How long would you like to vacation in Ancient Rome?

You will have local currency, an escort if needed, clothing etc.

One Day
11.7%
A week or two
31.1%
Few months
19.6%
No thank you.
37.5%
Poll ended at .
@futurebird
Nope. I coincidentally just watched a YouTube video where this guy made his own garum from an old roman recipe and that done did it for me. I don't think it was a life of pizza, and spaghetti like we imagine.

@snork303
You need tomatoes for the pizza and they are from America, and the pasta is Chinese.

Ancient Rome didn't have those ingredients.
@futurebird

@rivas @snork303 @futurebird I think this is in Wikipedia's list of common misconceptions. There were recipes akin to lasagna in the ancient Rome.

Garum is a condiment, like nuoc cham. You're not supposed to feed on this.

@HydrePrever @rivas @snork303 @futurebird Yeah, the food sounds really interesting! "The ancient Roman diet included many items that are staples of modern Italian cooking. Pliny the Elder discussed more than 30 varieties of olive, 40 kinds of pear, figs (native and imported from Africa and the eastern provinces), and a wide variety of vegetables. Some of these vegetables are no longer present in the modern world, while others have undergone significant changes. Carrots of different colours were consumed, but not in orange. Many kinds of vegetables were cultivated and consumed. These included celery, garlic, some flower bulbs, cabbage and other brassicas (such as kale and broccoli), lettuce, endive, onion, leek, asparagus, radishes, turnips, parsnips, carrots, beets, green peas, chard, field greens, cardoons, olives, and cucumber. *** Roman chefs made sweet buns flavored with blackcurrants and cheese cakes made with flour, honey, eggs, ricotta-like cheese and poppy seed. Sweet wine cakes were made with honey, reduced red wine and cinnamon. Fruit tarts were popular with the upper class...." https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Roman_cuisine
Ancient Roman cuisine - Wikipedia

@msbellows A YouTube channel I watch sometimes (which might be what the commenter who mentioned garum saw) is at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5S7Bb0Qg-oE&list=PLIkaZtzr9JDkCHpSx2Kf2XWRcgqjClDff - he reconstructs recipes from ancient Rome and tries them out, and I'd definitely give quite a lot of it a go.

@HydrePrever @rivas @snork303 @futurebird

I finally made GARUM | Ancient Rome's favorite condiment

YouTube

@zeborah

Yes that's the channel. He did a follow up later in which he made garum. It's gross.

@snork303 @zeborah (shrug) it’s salty, has umami… think ‘I don’t want to know what’s in the Greek antecedent to ‘A1 steak sauce’ or soy or Worcestershire sauce.
Garum sauce: ancient Rome's 'ketchup' becomes a modern-day secret ingredient

Also known as colatura di alici, the centuries-old condiment of fermented and salted anchovies adds a sharp, savory flavor to simple pasta dishes

The Guardian