(I know this is about Rifftrax, but we don’t have a Rifftrax community.)

  • @Jakdracula@lemmy.world
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    673 months ago

    Have we checked all food to see if exploding them makes them into something better or did we just stop with corn?

    • @SonicDeathTaco@lemm.ee
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      3 months ago

      Let me tell you a little story about brassicas… broccoli, cabbage, bok choi, cauliflower, kohlrabi, canola oil. They’re all this little guy. Edit: Shit! I missed the exploding part. gracile green plant with small yellow leaves that looks nothing like broccoli

    • @FiniteBanjo
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      143 months ago

      I’ve been dipping stuff in hot oil for awhile now and it appears to work for most of them.

      • Flying SquidOP
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        303 months ago

        Bananas are a similar one to corn too. Take something almost entirely inedible and cultivate it into something edible. Makes you wonder what convinced them to start.

          • Flying SquidOP
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            143 months ago

            Could be. We still don’t know why people became sedentary farmers over hunter-gatherers, but it’s happened many times in history.

            Somehow, farming happened independently but around the same time around the world, between 8000 and 10000 years ago. This is everywhere from Europe to the Americas to New Guinea, all apparently independently of each other!

              • Flying SquidOP
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                53 months ago

                Beer was one of the first processed foods, but I don’t think that was the reason for the development of agriculture.

                They were farming taro on New Guinea 10,000 years ago. There’s no tradition, as far as I know, of making alcohol from taro.

            • @Strykker@programming.dev
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              3 months ago

              Saying we don’t know is kinda dumb though, farming allows a population group to massively outperform a hunter gatherer group in terms of food and energy collected over a year, this allows them to have more children, and results in fewer deaths due to accidents while hunting. Farming also means fewer people are required for the same amount of food intake leaving more people free to do other things like develop tools and weapons

              This all snowballs resulting in massive growth that allows the farming group to kill off or absorb any group that doesn’t farm.

              Same as natural selection/evolution, random choices/changes occur and the ones that lead to more children are the ones that last 1000s of years.

                • @hark@lemmy.world
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                  23 months ago

                  If I’m going off my own experience and behaviors, I would assume that laziness made it seem like simply planting things would take less effort than hunting down an animal without doing hard calculations on total calories in/out and without imagining what could go wrong with the “lazy” approach.

                  • Flying SquidOP
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                    43 months ago

                    I don’t think you understand how hard it is to plow a field without draught animals. They didn’t have domestic horses or oxen when farming began. It was incredibly hard work vs. just cutting down wild plants and shooting animals with animals or hitting them with spears. And, of course, processing grains by hand before milling was invented was also very hard work. You can’t just eat wheat as-is. You have to turn it into flour and cook with it.

                    The “lazy” people would be the ones who didn’t want to do all of that and instead just walk around the woods until they saw a deer and then shoot it.

                    The biggest advantage of agriculture over hunter-gathering is storage during cold or dry seasons when foraged food could be harder to come by, but it is not clear that this was an advantage of farming or the reason for it.

                    This isn’t even something we have to infer from ancient peoples. There have been studies of modern peoples that show that hunter-gatherers do not work as hard as farmers, and that is with draught animals and other techniques that were developed after the development of agriculture: https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/farmers-have-less-leisure-time-than-hunter-gatherers-study-suggests

            • @Restaldt@lemm.ee
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              3 months ago

              Ever seen the happening?

              I bet its like that only instead of killing us the plants tricked humans into farming them

        • @Duamerthrax@lemmy.world
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          33 months ago

          Probably used is processed in a dish or alcohol were the seeds didn’t matter much, and over time farmers just made it easier to eat raw because “why not?”