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185 facts

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Facts

True, surprising, and completely unnecessary knowledge. Your brain will thank you — eventually.

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3,000-year-old honey found in Egyptian tombs was still perfectly edible

food

We live in a world where most food expires within days, so a food that lasts millennia seems physically impossible.

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Fortune cookies were invented in California, not China

food

Fortune cookies are so deeply associated with Chinese restaurants in the West that discovering they're a California invention feels like cultural inversion — the 'Chinese' food that isn't Chinese at all.

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Carrots were originally purple — orange was a political choice

food

The vegetable we assume is definitionally orange is actually purple by default, and the colour change is arguably a piece of political branding that became universally adopted.

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Ketchup was sold as medicine in the 1830s

food

Ketchup is so thoroughly associated with fast food and condiments that discovering it was once a prescription medicine inverts its cultural identity completely — from the most banal of toppings to a regulated pharmaceutical.

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Aztecs used cacao beans as currency — and counterfeited them

food

Chocolate is one of the most democratised indulgences in the modern world. Discovering that it was once a luxury currency — so valuable it was worth faking — makes its journey from sacred commodity to supermarket impulse buy feel like a cultural reversal.

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Pure salt never expires and has been found usable in 3,500-year-old Egyptian tombs

food

We're trained to think all food expires. Salt is the exception that proves the rule — a substance so chemically stable that it can outlast the civilisation that mined it by millennia and still be safe to eat.

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Gold is completely edible and chemically inert inside the human body

food

Gold's extreme monetary and cultural value makes it feel like something that should interact meaningfully with the body — either nourishing or toxic. Its complete biological inertness makes it simultaneously the most expensive and least useful thing you could eat.

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A 3,000-year-old honey jar found in Tutankhamun's tomb was still perfectly edible

food

The Tutankhamun discovery gives the general honey-never-expires fact a specific, graspable context. A jar of honey that predates ancient Rome by 1,000 years, Greek philosophy by 700 years, and the entire Common Era by 1,300 years — still edible. The timeline makes the chemistry feel visceral.

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Pineapple digests you back — it contains an enzyme that dissolves the lining of your mouth

food

Food is something you eat. Finding that one specific food is simultaneously eating you back — running a mild digestive process on your mouth tissue while you consume it — makes the act of eating feel briefly like a negotiation.

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