Scientists Ate a Stew from a 50,000-Year-Old Bison to See What It Tastes Like

In a dагіпɡ culinary exрeгіmeпt, scientists took a Ьoɩd step into the past by consuming a stew made from a 50,000-year-old bison. Seeking to understand the flavors and textures of ancient diets, these intrepid researchers embarked on a ᴜпіqᴜe gastronomic exploration. By examining the culinary һeгіtаɡe of our ancestors, this ɡгoᴜпdЬгeаkіпɡ endeavor offeгѕ insights into the tastes and culinary practices that shaped human history. This Ьoɩd act of scientific іпqᴜігу сһаɩɩeпɡeѕ our understanding of food, history, and the interplay between culture and cuisine.

“Strong Pleistocene Aroma”

The unusual dinner party would play out at the Alaska home of palaeontologist Dale Guthrie who was instrumental in the retrieval of Blue Babe from the environment. Initial analyses of the bison’s collagen appeared to indicate the remains were around 36,000 years old, but more modern investigations changed this to 50,000 years.

Blue Babe’s speedy transition into a Pleistocene popsicle after its death meant that its muscle tissue was preserved comparably to that of beef jerky with fat and bone marrow to boot. With so much on offer, the research team decided to follow in the footsteps of Russian scientists who had come before them in introducing a little bit of the findings into an evening meal.

“To climax and celebrate Eirik Granqvist’s [the taxidermist] work with Blue Babe, we had a bison stew dinner for him and for Bjorn Kurten, who was giving a guest lecture…” wrote Guthrie of the event. “A small part of the mummy’s neck was diced and simmered in a pot of stock and vegetables.”

Neck Stew

As for why they opted for stew, “Making neck steak didn’t sound like a very good idea,” Guthrie told Atlas Obscura. “But you know, what we could do is put a lot of vegetables and spices, and it wouldn’t be too bad.”

A bit of culinary wizardry may have rescued the flavor, but nothing could be done to revive the contents of Blue Babe’s abdomen, which had evidently spoiled before the animal first froze all those tens of thousands of years ago. Evidence of predation by lions was found in Blue Babe’s neck where tooth fragments remained, but where they’d trimmed the bison’s neck musculature meant the tissue here froze very quickly and so – even 50,000 years later – when it thawed it was quite fresh.

“When it thawed it gave off an unmistakable beef aroma, not unpleasantly mixed with a faint smell of the earth in which it was found, with a touch of mushroom,” Guthrie wrote. “About a dozen of us gathered… on April 6, 1984, to partake of Bison priscus stew.”

And in case you’re wondering how their constitutions fared after dining on 50,000-year-old meat, it seems they did just fine.

“The taste was delicious, and none of us suffered any ill effects from the meal.”

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