Oct. 10, 2006 — New evidence shows that people have been slurping up yogurt since at least as far back as the Neolithic Age.
Food particles found embedded in ancient cooking pots reveal that Britain’s first farmers boiled milk and processed it to make foods such as cheese, butter and yogurt, according to a report in the latest British Archaeology.
The find adds to the growing body of evidence that many Neolithic Europeans living 3,000 to 6,000 years ago were dairymen as well as farmers.
In other parts of the world, yogurt-eating appears to have begun even earlier. Earlier this year, another team of researchers found similar milk processing evidence dating to 8,000 years ago from Romania, Hungary and Switzerland.
Early dairy farmers likely made their yogurt and cheese to ensure their food lasted. Processing milk improves storage life of the resulting products, such as ghee and cheese, which lead researcher Sebastian Payne said could have lasted for years without refrigeration.
"The cheese would have been fairly sharp, but I would rather eat strong cheese than starve," said Payne, chief scientist at English Heritage, an organization that supports research on British history.
He and colleagues studied degraded fats on thousands of pieces of ancient cooking pots. Stearic acid — common to animal fats — predominated, and the scientists believe meat dishes were cooked in the pots that showed signs of scorching from being placed over a fire.