Miss Violaceous
10-28-2005, 10:17 AM
At first blush, I thought Wow! when I read the following, but immediately after my common sense got the better of me.
History of popcorn (http://whatscookingamerica.net/History/PopcornHistory.htm), see the "prehistory" section. It says that 5,600 year-old popcorn was retrieved from a dig and actually popped.
From my understanding, the reason popcorn pops is because when the kernel is heated, moisture inside the kernel builds up into steam, eventually bursting the shell and turning the kernel inside-out.
How the heck are those kernels still going to have that much moisture after 5,600 years at the bottom of an ancient trash heap?
Googling turns up the standard urban legend results of the "fun fact" being repeated on various pages without attribution. Interestingly, wikipedia mentions the old popcorn, but doesn't say it popped.
What say you, dopers?
History of popcorn (http://whatscookingamerica.net/History/PopcornHistory.htm), see the "prehistory" section. It says that 5,600 year-old popcorn was retrieved from a dig and actually popped.
From my understanding, the reason popcorn pops is because when the kernel is heated, moisture inside the kernel builds up into steam, eventually bursting the shell and turning the kernel inside-out.
How the heck are those kernels still going to have that much moisture after 5,600 years at the bottom of an ancient trash heap?
Googling turns up the standard urban legend results of the "fun fact" being repeated on various pages without attribution. Interestingly, wikipedia mentions the old popcorn, but doesn't say it popped.
What say you, dopers?