Continuing from the last post,
regarding the planting of seeds in certain climates in the Land of Promise. The
last article ended with a description of the Jerusalem style seed for wheat.
Before finishing the Wheat, let’s
visit what was grown in Jerusalem in 600 B.C. Jerusalem was part of the wheat
belt where the future of flour and bread as a universal food base developed;
grains were wheat, barley (wheat needs
better soil than barley), oats (groat),
millet and emmer (a type of spelt); seedpods of legumes, such as lentils, beans
and chickpeas; vines producing grapes; vegetables, particularly wild garlic and
onions, cucumbers; green seeds such as “carmel” (a spinach), and “melilot”; accordingly,
plentiful was its honey and abundant its olives, with every kind of fruit on
its trees—with olive oil a major product used in numerous ways, especially as a
dip for bread.
The wealth and luxury of King
Solomon's court some 350 years (970-931 B.C.) before the time of Lehi, is
indicated by the daily menu of the palace kitchens: daily provisions consisted
of 30 kors of semolina and 60 kors of [ordinary] flour, 10 fatted oxen, 20
pasture-fed oxen, and 100 sheep and goats, besides deer and gazelles, roebucks
and fatted geese" (1 Kings 5:2-3). The cattle were imported from the
Hauran area (east of the Jordan River), while fatted geese were a well-known
Egyptian dish, prepared to please Pharaoh's daughter, Solomon's wife, who was
accustomed to the pamperings of the Land of the Nile. Sugar cane probably also
reached the region during this period. In fact, when the Queen of Sheba arrived
in Jerusalem she was stunned by the splendor: "When the queen of Sheba
observed all of Solomon's wisdom... the fare of his table, the service and
attire of his attendants, and his wine service... she was left breathless"
(1 Kings 10:5).
By the Second Temple Period (First
century B.C. through 2nd century A.D.), Jerusalem had a variety of
fruits, including: pomegranates, peaches, almonds, nuts, apples, pears of
various kinds, carobs, black strawberries, citrons, peanuts, and pistachio
nuts. Legumes continued to constitute the food staples. Among them were ful
(broad beans), vetches, sweet peas, beans, lentils, peas, lupines, and sesame.
However, the main crops were still wheat, olives, and grapes. Thus, we can say
that when Lehi brought "seeds of every kind" from Jerusalem, they were mostly
wheat, barley, emmer, and oats, as well as all kinds of fruits of the time,
olives, pomegranates, figs, and grapes; legumes. It should also be noted that
when in the Land of Promise, the grains expanded to include corn, neas and
sheum, the latter two being quinoa and kañiwa, two supergrains from South
America that are extremely high in protein and the reason why today South
America produces very little wheat.
It should be noted, that in our day,
wheat has come to dominate the grains we eat with 29-million hectares (1
hectare equals 100 acres) grown in China, 25-million grown in the U.S.,
24.9-grown in India, 23.6-million grown in Russia, 12.6-grown in Kazakhstan,
11.4-grown in Canada, etc. Because wheat contains large amounts of gluten, a
stretchy protein that enables bakers to create satisfying risen breads, it is
almost impossible to make an acceptable risen loaf without at least some wheat
mixed in; however, in B.C. times, wheat was not highly regarded—with most of
the wheat crops used for animal feed; today corn and soy are used in that role.
While Ralph Olsen in his Malay
Peninsula Theory quotes Hunter and Ferguson that small grains of every kind
from the Middle East would have included: “wheat, rye, barley, oats, millet,
sorghum, and rice,” rice was not introduced into Jerusalem until around 350
B.C.
In regard to “oats,” another seed
from the Jerusalem area, which is the highest of all Old World cereal grains in
protein and lowest in carbohydrates. Oats make tasty table fare, but most
cultivars have a tough hull that’s hard to remove. Oats need lots of moisture,
and favor a cool climate and fertile, well-drained soil—again, another grain
that would have done well in the climate of the Lurin Valley where the
Mulekites settled.
