#3630: Why Your Hummus Isn't Biblical (It's Medieval)

Hummus isn't ancient. The lemon gives it away. Here’s where the chickpea-tahini combo actually started.

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The hummus you eat today is not an ancient recipe. While chickpeas have been cultivated in the Levant for over seven thousand years, the specific combination of chickpeas, tahini, and an acid is surprisingly modern. The earliest known recipe for something resembling hummus appears in a 13th-century Egyptian cookbook called "Kitab Wasf al-At'ima al-Mu'tada." That recipe, "hummus kasa," used vinegar, not lemon. Lemons themselves are not native to the region and only became common in Mediterranean cooking centuries later, meaning the lemon-forward hummus we know today likely crystallized between the 15th and 18th centuries.

This timeline complicates modern cultural appropriation debates. While Israeli companies like Sabra popularized hummus globally in the late 20th century, Jewish communities in the Levant had been eating chickpea-based dishes for centuries alongside their neighbors. The dish is a shared inheritance from the medieval Arab world, not a recent theft. In contrast, the fava bean spread known as "ful" is the truly ancient legume dish of the region, with every ingredient available in the biblical Levant. The episode concludes that food history is messy and borderless, with today's hummus being a relatively modern stack on a very old foundation of bread and legumes.

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#3630: Why Your Hummus Isn't Biblical (It's Medieval)

Corn
Daniel sent us this one — he's been eating hummus and bread for breakfast every day since he was thirteen, which is either devotion or a cry for help. Ezra's apparently using it as face paint now, which tracks. But the real question is about origins. Hummus is Israel's unofficial national food, yet it's undeniably part of other cultures too, and there's been plenty of noise about cultural appropriation. The puzzle Daniel's poking at is this: lemon juice is a key ingredient, but lemons aren't native to the Levant and weren't around during most of the biblical period. So was hummus actually eaten in biblical times, or was the fava bean the main legume spread of the day? Where did it actually start?
Herman
Oh, this is a fantastic question. And the lemon thing is exactly the right thread to pull, because it unravels the whole timeline. Most people assume hummus is ancient — like, Moses-was-dipping-pita ancient — but the ingredient list tells a very different story.
Corn
Because if you pull lemon out of hummus, what are you left with? Chickpeas, tahini, garlic, salt. still a spread. But is it hummus?
Herman
That's the semantic knife fight we're walking into. Let me lay out what we actually know from the historical record. The earliest written mention of anything resembling hummus — chickpeas mashed with tahini and something acidic — appears in a thirteenth-century cookbook from Cairo. That's the twelve hundreds, Common Era. Not Before the Common Era.
Corn
So we're closer to the invention of the printing press than to King David.
Herman
The specific text is the "Kitab Wasf al-At'ima al-Mu'tada," which translates roughly to "The Description of Familiar Foods." It's an Egyptian cookbook from the twelve hundreds, and it contains a recipe for something called "hummus kasa" — cold chickpeas mashed with vinegar, tahini, and spices. Vinegar, not lemon. But it's recognizably the ancestor.
Corn
Vinegar instead of lemon. That makes sense — vinegar's been around for millennia. You can make it from basically anything that ferments.
Herman
And that's the key. The acid component in early chickpea-tahini spreads would have been vinegar, or possibly verjuice — the juice of unripe grapes — or even sour pomegranate. Lemon enters the picture much later. Lemons originated in South and Southeast Asia, probably in the foothills of the Himalayas. They spread westward very slowly. Alexander the Great's soldiers encountered citron in Persia around three hundred BCE, but that's citron — thick rind, almost no pulp, all pith. Not a lemon.
Corn
Citron is the fruit that looks like a lemon that's been hitting the gym but skipping leg day.
Herman
The actual lemon, Citrus limon, didn't reach the Mediterranean in any meaningful way until the Arab agricultural revolution, roughly the seventh to tenth centuries CE. And even then, it was grown as an ornamental and for medicine for a long time before anyone thought to squeeze it onto food.
Corn
The lemon-on-hummus move is maybe a few hundred years old at most.
