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When we say Italian food, we often
think of many popular and delicious dishes
like tagliatelle pasta with Bolognese sauce, chicken
Parmesan, and, of course, pizza.
We rarely think of the dishes that
were popular with the ancient Romans
like dolphin meatballs, parrot heads, and fermented fish guts.
The people of Rome routinely chowed down
on things most modern-day folk would shudder to even think
about putting in their mouth.
Today, we're going to take a look at the weirdest foods
from ancient Roman cuisine.
But before we get started, be sure to subscribe
to the Weird History channel.
And let us know in the comments below what
other culinary topics you would like to hear about.
OK, put your bib on.
We're about to sink our teeth into some creepy Roman food.
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For the people of the ancient Roman world,
meat was a bit of a delicacy, and it was almost exclusively
enjoyed by the rich.
Exotic meats like peacock were even more of a rarity.
The bird was typically served by cooks trying
to impress wealthy guests.
According to a collection of recipes and food
facts from the First Century called Apicius,
peacock was considered a first-ranked dish.
That meant it outranked foods like rabbit, lobster, chicken,
and pork in terms of its value as a luxury.
Roman elites also enjoyed the peacock's eggs,
which were also ranked highest among their counterparts.
Don't eat too much.
Save some womb for this.
Sterile sow's womb may not sound super appetizing to most,
but the ancient Romans really loved it.
To keep their pigs from having piglets,
Romans typically had the animals spayed.
This would ideally keep the animal's womb
pristine in both texture and taste.
Apicius details numerous recipes featuring this delicacy,
which is often accompanied by things like belly flesh
and udders.
There were numerous ways to prepare a sow's womb.
One was to cook it in pepper, celery seed, dry mint, laser
root, honey, vinegar, and broth.
Alternatively, a Roman chef might grill the sow's womb
after coating it in bran and then putting it into a brine.
From all this talk, I kind of do have a hankering for womb now.
I'll stop at the drive-thru later.
One of the ancient Roman empire's most famous gourmands
was Elagabalus, who was emperor during the Third Century
from 218 to 222 CE.
Contemporary writings about Elagabalus
said that he loved hosting fancy dinner parties.
Ancient gossip recorded in the Historia Augusta
claims he was a gluttonous maximus who
lived to serve people the greatest delicacies.
The ancient book even states that he served his own palace
attendants huge platters heaped up
with heads of parrots, pheasants, and peacocks.
Gosh, thanks, boss.
I guess free lunch is a perk.
The Roman affinity for exotic birds
also extended to the flamingo.
Both flamingo and parrot were prepared
by boiling the meat in dill, salt, and vinegar, and later
adding ingredients like leeks and coriander.
Apicius reports the birds would then
be infused with spices like pepper and cumin.
Finally, the meat would be sweetened with dates
and braised.
Some recipes added additional flavors
like mint, celery seeds, and shallots.
When it came to parrots, Romans didn't just eat them.
They also consider them conversation partners.
Pliny the Elder wrote that the parrot
was interesting due to its ability
to imitate the human voice and actually converse.
He noted that "a parrot will duly salute an emperor
and pronounce the words it has heard spoken."
He also observed that "the parrot
is rendered especially frolicsome
under the influence of wine."
There's something they don't teach you in school.
If you want to frolic with parrots, bring a good Chianti.
Archaeologists digging at Pompeii
uncovered the remains of a giraffe bone
that was stuck in the drain of an ancient restaurant.
Butchering marks found in the leg joint
indicated that the animal was used for food.
However, how it got to the restaurant in the first place
remains a bit of a mystery.
This is especially true given that it's the only giraffe
bone ever to be recovered from an Italian excavation.
And to think, if one plumber had just done their job,
this would have never been discovered.
Along with giraffes, the Romans apparently
enjoyed camel at least as an occasional delicacy.
An excavation of an ancient garbage dump in Rome
yielded camel bones, which bore marks
indicative of Elagabalus' strange predilection for eating
the animal's heels.
Why did he do that?
Well, according to one biography,
the emperor frequently ate camel heels
because he was told that one who ate them
was immune from the plague.
Using camel parts as medicinal remedies wasn't uncommon.
Writing in the 5th Century, the Roman physician Caelius
Aurelianus criticized the use of camel's brain
as a remedy for epilepsy, which was apparently
common among his predecessors.
Speaking of folk remedies for epilepsy,
weasels weren't regularly served at Roman feasts,
but they were believed to be handy to have
around for medicinal reasons.
Pliny the Elder took some time off from getting drunk
with parrots to write that as a treatment for epilepsy,
the brains of a weasel were considered very good.
For use as a remedy, the brain was dried up and then taken
in a drink.
Other helpful parts of the weasel
were its liver and uterus or testes,
which would be dried up and then taken with coriander.
Weasel flesh, when combined with salt,
was supposedly helpful for healing people
bitten by snakes.
However, by the Fifth Century, Caelius Aurelianus
challenged the idea that weasel bits were curative
for epilepsy, exactly as he had done for camels' brains.
He turned out to be right, much to the relief of camels
and weasels everywhere.
Brain was a common food.
And if you go to the restaurant Animal in Los Angeles,
it still is.
Brain was frequently mentioned in Apicius
with those of young sheep and cows especially featured
throughout the ancient cookbook.
One notable recipe includes lamb brains along with eggs, pepper,
and, interestingly, rose petals.
Brains were also commonly used to stuff sausages
and other meat dishes.
Apicius' recipe for Apician jelly includes either
the sweetbreads of calf or lamb with a variety
of other ingredients, including but not limited
to honey, raisins, nuts, cheese, and mint.
Once the ingredients were combined,
they were to be covered and chilled, which in those days
typically meant buried in the snow.
The agent Romans didn't use ketchup,
but they loved a good condiment.
Their favorite was a tasty concoction
known as garum or liquamen.
Sold in large and small quantities alike,
garum was prepared from the intestines of fish
and various parts which would otherwise
be thrown away, kind of like a Roman version of the McRib.
The ingredients would be mixed with honey, vinegar,
and other additives.
Garum is even known to have come in kosher varieties.
According to Pliny the Drunk Parrot Guy,
garum was extremely expensive, not like the McRib.
As he tells it, "A garum of mackerel from the fisheries
of Carthage is the most highly prized.
Hardly any other liquid commands such prices, apart
from perfume."
Given that garum was cost prohibitive,
lower class Romans typically opted
to substitute something called allec.
Originally made from anchovies, allec
was basically the remnants of a good garum