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#1 | |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: midway upon... in a forest dark
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Potatoes
Having read the bit of CoH with Mim and his sack of roots this dinnertime I thought... the roots he was gathering were... potatoes. Any thoughts?
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This was the First Age; probably during the Third Age, where we have Sam wishing for "good taters" to stick in his stew, potato cultivation has been around for quite a long time. I've tried Googling "potatoes Mim Turin" and nothing significant I have found. Oh and forgive this thread that is probably brought about by working in the dead of night with a tummy full of potatoes.
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#2 |
Woman of Secret Shadow
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: in hollow halls beneath the fells
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Well I don't know. Potatoes aren't the only edible roots there are, and while they certainly were cultivated in the Middle-Earth of the Third Age, I don't how easy it would have been to find wild potatoes so far in the north on the First Age. According to Wikipedia, at least one wild potato species is found as far north as Texas, and I bet the climate of Beleriand was colder than that of Texas.
I'd imagine they were probably more like swedes or turnips (which grow wild also in the north), or just some random roots which have no name (that I'd know of). Also, there are many types of breads, and eg. swedes taste a bit like a certain kind of sweet rye bread, so it's hard to figure how the roots actually tasted. Hunter-gatherers have always fed on roots, and hunting and gathering is mostly the way also Mîm & co got their food, so no wonder if they knew things the elves &c. didn't.
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#3 |
shadow of a doubt
Join Date: Jan 2008
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Why not? Considering how important potatoes became for the peoples of Northern Europe it's entirely possible this is a reference to the 'taters Sam loved so much several millennia later. But well, potatoes are not really white or fleshy I guess, nor do they taste like bread. Hm. Maybe not after all.
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#4 |
Shade of Carn Dűm
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 347
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I think it rather humorous that Arda has things like "taters", seeing as how they came from the New World, as did Tobacco. LotR, Silmarillion, etc. are supposed to be a sort of pre-history of Europe no? Long before all these New World plants could have gotten there.
Just a comment. |
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#5 | |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: midway upon... in a forest dark
Posts: 975
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#6 |
Guard of the Citadel
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Oxon
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Potatoes are in my opinion and good and at least plausible explanation and it would make sense there were taters in Beleriand.
Talking about climate I took a look at this wonderful book that is The Atlas of M-e by Mrs Fonstad and it appears that in her opinion the region where the outlaws lived, as anyways pretty much all of southern and central Beleriand was a region where west winds blew, much like todays Europe and thinks that a type of Gulf current-like oceanic current brought warmth to Beleriand. This results in mild summers and mild winters and in England, North Central Europe and West Oregon (examples given by Mrs Fonstad). Now, given these circumstances I don't see any problem why the roots could not have been potatoes.
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#7 |
Sage & Onions
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: Britain
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Hi all,
Mim's roots, thats an interesting one. I have heard of somthing called a breadfruit, though I believe its tropical so not too likely in Beleriand, and of course a fruit not a root. I guess potatoes can be 'floury' sometimes, but the usual view is that potatoes tomatoes tobacco etc were imported into Middle Earth from The West via Numenor. They could be swedes, turnips etc, or even some species which was unique to Beleriand and died with it. Anyway I was reminded of the old coffee thread, see here... coffee thread
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#8 |
A Mere Boggart
Join Date: Mar 2004
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If the taters came up when cooked like bread then they were probably King Edwards. The UK's finest floury spud for making big chunky chips, mash, and you can also knock up tater cakes from them - using cold mash and a bit of flour, just mix into a 'dough', roll out and cut into rounds and dry fry them til browned and serve with a big knob of butter. Drrrrrrooooooool.
![]() Aren't chapatis also made from tater flour? Plus spuds will grow in all kinds of climates. Some of the best are harvested up in Scotland, and of course it's the staple Irish food and the climate there certainly isn't balmy. Anyway, all this wondering about why they had taters when America hadn't been discovered is a bit of a red herring because it was Arda. It didn't have an America in it, nor a Europe; it was a fantasy world so there's no problem with them having taters, tobacco, tomatoes and coffee in Middle-earth. ![]() I'm not surprised Elves didn't know about taters though. They probably existed on that vile no-carbs Atkins diet, looking at how skinny they were (I wonder if they also had the bad breath?). ![]()
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#9 | |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
Join Date: Jun 2006
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#10 |
Shady She-Penguin
Join Date: Dec 2004
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Well, at least Gildor's company ate fruit and white bread.
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#11 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
Join Date: Jun 2006
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No, I mean, how did they prepare them? And besides, Gildor's company was travelling, they couldn't prepare food as well as if they were just at home.
