this post was submitted on 04 Nov 2024
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Who the hell thought, “OK, so it killed Bill, but I think there’s something here. We just need to keep trying.”
There are lots of wild foods that are poisonous, but that didn't stop our ancestors from figuring out ways to make them edible. In the case of bitter almonds I can find a reference to baking and boiling being effective methods of reducing cyanide content. Cold leaching might also work but it would take a lot more time.
I have to imagine that dire necessity was a catalyst for these discoveries. I'm guessing the thought process was more like "These are bitter as shit and they killed Bill, but we're gonna starve to death if we don't find some food, so let me try boiling these to see if the bitter goes away."
Additionally, cyanide toxicity is mostly something that happens over time. Unproccesed Cassava will kill you, but not after the first meal.
Boiling also works to make acorns ~~edible~~ ~~consumable~~ less lethal. They still taste kinda bad though.
Because almonds are tasty as fuck. As long as someone else is testing the new strains that is a sacrifice I am willing to make.
Also, everything gets taste tested during a for real famine.
I imagine wild almonds probably taste like burning
I don't really think almonds taste good imo. They're pretty bland to me.
The nuts are bunk, but the extract is where it's at!
You are entitled to your own opinion irrespectivly of how wrong it is.
fair enough haha
I'm not a big fan of almonds by themselves, but I love almond butter, almond milk, and roasted almonds.