"Then Jacob gave Esau bread and pottage of lentiles..."
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§ Home § Search § FoodTales § Any comments?LentilsThis little baby goes all the way back to 8000 to 7000 BCE, in southwestern Asia on the fertile lands that now border the Indus River. From there it spread all over the Mideast and to northeast Africa, then to India and to Eastern Europe. In Genesis 25: 30-34, of course, Esau--famished after a day of hunting--sold his birthright to his brother Jacob for a mess of potage, meaning red lentils--and in many cuisines the culinary term Esau has come to mean lentil.
The bean itself is the seed of a small shrub, shaped like a lens (get it? Latin, lens, lentis). 17th-century scientists accordingly named their convex glass invention a lens. Egyptians ate it; Greeks too; also Romans. Aristophanes, reflecting on its reputation for feeding the poor, has a snobby character say of a nouveau riche friend, "Now he doesn't eat lentils anymore." Much later, Robespierre played a different riff on the same instrument--no gourmet himself, this humorless man of principle wanted the French to eat a dish of lentils with love of the Patrie as its only seasoning. Lentils come in different forms: brown (the famous French lentille blondes); brown masoor lentils, which are red and tender; green, or Egyptian, lentils; red lentils, which are orange-pink in color; and masoor dal--just the brown masoor bean with the seed coat removed. For more family gossip, see beans. For the last word in lentils, consider the following poem "Song to the Lentil" by Roy Blount, Jr.:
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