Egyptian Fact or Myth Free E-Liquid Give-a-Way

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levisdaddy

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Reddhott

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i still say myth
i dont think they had blueberries


Pie History from 1300 to 1200 B. C.
rameses iii bakery spiral shaped bread pie history
The bakers to the pharaohs, a king who believes he is god, incorporated nuts, honey, and fruits in bread dough, a primitive form of a galettes. Drawings were found on the tomb walls of Ramses II, located in the Valley of the Kings. King Ramses ruled from 1304 to 1237 B.C. Ramses III of 1186 to 1155 B.C. also used galettes of spiral shapes on tomb walls.



The tradition of galettes, the beginnings of pie, was carried on by the Greeks. These pies were made of a flour and water paste wrapped around meat. This served to cook the meat and seal in the juices.



Pie History Roman times - 234 to 149 B.C.
When the Romans defeated Greece, they brought with them Greek culinary foods like the galettes. The wealthy and educated Romans used many types of meat in every course of the meal, including dessert course (secundae mensea). The secunda mensa was a sweet course or dessert, consisting of fruit or sweet pastries.



Cato the Younger (234-149 B.C.), a politician and statesman in the late Roman Republic, recorded the popularity of this sweet course, and a cheesecake like dish called Placenta, in his treatise De Agricultura, a Latin writing of small farms in Italy. Placenta was more like a cheesecake pie, baked on a pastry base, or sometimes inside a pastry case.



The delights of the pie passed from Egypt to classical Greece and then to Rome and the rest of Europe. The pie was adapted to their customs and food availability as it migrated across the lands.
 

DrBeaker

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From somewhere online....

Blueberry

Blueberries are native to North America. They were eaten by Native Americans (sometimes with meat). They were also used as a medicine. Europeans learned how to grow blueberries and from the late 19th century they were canned.

It was a Myth I made it up.
 
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