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#12 | |
Cryptic Aura
Join Date: May 2002
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#13 | |
Shade of Carn Dűm
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 435
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Well, thanks to the Hobbit, we know they drink wine (at least wood elves do, and it is not unreasonable to assume that Elrond's and Galadriel's elves do as well), as for food, that's a little more ambiguous. Lots of fruit and nuts (in thier seasons) seems to fit with the elves being "closer" to nature than either men or hobbits, and bound in the music. I've always imagined there being a lot of venison as well, but my mind is proably clouded by innumerable images of the "fairy hunt". With thier light silent step and handyness with the bow, elves are however probably incredible hunters and put that skill to use frequently. In fact There is probably little difference in diet between elf and man of comparable means (I say this only beccause there doesn't seem to be an elf pesantry or serf class) except that leves proably relied more on game than domestic animals and probably did not eat as much "processed" food (for the purposes of this argument things pickled, smoked, cured, etc.) (Oh great, now I've got an image of boar and venison smoked over mallorn wood) On the subject that strated this thread, potatoes are certainly a possiblity, though by no means the only one. If you take the argument that "Middle Earth isn't our earth; any plant could have come from anywhere". The number of plants with edible tubers and or roots that are starch becomes frightening, especailly if the other arguments used by some on this thread is considered valid (that Ist age beleriand had a fairly mild climate). If you dont like the "floury potatoes" idea how about something from the genus Discorea (the true yams) there are a lot of kinds most are floury or bread like and some grow quite large. (I seem to recally something about the roots being fist sized or larger), plus a lot grow in poor soil conditions whis the area around the bald hill might qualify as. other (admittedly less likey possibilites) include sweet potato (would have to be a white variety) oca (a bit too waxy and most of the ones I've seen have been pink, not white) "fairy spuds" (a kind of claytonia found in the eastern US (tastes like chesnuts, but we dont know what kind of bread Turin and Co were used to, and chesnut flour is pretty common in some parts of Europe) or a gigantic form of chufa groundnut (Cyperus esculus I think, it's a kind of sedge). There is even a subspecies of domestic vetch found in parts of France, (Vicia sativa var. subterrenea) that produces edible tubers. One second (checks online references) No wait, never mind that doesn't produce tubers it produces cleistomagous flowers that make subterrenian seeds, (like a peanut), sorry about that.) |
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#14 | |
A Mere Boggart
Join Date: Mar 2004
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There might be taters in the Lembas, but I always think of it as a bit like Ship Biscuit but nicer and with less maggots and weevils.
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#15 |
Curmudgeonly Wordwraith
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Or perhaps they indeed kept the remains of the vermin in the lembas as a protein source, but always chose a smaller rather than a larger one (so as not to be conspicuous) -- the lesser of two weevils, as it were.
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#16 | ||
Cryptic Aura
Join Date: May 2002
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I would also think that the elves' miruvor would decompose, dissolve or otherwise cancel out any vermin--assuming that miruvor and lembas were taken together--and would thereby diminish any nutritional value. So there wouldn't be any point in including either a lesser or a greater of two weevils if one was going to imbibe miruvor with them. But then I've always thought of lembas as similar to Yorkshire oatcakes.
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#17 | |
Shade of Carn Dűm
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: The Shire (Staffordshire), United Kingdom
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/stoke/local_her...e_recipe.shtml . |
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#18 | ||
A Mere Boggart
Join Date: Mar 2004
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I've never heard of such a thing! There are Staffordshire oatcakes, which are lush (I had some for second breakfast in fact!). And there are breadcakes in Yorkshire - buns or barms to everyone else. But I've never heard of a Yorskhire Oatcake? Maybe this is some sinister secret foodstuff not available to 'foreigners' like me. I shall have to ask davem the professional Tyke.... ![]()
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#19 |
Curmudgeonly Wordwraith
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It was the only memorable line in the whole movie!
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#20 | |||
Cryptic Aura
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I’ll sing his roots off. I’ll sing a wind up and blow leaf and branch away. Last edited by Bęthberry; 09-24-2008 at 11:26 PM. |
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#21 | ||
Cryptic Aura
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the unbearable lightness of being elves
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![]() Perhaps Tolkien himself considered the divisions of the elves as originating in their culinary differences and preferences. I would be inclined, however, to think that the more southern elves would likely display the unfortunate consequences of consuming the oatcake with the larger amount of sugar. It was perhaps these elves who would leave traces of their footprints in the snow where the northern elves would demonstrate that fabled lightness of slender elves.
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I’ll sing his roots off. I’ll sing a wind up and blow leaf and branch away. |
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#22 | |
Curmudgeonly Wordwraith
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#23 |
A Mere Boggart
Join Date: Mar 2004
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Well Bb, you know, I think I recall one of these sorts of 'oatcakes' back in the mists of my memory. They were the sort of dry, vile thing that your gran might bring back from a day out in Harrogate (as if to underline how thankful you ought to be for being Lancastrian and only ever having to tackle such things as black pudding
![]() They aren't any day-to-day part of the Tyke diet however, unlike the superior Staffordshire oatcake, which is eaten by natives of the county daily (and also by me when I can get them). However, going back to po-ta-toes, I still rather like the idea that Lembas was basically potato cakes.
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#24 | |
Cryptic Aura
Join Date: May 2002
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What is more plausible from my limited view of matters is that Tom Bombadil has quite likely invested a large share of his worldview in these matters. What this has to do with the price of potatoes in lembas I'm not sure but I hear that panic may be ensuing in the fandom for fear that lembas will no longer be consumed by any elves.
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I’ll sing his roots off. I’ll sing a wind up and blow leaf and branch away. Last edited by Bęthberry; 09-26-2008 at 10:02 AM. Reason: for the 'l' of it |
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#25 | |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: midway upon... in a forest dark
Posts: 975
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Though guys, being a nativist-when-it-comes-to-food type of person, who has no great liking of stepping foot in non-Filipino or Chinese pr Japanese restaurants, I have no idea of what an oatcake tastes like.
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