[Magdalen] The origins of maize: the puzzle of pellagra (EUFIC)

Lynn Ronkainen houstonklr at gmail.com
Mon Jul 25 13:09:10 UTC 2016


Interesting to think about. Thanks. The article I posted sparked a conversation with a friend who had researched the geography and peoples of Chaco canyon. When their large population seemingly vanished sociologists have posited various scenarios but none of them have included the possible effects of a society falling apart due to advanced symptoms described in the article. 
Lynn

Sent from my iPhone

On Jul 25, 2016, at 7:06 AM, ME Michaud <michaudme at gmail.com> wrote:

The history of food is the most interesting history of all (even more
interesting than the history of the church). When you think about it, you
realize that what we call "Italian" is actually a South American/Asian
fusion. Before the sixteenth century there were no tomatoes, no peppers, no
polenta. No potato gnocci. Macaroni and eggplant came west with Marco Polo
. And before that the coastal Italians ate like Greeks and the upland
Italians apparently subsisted on wheat, barley, carrots, cabbages and
onions, like the rest of Europe.

Food tells us where we come from (African foods in the American South),
where we've been and how & when we've traveled, and who's in charge. Daring
and magical things have been happening around cooking fires and in kitchens
since long before history began.
-M


> On Sunday, July 24, 2016, Lynn Ronkainen <houstonklr at gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Really interesting I thought
> 
> 


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