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The History of Popcorn
- Though popcorn probably originated in Mexico, it was grown in
China, Sumatra and India years before Columbus visited America.
- Biblical accounts of "corn" stored in the pyramids of
Egypt are misunderstood. The "corn" from the bible was
probably barley. The mistake comes from a changed use of the word
"corn," which used to signify the most-used grain of a
specific place. In England, "corn" was wheat, and in
Scotland and Ireland the word referred to oats. Since maize was the
common American "corn," it took that name -- and keeps it
today.
- The oldest known corn pollen is scarcely distinguishable from
modern corn pollen, judging by the 80,000-year-old fossil found 200
feet below Mexico City.
- It is believed that the first use of wild and early cultivated
corn was popping.
- The oldest ears of popcorn ever found were discovered in the Bat
Cave of west central New Mexico in 1948 and 1950. Ranging from
smaller than a penny to about 2 inches, the oldest Bat Cave ears are
about 5,600 years old.
- In tombs on the east coast of Peru, researchers have found grains
of popcorn perhaps 1,000 years old. These grains have been so
well-preserved that they will still pop.
- In southwestern Utah, a 1,000-year-old popped kernel of popcorn
was found in a dry cave inhabited by predecessors of the Pueblo
Indians.
- A Zapotec funeral urn found in Mexico and dating from about 300
A.D. depicts a Maize god with symbols representing primitive popcorn
in his headdress.
- Ancient popcorn poppers -- shallow vessels with a hole on the top,
a single handle sometimes decorated with a sculptured motif such as
a cat, and sometimes decorated with printed motifs all over the
vessel -- have been found on the north coast of Peru and date back
to the pre-Incan Mohica Culture of about 300 A.D.
- Most popcorn from 800 years ago was tough and slender-stalked. The
kernels themselves were quite resilient. Even today, winds sometimes
blow desert sands from ancient burials, exposing kernels of popped
corn that look fresh and white but are many centuries old.
SOURCE: Popcorn.org |
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