Herman
Probably crystallizing as standard practice somewhere between the fifteenth and eighteenth centuries. Which means the hummus we know today — chickpeas, tahini, lemon, garlic, salt — is a relatively modern dish. Delicious, beloved, culturally central, but not ancient.
Corn
That's going to upset some people.
Herman
It always does. Food origin stories are basically secular creation myths. Every culture wants its flagship dishes to be primordial.
Corn
Which brings us to the cultural appropriation question. Israel gets accused of stealing hummus. But if hummus as we know it is maybe five or six hundred years old, and the chickpea-tahini combination originated in the medieval Arab world, then...
Herman
Then nobody alive today invented it, and the modern nation-state framework is a terrible lens for understanding medieval food history. The Levant was a patchwork of empires, caliphates, and overlapping communities. Chickpeas have been cultivated in this region for at least seven thousand years. Archaeological evidence from Neolithic sites in the Levant shows domesticated chickpeas going back to roughly seven thousand BCE.
Corn
Seven thousand years of chickpeas. That's a lot of hummus potential.
Herman
Here's the thing — chickpeas were absolutely eaten in biblical times. The Hebrew Bible mentions "hamitz" or "chimitz," which is usually translated as chickpeas, though there's some scholarly debate about whether it refers to chickpeas or a related legume. What's clear is that legumes were a dietary staple. Lentils, fava beans, chickpeas, bitter vetch — these were the protein backbone.
Corn
What would an ancient Israelite have done with chickpeas? Just boiled them?
Herman
Boiled, stewed, roasted. Possibly ground into a rough paste. There's a reference in the Talmud — which is post-biblical, compiled between the third and fifth centuries CE — to something called "humsa d'talya," which some have tried to claim as early hummus, but the evidence is thin. It seems to have been more of a chickpea-based porridge or gruel.
Corn
"Humsa d'talya." The name is tantalizingly close. But a porridge isn't a dip.
Herman
And tahini — sesame paste — is another piece of the puzzle. Sesame was known in the ancient Near East. There's evidence of sesame cultivation in Mesopotamia going back four thousand years. The word "sumsum" appears in Akkadian texts. But the process of grinding hulled sesame seeds into a smooth paste — tahini as we know it — requires a level of processing that we don't have clear evidence for until much later.
Corn
They had sesame seeds. They had chickpeas. They had garlic and salt. They could theoretically have mashed them together. But we have no evidence they did.
Herman
No recipe, no description, no archaeological trace of that specific combination. And that's not nothing — ancient foodways leave traces. We find residue in pottery. We find textual references in administrative records, in religious texts, in trade documents. Chickpeas show up. Sesame shows up. They never show up together in a way that suggests hummus.
Corn
Meanwhile, fava beans are all over the biblical record.
Herman
Fava beans — Vicia faba — were domesticated in the Near East around eight thousand BCE. They're one of the oldest cultivated legumes in the world. In the Hebrew Bible, they show up in Second Samuel, where it describes food brought to David and his troops — parched grain, beans, lentils, and honey. That's fava.
Corn
If you were an Israelite in seven hundred BCE Jerusalem, and you wanted a legume spread on your bread, it was probably mashed fava beans.
Herman
Fava beans can be cooked down into a paste — it's called "ful" in Arabic, and "ful medames" is still a staple breakfast in Egypt and across the Levant. Slow-cooked fava beans, mashed with olive oil, garlic, maybe some cumin. It's ancient, it's documented, and it requires no New World ingredients, no Asian imports. Every component was available in the biblical Levant.
Corn
Ful is the real ancient legume spread. Hummus is the flashy newcomer.
Herman
Ful is the foundation. And here's where it gets interesting — in modern Israeli and Palestinian cuisine, hummus and ful often share the same plate. You'll see "hummus ful" on menus, which is hummus topped with warm fava beans. It's a beautiful culinary acknowledgment of the relationship.
Corn
The old guard and the new guard, literally on the same plate. There's something almost poetic about that.
Herman
It is poetic. And it reflects the reality that food traditions aren't static — they layer. You don't replace the old thing, you stack the new thing on top.
