Crafting a loaf of bread from scratch can be challenging at the best of times, but when you’re dealing with yeast that’s 4500 years old, your bread-baking game hits expert level.
That's the case for a physicist, video game developer and self-professed ‘bread nerd’ , whose adventures in (ancient) bread-making recently went viral. Teaming up with Egyptologist and microbiologist , Blackley recovered yeast from an ancient Egyptian pot and then did what any respectable bread aficionado would do – baked a loaf with it.
Blackley documented the fascinating process on Twitter, from yeast retrieval all the way through to the end product: a delicious-looking puffed up sourdough, .
“Using a nondestructive (sic) process and careful sterile technique, we believe we can actually capture dormant yeasts and bacteria from inside the ceramic pores of ancient pots,” Blackley wrote on Twitter. “We sampled beer- and bread-making objects which had actually been in regular use in the Old Kingdom.”
After carefully tending to the sample organisms, he added flour milled from grains that would have been common in ancient Egypt. The intention was to emulate Ancient Egyptian bread and baking techniques as closely as possible.
“This is a hobby,” Blackley told . “It’s amateur science, and our intention is to make really good bread and beer. So you can taste what it’s like to be [in Ancient Egypt].”
If you talk to microbiologists around the world, they might tell you ancient yeast is having a moment. In May, scientists 5000-year-old yeast to brew beer, after a team of archaeologists a brewery in a cave located in the northern Israeli city of Haifa.
Back to the bread: once Blackley’s dough rose, it was time to switch to 21st-century methods, proving you can’t go past a trusty conventional oven when it comes to baking the perfect loaf.
The result? Crusty on the outside, light and fluffy on the inside. Perfection, according to Blackley.
And there might be more Ancient Egyptian bread just around the corner.
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