I am arguably the world’s worst cook, so I avoid it as much as possible. I do, however, love to eat good food, and I suppose I always thought that the purpose of cooking was to turn tasteless and chewy raw ingredients into something delicious. To the extent that I thought about it at all, I assumed that cooking was something that developed somewhere in our evolutionary past when one of our distant ancestors dropped a chuck of raw meat into the fire and it took him a while to fish it out. I visualized a Neanderthal or the like doing this.
Maybe this just displays my general ignorance. Recently, on a long plane trip, I read a book that had a very different interpretation of events and one I found fascinating. It’s an African story; wherever this happened, it was somewhere in Africa. And with the Cradle of Humankind up the road from where I live, it might have been quite close by.
The book is CATCHING FIRE: How cooking made us human by Richard Wrangham. The author is the Ruth Moore Professor of Biological Anthropology at Harvard and an expert on Chimpanzees on the side. This guy knows his stuff. It is sometimes said that we are what we eat. The thesis of this book is that it’s not what we ate that mattered, but that we cooked it first.
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| Professor Wrangham and friends Compare the teeth! |
The book starts out gently explaining that raw food is great except that it takes a long time to chew up and a lot of energy to digest. Much of the food value is wasted. What you need is big, strong teeth, heavy jaw muscles, and plenty of lower intestine. My neighbors up the road here had all that. They were much smaller than humans but had bigger teeth. I did know that. I suppose I just thought that our smaller teeth resulted from our larger overall size and changed diet. Well, right. Professor Wrangham points out that it's diet that drives evolution, never the other way around. It was when our ancestors started cooking their food that two things happened, probably over quite a short space of time in evolutionary terms. The one was that they were now getting much more nutrition from the same amount of food. That’s because breaking down the cellular structure with heat makes the nutrients more easily accessible. The other was that we could eat more quickly. The food was softer, less chewing was required, and less digestion. Over time our teeth changed to reflect that situation and our guts changed appropriately too.
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| Australopithecus Sediba |
The archaeological record shows that humans controlled fire about half a million years ago and maybe much earlier. At Swartkrans in South Africa and at locations in Kenya, there are sites dating back one and a half million years with suggestions of fire use. This physical evidence is disputed so Wrangham turns to biology instead, seeking the change in anatomy that would link with the cooked food.
Over the last two million years, there were only three periods when our ancestors’ evolution was fast and strong enough to justify a change in species names. The crucial one occurred some 1.8 million years ago when Homo erectus emerged from the australopithecines. ‘Suddenly’ we had a much larger creature, one that walked and ran and was probably not well suited to climbing, had smaller teeth, and probably differently structured guts. It had to be fire that allowed the erectus part. The African savanna was not a safe place to be on the ground at night with saber tooth cats all over the place. The australopithecines were probably excellent climbers and slept in trees as all modern apes do. But if you were cooking around a cheerful bonfire, sleeping around it – presumably with a watchman to keep the fire fed – would be safe and comfortable. So the implication is that it was the possession of fire and the rudimentary art of cooking that drove the development of Homo.
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| Skull of Homo Erectus |
That in itself is a pretty intriguing idea. But there’s more. If we were happily eating roasted meat and broiled vegetables all that time ago, why did our brain size develop? It turns out that the development of brain tissue is very expensive in terms of energy demands. Wrangham believes that what we think of as intelligence was needed for social interaction rather than for food gathering. It was the excess of nutrition from the cooked food that allowed the extra resources to feed and develop our brains. Thus it was cooking that led to our intelligence, rather than the other way around.
Wrangham has one final twist. He observes that universally in hunter-gatherer communities, the women do the cooking. (The exceptions are a few instances when men do some culturally significant form of cooking and he dismisses those.) Men do the hunting – or whatever else they want to do – and leave the vital cooking task to the women. In a few societies, it's much more significant for a woman to feed a man than to have sex with him. If she gives him dinner, they're married.
Wrangham toys with the idea that as cooking developed, females could be set upon and have their food stolen, so they made alliances with males, not for sex and procreation as is the conventional wisdom – generally apes don't do that - but for shared food and resources and for defense against food thieves. So much for ‘family values!’ It’s all about food! Wrangham obviously feels very uncomfortable that this prehistoric motivation has settled into modern times as an excuse give women a subservient role. He concludes this chapter with:
“The idea that cooking led to our pair-bonds suggests a worldwide irony. Cooking brought huge nutritional benefits. But for women, the adoption of cooking also led to a major increase in their vulnerability to male authority. Men were the greater beneficiaries. Cooking freed women’s time and fed their children, but it also trapped women into a newly subservient role enforced by a male dominated culture. Cooking created and perpetuated a novel system of male cultural superiority. It is not a pretty picture.”
Michael - Thursday







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