before our eyes. Culinary heritage isn’t being preserved ...