There will probably be more than one of these posts, since there are a variety of different topics which all end up tied in together. The original post of twitter which started all this off was
hawkwing_lb's: I'm beginning to think that writers of epic fantasy and SF should be required to learn about the anthropology of material culture.This started quite a
(
Read more... )
Comments 24
Reply
Reply
Reply
Reply
Pumpkins are often reserved for use in pies in the US, but they, along with the squash, parsnips, turnips, and eggplants do appear in US grocery stores, so someone is eating them even if not everyone does
That would be me! I eat cabbage, beets, parsnips, turnips (TURNIPS), radishes, summer and winter squash, and an occasional rutabaga. Eggplants are not a staple because Mati is allergic. Buckwheat is a staple in this house, along with millet. I have consistently failed at cooking amaranth.
Reply
Reply
It is something I hear often, that root vegetables taste like dirt. It baffles me.
Reply
Reply
Reply
Reply
Reply
Reply
http://labyrinthine.wikia.com/wiki/More_Work_for_Mother
Off to Leeds in the snow to talk about 18th century cheese routes at the Social History Society!
Reply
Cheese routes? Is this like the hegglers? Or, indeed, the higglers?
Reply
I use the cheese routes and the Berwick higglers, as well as a few other interesting examples like a guy who regularly shipped tobacco from Liverpool to Hull overland and over water, to point out that goods carriage was very often multimodal as well as involving many pairs of hands; it's misleading for scholars to identify 'a' preferred mode, or claim that modes 'competed' with each other, when one single standard freight route often involved road, river, canal, coastal vessel, or some or all of the above.
Reply
Reply
Leave a comment