Dan Flynn
Do you just accept what they're telling you, or do you analyze, and boil down what they're telling you (to the basic ingredients), to find out ''exactly what the main course, they've just served you, was after watching or hearing it?" I hope so. Are they feeding you lies by the mouthful? I try to boil the answer down in this one. Do you think I succeeded? It's all in the presentation, they say. Oils were used for sauces on fish, foul, and meats of all types, eh? Yup. And? Mutton, beef, chicken, and all cooked meats or fish were? Salted. A pharaoh would need a lot of salt on hand, I'd think. What else would a cook / kitchen keep handy, and would a pharaoh ever feel like a midnight or three in the morning loaf of freshly baked bread? A 24 hour baker, on sight, would be required. You think? Made for content, debate, and the intrigue towards further research on the matters presented. Used under the terms of fair use. As a pharaoh, knowing how the peasants can be, wouldn't you store your extra salt, barley, wheat and oils in coffins, or what appeared to be coffins? Particularly, ''royal ones?'' Drama makes the recipe last longer. Edited to hold only that which was discovered. After watching a show on a new discovering? I found I wasted a lot of time to hear about a recipe, and that was it, blended in with too much conjecture and speculation than anyone should ever be able to put up with. I edited out the drama. Original Egypt's Mystery Chamber Full show https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L01Ry...