Corn
Let's talk about the appropriation debate directly. The argument is that Israel adopted hummus from Arab cuisine and then marketed it globally as Israeli food.
Herman
The marketing part is real and documentable. In the second half of the twentieth century, as Israel developed its export food industry, hummus was packaged and sold abroad by Israeli companies. Sabra, for example, was founded in the eighties as a joint venture between an Israeli food manufacturer and an American company. Israeli brands dominated the supermarket hummus category in the US and Europe for decades.
Corn
This coincided with hummus becoming trendy in the West.
Herman
Hummus went from an ethnic specialty to a mainstream supermarket product between roughly nineteen ninety and twenty ten. And Israeli companies were well-positioned to capitalize on that. But the claim that Israel "stole" hummus is complicated by the fact that Jews have been eating hummus in the Levant for centuries.
Corn
Because Jewish communities existed continuously in the region.
Herman
Jewish communities in Jerusalem, Safed, Hebron, Tiberias — these communities were eating chickpea-based dishes alongside their Muslim and Christian neighbors for hundreds of years before modern nation-states existed. When Mizrahi and Sephardic Jews immigrated to Israel from surrounding Arab countries, they brought their food traditions with them. Hummus wasn't something Israelis looked at from across a border and said "we'll take that." It was already inside the house.
Corn
It's the difference between appropriation and shared inheritance.
Herman
That's what makes the debate so fraught. The modern political conflict gets projected backwards onto food history, and suddenly a bowl of mashed chickpeas becomes a proxy war.
Corn
The hummus wars. There was an actual legal dimension to this, wasn't there?
Herman
In two thousand eight, the Association of Lebanese Industrialists filed a lawsuit seeking protected designation of origin status for hummus from the European Union — essentially trying to make "Lebanese hummus" a protected term, like Champagne or Parmigiano-Reggiano. They argued that Israel was unfairly profiting from a Lebanese product.
Corn
How did that go?
Herman
It went nowhere. The EU never granted the status. But it did spark a kind of hummus arms race. In two thousand nine, Lebanon set a Guinness World Record for the largest plate of hummus — over two tons. Israel responded in twenty ten with a four-ton plate. Lebanon then came back with a ten-ton plate, and that record still stands, I believe.
Corn
Ten tons of hummus. That's not a dish, that's a construction project.
Herman
It required a satellite dish to hold it. I'm not making that up. They used an actual satellite dish as the serving vessel.
Corn
Of course they did. The hummus cold war, fought with increasingly absurd serving vessels.
Herman
All of this over a dish that, as we've established, probably originated in medieval Cairo and only acquired its modern form within the last few hundred years.
Corn
Nobody's hands are entirely clean, and nobody's claim is entirely exclusive. That's the unsatisfying truth.
Herman
It's unsatisfying if you want food to validate national identity. It's deeply satisfying if you're interested in how food actually moves through history — which is messily, unpredictably, without regard for borders.
Corn
Let me bring it back to Daniel's actual breakfast. Hummus and bread, every day since age thirteen. What is he actually eating, historically speaking?
Herman
He's eating a dish that crystallized in the medieval-to-early-modern Levant, built on ingredients — chickpeas, sesame, garlic — that have been cultivated in this region since the Neolithic. The lemon juice is the giveaway that this is a post-biblical food. If Daniel had lived in Jerusalem in seven hundred BCE, his daily legume spread would have been ful — fava beans mashed with olive oil, maybe some herbs.
Herman
The bread would have been familiar. Flatbread baked on a hot stone or in a clay oven, probably barley or emmer wheat. That part hasn't changed much. Bread is the constant.
Corn
The breakfast is ancient in structure — bread plus legume spread — but modern in specific execution.
Herman
The format is ancient. The recipe is relatively recent. And that's true of most food traditions — we imagine them as unchanging, but they're constantly evolving. The Italian tomato sauce your grandmother made? Tomatoes are from the Americas. They didn't exist in Europe before the fifteenth century. Thai food with chili peppers? Chilies are from the Americas too. Indian curry with potatoes? Potatoes, also from the Americas. The "traditional" cuisines we fight over are often only a few hundred years old.
