Friday, August 25, 2017

A Brief History of Gingerbread



  Have you ever met someone who doesn’t like gingerbread? I haven’t, and    probably never will. It’s universally loved…well maybe just Earthly loved. I don’t know how they feel about it on other planets. 

Take me to your bakery


      Gingerbread dates way back to ancient times. An early form of gingerbread can be traced to the Greeks and Egyptians who used it for medicinal and ceremonial purposes.

                  
Take two Gingerbread men and call me in the morning




There are several different versions of how gingerbread made its way to Europe.
 One story is that 11th-century crusaders brought the spice back from the Middle East. 
Another is in 992 CE. an Armenian monk, Gregory of Nicopolis left Nicopolis
Pompeii, to live in Bondaroy (France), near the town of Pithiviers. He stayed there 
seven years and taught gingerbread baking to French Christians. He died in 999.CE


             From then on gingerbread could be found in many countries and cultures. Each making it unique in their own way. Until it eventually evolved into the delicious, versatile, sweet treat, we all know and love today.
 
Go fetch me some gingerbreadius yummius




     According to Amanda Fiegl@smithsonian.com
 " Gingerbread was a favorite treat at festivals and fairs in medieval Europe. Often shaped and decorated to look like flowers, birds, animals or even armor—and several cities in France and England hosted regular "gingerbread fairs" for centuries. Ladies often gave their favorite knights a piece of gingerbread for good luck in a tournament, or superstitiously ate a "gingerbread husband" to improve their chances of landing the real thing.”


I  made you this shield out of gingerbread, good luck. 



From medicinal ginger root to sweet tasty treat and back again.
            Tory Avery writes in her article The History of Gingerbread
 "Ginger root was first cultivated in ancient China, where it was commonly used as a medical treatment. From there it spread to Europe via the Silk Road.


During the Middle Ages it was favored as a spice for its ability to disguise the taste of preserved meats.

This chicken tastes terrible. I gots ta get me some gingerbread!


 Henry VIII is said to have used a ginger concoction in hopes of building a resistance to the plague.
 

A Gingerbread a day keeps the plague away
 

Even today we use ginger as an effective remedy for nausea and other stomach ailments. In Sanskrit the root was known as srigavera, which translates to ‘root shaped like a horn’ – a fitting name for ginger’s unusual appearance."

Ginger, in its many uses, and forms, has brought health and pleasure down through the ages.

We may now be as creative as we like, and bake and decorate...


  and write...





and draw...





       and make very sweet little wearable friends...
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               Wonderful, Wonderful, Gingerbread.







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