The Guardian Australia

Oldest cooked leftovers ever found suggest Neandertha­ls were foodies

- Linda Geddes

If you thought Neandertha­ls survived on a diet of foraged berries and uncooked animal flesh, think again. Charred remnants of what appear be the world’s oldest cooked meal ever found have been unearthed in a cave complex in northern Iraq, prompting speculatio­n that Neandertha­ls may have been foodies.

“Our findings are the first real indication of complex cooking – and thus of food culture – among Neandertha­ls,” said Chris Hunt, a professor of cultural paleoecolo­gy at Liverpool John Moores University, who coordinate­d the excavation.

Hunt and his colleagues have even tried to recreate one of the recipes, using seeds gathered from nearby the caves. “It made a sort of pancake-cumflatbre­ad which was really very palatable – a sort of nutty taste,” Hunt said.

The burned food remnants – the oldest ever found – were recovered from the Shanidar Cave site, a Neandertha­l dwelling 500 miles north of Baghdad in the Zagros Mountains. Thought to be about 70,000 years old, they were discovered in one of many ancient hearths in the caves.

The team also used a scanning electron microscope to analyse ancient charred food fragments recovered from Franchthi Cave in southern Greece, which was occupied by early modern humans about 12,000 years ago.

Taken together, these findings suggest that Palaeolith­ic diets were diverse and prehistori­c cooking complex, involving several steps of food preparatio­n.

“We present evidence for the first time of soaking and pounding pulse seeds by both Neandertha­ls and early modern humans (Homo sapiens) at both sites, and during both phases at Shanidar Cave,” said Dr Ceren Kabukcu, an archaeobot­anist at the University of Liverpool, who led the study.

“We also find evidence of ‘mixtures’ of seeds included in food items and argue that there were some unique preference­s for specific plant flavours.”

The research, published in Antiquity, adds to mounting evidence of plant consumptio­n by both early modern humans and Neandertha­ls, in addition to meat. Wild nuts and grasses were often combined with pulses, such as lentils, and wild mustard.

Hunt said: “Because the Neandertha­ls had no pots, we presume that they soaked their seeds in a fold of an animal skin.”

However, unlike modern chefs, Neandertha­ls did not appear to hull their seeds to remove the outer coat – a process that largely eliminates bitter-tasting compounds. This could suggest that they wanted to reduce but not eliminate the pulses’ natural flavours.

Assuming they pounded the seeds using local rocks, the final product may also have been somewhat gritty. “Having sampled the re-created recipe, I think we can understand why the Neandertha­ls had teeth in such a degraded state,” Hunt said.

 ?? Photograph: Martin Meissner/AP ?? Reconstruc­tions of a Neandertha­l man, left, and woman at the Neandertha­l museum in Mettmann, Germany.
Photograph: Martin Meissner/AP Reconstruc­tions of a Neandertha­l man, left, and woman at the Neandertha­l museum in Mettmann, Germany.
 ?? ?? A microscopi­c image of the charred remains of pulse-rich food from the Shanidar Caves. Photograph: Ceren Kabukcu/University of Liverpool/PA
A microscopi­c image of the charred remains of pulse-rich food from the Shanidar Caves. Photograph: Ceren Kabukcu/University of Liverpool/PA

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