Barley is one of the oldest
cultivated grains in the world. Barley flour is low in gluten and is mixed with
other flours for making bread, and anciently, Egyptians buried mummies with
necklaces of barley, and centuries later n 1324 Edward II of England
standardized the inch as equal to “three grains of barley, dry and round,
placed end to end lengthwise.” It is a highly-adaptable crop, growing
north of the Arctic circle and as far south as Ethiopia. Barley (Hordeum vulgare) is a delicious,
nutty-tasting cereal grain, especially good in casseroles, soups, and pilaf.
The grain has an outer hull that is removed before eating, and a “pearl” barley
has been milled to remove the tough husks. Modern science discusses that
Columbus introduced barley into South America, yet barley grows at very high
altitude of 13,000 feet and is found all over the high Andes of Peru where it
has adapted to the extreme conditions, is quick growing.
However,
the European introduced barley never did grow well in South America until
Marino Romero joined the National Agrarian
University La Molina in Lima and founded the Cereals Research Programme.
Growing up in the Andes, Romero was the son of a teacher who was also a farmer,
so he was aware of the importance of barley to the mountain communities. He set
out on a mission to develop new varieties of barley that would thrive above
9,800 feet and would improve the diet, health and economy of the Andean
population.
With the support of the IAEA through its joint
division with the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization, he managed to develop
nine improved varieties of barley over the course of forty years that now
account for over 90 per cent of the barley cultivated in Peru. Marino Romero
died in 2005, but his work was continued by his wife, Professor Luz Gomez
Pando, who since 1998 has led the Cereal Research Programme at La Molina
University. Before the progress of Romero, barley was largely ignored by plant
breeders and researchers since it was associated mainly with beer and animal
feed.
Another grain is Millet, which is
not a single grain but a name given to a group of several small related grains
that have been around for thousands of years and are found in many diets
around the world. They include pearl millet (Pennisetum glaucum), foxtail millet (Setaria italica), proso millet (Panicum
miliaceum), finger millet/ragi (Eleucine
coracana), and fonio (Digitaria
exilis). Millet has grown in Bolivian Andes for sever al thousand years.
Still another grain, Spelt, is very
similar to modern wheat and refers to three ancient varieties Einhorn, Emmer,
and Spelt. This grain is a variety of wheat widely cultivated until the spread
of fertilizers and mechanical harvesting left it by the wayside in favor of
wheats more compatible with industrialization. Spelt can be used in place of
common wheat in most recipes.
As for corn, it was once dismissed
as a nutrient-poor starch—both a second-rate vegetable and a second-rate grain;
however, today corn is being reassessed and viewed as a healthy food.
Anciently, traditional Latin cultures learned how to treat corn with alkali,
creating masa harina. This treatment
liberates the niacin in corn, so those who depend on it for sustenance will
avoid pellagra (disease caused by
lack of nicotinic acid). Also, eating corn with beans creates a complementary
mix of amino acids that raises the protein value to humans. Strictly an
American food, corn was introduced to Europe (like the potato from Peru) from
its history in the Americas dating back to about 2500 B.C., when it is believed
to have spread thorugh much of the Americas; however, corn is credited as being
in the inter-Andean valleys of Colombia between 7000 and 6000 years ago—5000 to
4000 B.C. (Dolores R. Piperno, "The Origins of
Plant Cultivation and Domestication in the New World Tropics: Patterns,
Process, and New Developments," Current
Anthropology, 2011, 52(S4), S453-S470).
This would suggest that the seeds
brought from Jerusalem, if indeed the Mulekites brought any, would have grown,
at least partially, in the Lurin Valley, or what they called the Land of
Zarahemla. We need to keep in mind that any seed, that can get a partial start in a new area, will eventually develop and
after two or three harvests, begin to adapt to the new soils, temperature and
precipitation, thus surviving the change. What we do not find with the
Mulekites is any information, like Nephi wrote, about their seeds growing
exceeding and producing an abundant crop. Thus, minimal harvests, if supplanted
by other foods, fishing and hunting, as an example, a new colony could have
survived long enough for the crops to provide better and more abundant
harvests.
One of the interesting things about
the Land of Zarahemla, being in the areas of Pachacamac in regard to
supplementing food supplies until crops could be counted on, or wild plants
domesticated, is the overabundance of fish and game.
(See the next post, “Growing Seeds in
the Land of Promise – Part III,” for the amazing supplemental food available to
the Mulekites)
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