Corn
The tomato thing always breaks people's brains. Italian food without tomatoes is basically just bread and cheese.
Herman
Which, to be fair, is also excellent. But yes, the point stands. What we think of as timeless culinary traditions are usually snapshots of a specific moment in global trade.
Corn
If we wanted to reconstruct what a biblical-era legume spread actually tasted like, what would we be working with?
Herman
Fava beans, definitely. Soaked overnight, slow-cooked until they break down. Olive oil — olive cultivation was huge in the biblical Levant, olive oil was a dietary staple, a fuel source, an anointing oil, a trade commodity. Garlic and onions were available. Salt, obviously — the Dead Sea was a major salt source. Cumin, coriander, and dill are all native to the region and show up in archaeological remains.
Herman
Probably not in the smooth paste form we know. They might have crushed sesame seeds and added them — sesame oil was used — but tahini as a primary ingredient in a legume spread is unattested in the biblical period.
Corn
Definitely no lemon.
Herman
If they wanted acidity, they'd reach for vinegar — wine vinegar was common — or possibly sour grapes, or pomegranate juice. Pomegranates are native and show up all over the biblical text.
Corn
Pomegranate juice in ful. That actually sounds pretty good.
Herman
I've tried it. The tartness is different from lemon — fruitier, less sharp — but it balances the richness of the olive oil and the earthiness of the beans.
Corn
Of course you've tried it. You've made biblical ful in your kitchen.
Herman
I've made several versions. The one with pomegranate molasses and cumin was the best. The one with just salt and olive oil was... It tasted like food that meant business, not pleasure.
Corn
"Food that meant business." That's a great description of what most ancient eating probably was. Sustenance first, enjoyment second.
Herman
Though we shouldn't underestimate ancient cooks. They knew what they were doing. The combination of legumes and grains — bread and beans — creates a complete protein. They may not have understood amino acid profiles, but they figured out through centuries of trial and error that this combination kept people alive and strong.
Corn
The Daniel breakfast — hummus and bread — is nutritionally continuous with the ancient Israelite breakfast of ful and bread. Same principle, different bean, different acid.
Herman
And that continuity is, in some ways, more meaningful than whether the specific recipe is ancient. The pattern persists. Legume spread on bread has been breakfast in this region for thousands of years. The bean changes. The acid changes. But the idea endures.
Corn
Which brings me to a question I hadn't thought of before. Why chickpeas over fava beans? What drove the shift?
Herman
And I don't think there's a single clear answer. Part of it is probably texture and flavor. Chickpeas make a smoother, creamier paste than fava beans. Fava beans can be slightly gritty and have a stronger, earthier flavor. Chickpeas are milder, more neutral — they take on other flavors well.
Corn
Chickpeas are a better canvas.
Herman
A better canvas, and also easier to process into a smooth paste once milling technology improved. But there's also an agricultural dimension. Chickpeas are more drought-tolerant than fava beans. They grow well in the drier parts of the Levant. As agricultural patterns shifted over centuries, chickpeas may have simply become more abundant and economical.
Corn
Now fava beans are the specialty item and chickpeas are the default.
Herman
In hummus, yes. Though ful is still widely eaten. If you walk through the Old City of Jerusalem in the morning, you'll find places serving both. Sometimes from the same pot.
Corn
The Old City breakfast tour is something I've been meaning to do properly.
Herman
It's worth it. There's a place near the Damascus Gate that's been serving ful since the eighteen hundreds. Same copper pots. They open at five in the morning and close when the pots are empty.
Corn
A hundred-plus years of the same breakfast. That's a kind of continuity that doesn't need biblical provenance to be meaningful.
Herman
The search for ancient origins sometimes misses what's right in front of us — living traditions that are old enough on their own terms.
Corn
Let's talk about the chickpea itself for a moment. You mentioned seven thousand years of cultivation. Where did it actually originate?
Herman
The Fertile Crescent, primarily. Archaeological evidence points to southeastern Turkey and northern Syria as the center of domestication. Wild chickpeas — Cicer reticulatum — still grow there. The domesticated chickpea, Cicer arietinum, appears in Neolithic sites across the Levant. There are two main types — the larger, lighter-colored Kabuli chickpea, which is what most people think of, and the smaller, darker Desi chickpea, which is more common in South Asia.
