• PugJesus@lemmy.worldOPM
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    5 days ago

    Explanation: Romans were inordinately fond of a kind of fermented fish sauce they called garum. Like wine, it had low-quality varieties, which, also like low-quality wine, were considered the essential part of even a slave’s rations; and high-quality varieties, which could cost a year’s wages for a common laborer for a single container! The Romans put their fermented fish sauce in everything - on their bread, in their porridge, on their salads, even in their wine! De gustibus non disputandem est - there’s no accounting for taste!

      • PugJesus@lemmy.worldOPM
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        8 hours ago

        Difference between modern fish sauce and Roman fish sauce, or difference between low and high quality garum?

        I don’t know the methods of making modern fermented fish sauce, but the big difference with garum quality was location/fish. I forget which kind exactly, but there was a particular fish off the coast of modern-day Portugal which was extremely highly valued as an ingredient for expensive garum, whereas cheap garum would often use a lot of small (and different species of) fish mashed in together. “We made this out of whatever we had, except for the best catches; those went to make good garum” sort of thing.

    • Sergio@slrpnk.net
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      5 days ago

      I dunno, I once got a tube of anchovy paste and I experimented with putting it on a lot of different things - besides pizza, also crackers, bread, pasta, salads (I didn’t try drinking it, tho!) so I kinda get it.