I still think Havenero's were introduced by space aliens.
Ancient spacecraft were powered by the deadly peppers....
-WaV

On 7/10/07, [email protected] <[email protected]> wrote:

 Ancient Americans Liked It Hot: Mexican Cuisine Traced To 1,500 Years Ago

*Science Daily <http://www.sciencedaily.com/> —* One of the world's
tastiest and most popular cuisines, Mexican food also may be one of the
oldest.

Plant remains from two caves in southern Mexico analyzed by a Smithsonian
ethnobotanist/archaeologist and a colleague indicate that as early as 1,500
years ago, Pre-Columbian inhabitants of the region enjoyed a spicy fare
similar to Mexican cuisine today. The two caves yielded 10 different
cultivars (cultivated varieties) of chili peppers.

"This analysis demonstrates that chilies in Mexican food have been
numerous and complex for a long period of time," said lead author Linda
Perry, of the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History. "It reveals
a great antiquity for the Mexican cuisine that we're familiar with today."

Perry and Kent V. Flannery, of the University of Michigan, studied
desiccated plant remains from excavations in Guilá Naquitz and Silvia's
Cave, two dry rock shelters near Mitla in the Valley of Oaxaca, southern
Mexico. Guilá Naquitz is famous for its well-preserved plant remains, dating
back to the beginnings of squash cultivation in Mexico some 10,000 years
ago. Arid conditions through the centuries prevented decay of the crop
remains, which include corn, squash, beans, avocados and chili peppers.

This new study focuses on the two upper layers of ash and debris known as
Zone "A" and "Super-A," spanning the period circa A.D. 500--1500. Perry
was able to distinguish different cultivars among the abundantly preserved
chili peppers, a type of analysis that had not been completed on ancient
Mexican chilies.

Perry found that peppers from Guilá Naquitz included at least seven
different cultivars. Peppers from the smaller sample in Silvia's cave
represented three cultivars.

It is unknown whether the cultivars found in the cave correspond to modern
varieties, or if they were types that died out after the arrival of
Europeans in Mexico. Perry said one looks like a Tabasco pepper and another
like a cayenne pepper, but it is difficult to know how closely related they
are to modern varieties without a genetic analysis.

"What was interesting to me was that we were able to determine that they
were using the peppers both dried and fresh," Perry said. (Chilies broken
while fresh had a recognizable breakage pattern.) "It shows us that ancient
Mexican food was very much like today. They would have used fresh peppers in
salsas or in immediate preparation, and they would have used the dried
peppers to toss into stews or to grind up into sauces like moles."

During the period circa A.D. 500--1500, the caves served as temporary
camps and storage areas for farmers from Mitla--a major town on the river of
the same name--whose cultivated fields evidently extended to the slopes of
the piedmont below Guilá Naquitz and Silvia's Cave. The Zapotec-speaking
people planted crops in several environmental zones--river bottoms, piedmont
and mountains-- probably as a way of buffering risk; it also added variety
to the diet.

"In the cave deposits, we can see excellent documentation for the
sophistication of the agriculture and the cuisine at this point in time,"
Perry said. "You don't grow seven different kinds of chilies unless you're
cooking some pretty interesting food."

The study will be published the week of July 9 in the online edition of
the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

*Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by
Smithsonian.*

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/07/070709171645.htm



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