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10 oldest dishes that have survived for centuries

etimes.in | Last updated on - Mar 25, 2026, 08:43 IST
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10 oldest dishes that have survived for centuries

Food, at its most enduring, is memory you can taste. Long before recipes were written down or kitchens standardised, certain dishes travelled through time carried not by hands, passed from one generation to the next, adjusted by climate, trade, war and ritual, yet never entirely lost. These are not just meals; they are living archives. A spoonful can hold centuries of migration, survival and quiet continuity. Across continents, a handful of dishes have outlived empires and revolutions, remaining recognisable even today, proof that flavour, when rooted deeply enough, resists erasure. Scroll down to read more.

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Kheer

One of the oldest among them is kheer, the slow-simmered Indian rice pudding that appears in ancient Sanskrit texts. Milk thickened with rice and sweetened gently, it has been offered in temples and homes alike for thousands of years. Its simplicity is deceptive; in every version, whether flavoured with cardamom, saffron or jaggery, there is a sense of ritual, of something made not in haste but in devotion.

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Hummus

From the Middle East comes a dish that is less a recipe and more a philosophy: hummus. Ground chickpeas blended with sesame, olive oil and lemon have been eaten in some form for centuries, with references tracing back to medieval Arab cookbooks. Its endurance lies in its balance, earthy, creamy, bright and in its adaptability across cultures that have each claimed it as their own.

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Tamales

Tamales, wrapped in corn husks and steamed, carry the imprint of ancient Mesoamerican civilisations like the Aztecs and Mayans. Portable, nourishing and deeply tied to maize culture, they were once practical sustenance for travellers and warriors.

Prepared from masa, a dough made of nixtamalised corn, tamales reflect centuries of culinary knowledge. The corn dough is carefully spread, filled and folded before steaming, a process that requires patience but rewards with a soft, fragrant texture that has remained beloved across generations and regions.

Today, they remain central to celebrations, their fillings varying but their essence unchanged, a meal designed to be held, shared and remembered.

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Congee

In China, congee has quietly sustained generations. A humble rice porridge, it has been eaten for over two thousand years, evolving with region and need. Sometimes plain, sometimes enriched with meats or preserved vegetables me, congee embodies comfort at its most elemental. It is the kind of dish that appears at both the beginning and end of life, fed to the ill, the elderly, the newborn, anchoring it firmly in the human experience.

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Ancient flatbread

Bread, in its earliest form, also claims ancient lineage. Egyptian flatbreads, baked as far back as 3000 BCE, laid the foundation for countless variations across the world. What began as a mixture of grain and water cooked on hot stones became a cornerstone of civilisation itself. Even now, every culture carries its own version, but the act, mixing, kneading, baking, remains eerily familiar.

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Pasta

Italy’s pasta, often romanticised, has roots that stretch deeper than many assume. Early forms of boiled dough appear in ancient Roman writings, evolving over centuries into the shapes and textures we know today. What has kept pasta alive is not just its versatility, but its ability to absorb the character of a place, each sauce, each region, telling its own story through the same basic structure.

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Injera

In Ethiopia, injera stands as both plate and bread, a fermented flatbread made from teff flour. Its spongy texture and tangy taste have remained consistent for centuries, despite changing times.

The batter ferments naturally over several days, creating the tiny air pockets that give injera its distinctive surface and softness. This slow process not only shapes the flavour but also reflects a culinary rhythm that values patience and continuity.

Meals are served atop it, eaten with hands, reinforcing a communal way of dining that has resisted modern fragmentation.

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Garum

From ancient Rome comes garum, a fermented fish sauce that once dominated the culinary landscape of the empire. Though its original form faded, its descendants live on in modern condiments across Southeast Asia and the Mediterranean.

Historical accounts describe garum as both a luxury ingredient and an everyday seasoning, produced by fermenting fish with salt under the sun. The resulting liquid carried an intense savoury depth that cooks used to enhance everything from vegetables to meats and stews.

Archaeologists have uncovered large garum production sites along the Roman coasts of Spain, North Africa and Italy, where clay vats once held fermenting fish for weeks under the Mediterranean sun. Amphorae filled with the prized liquid were then shipped across the empire, reaching markets and kitchens far beyond the shoreline.

It is a reminder that even when a dish disappears in name, its essence can echo through other traditions.

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Sushi

In Japan, sushi began not as the delicate art it is today but as a method of preserving fish through fermented rice. Over time, what started as preservation transformed into precision cuisine, yet traces of its origins remain in technique and philosophy, respect for ingredient, season and balance.

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Stew

And then there is stew, arguably the most universal of all. From prehistoric times, humans have simmered whatever was available, grains, meat, vegetables, into something cohesive and sustaining. Whether it appears as a French pot-au-feu, an Indian curry or a Middle Eastern tagine, the idea remains unchanged: to cook slowly, to extract depth, to make something greater than its parts.

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Copyright © May 22, 2026, 11.59PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service