Corn
Which one goes into hummus?
Herman
Kabuli, almost always. You want that smooth, pale, creamy result. Desi chickpeas are nuttier and hold their shape better, so they're more commonly used in Indian dal and similar dishes.
Corn
The chickpea spread from the Levant eastward into India, and westward into the Mediterranean. How far back does the Indian chickpea tradition go?
Herman
Chickpeas reached the Indian subcontinent probably by four thousand BCE. They became a staple there, and India is now the largest producer of chickpeas in the world — by a huge margin. Something like sixty-five to seventy percent of global production.
Corn
India has its own chickpea-based dishes, but no hummus.
Herman
Chana masala, dal, besan-based flatbreads and fritters — a whole parallel culinary universe built on the same legume. It's a beautiful example of how the same ingredient can evolve in completely different directions depending on the cultural context.
Corn
We've been talking about hummus as a Levantine food, but it's also a global commodity now. The supermarket hummus aisle is a whole thing.
Herman
It's a multi-billion-dollar global market at this point. And the supermarket versions are... let's say, variable in quality. The industrial process often involves pressure-cooking chickpeas, adding citric acid instead of lemon juice, and using canola oil rather than olive oil. It's hummus in the same way that a snack cake is cake.
Corn
The hummus-industrial complex.
Herman
And the flavor range has gotten absurd. Buffalo wing hummus. Pumpkin spice hummus.
Corn
Pumpkin spice hummus is the culinary equivalent of a cry for help.
Herman
I'm not saying it shouldn't exist, but I'm not not saying that.
Corn
The thing is, the industrial versions have probably done more to popularize hummus globally than any cultural heritage campaign ever could. Sabra putting hummus in every American supermarket did more for hummus awareness than the Lebanon-Israel Guinness World Record war.
Herman
That's true, and it's part of what makes the appropriation debate so complicated. Israeli companies did popularize hummus in the West. That's a fact. Whether that constitutes appropriation or simply successful marketing of a shared regional food is where the disagreement lives.
Corn
The answer probably depends on whether you think food belongs to the people who invented it or to the people who eat it.
Herman
That's the question, isn't it? And I don't think there's a clean answer. Food traditions have always been porous. They've always borrowed and adapted. The strict idea that a dish "belongs" to a specific national or ethnic group is relatively modern. For most of human history, food moved with people, and people mixed.
Corn
The lemon is the perfect metaphor for this. It's not native to the Levant. It came from Asia, passed through Persia, was cultivated by Arabs, and eventually became essential to a dish that multiple cultures now claim. The lemon doesn't care about borders.
Herman
The lemon is an immigrant that became indispensable. There's a whole episode in that.
Corn
If we're answering Daniel's question directly — was hummus eaten in biblical times? The ingredients weren't all available, and we have no textual or archaeological evidence for the specific combination.
Herman
What was eaten was legume spreads based on fava beans, and possibly chickpeas in a simpler preparation — boiled, stewed, maybe mashed with olive oil and herbs. The modern hummus we know, with tahini and lemon, is a medieval-to-early-modern development.
Corn
The fava bean spread — ful — is the true ancient legume dish of the region.
Herman
Ful is the ancestor. Hummus is the descendant. They're family.
Corn
Which is a much better framing than "who stole what from whom." It's a family tree, not a theft.
Herman
Family trees have branches that cross and overlap in ways that don't map neatly onto modern political boundaries.
Corn
One thing I want to circle back to — you mentioned the Talmudic reference, "humsa d'talya." Even if it's not hummus as we know it, the word "humsa" is clearly related to the modern Hebrew and Arabic words for chickpea — "hummus" in Arabic, "khimtza" in Hebrew. The linguistic root is ancient.
Herman
The Semitic root H-M-S or H-M-TZ relates to sourness or acidity. In Hebrew, "chamutz" means sour or pickled. In Arabic, "hummus" means chickpea, and "hamid" means sour. The linguistic connection suggests that chickpeas were associated with some kind of sour preparation even in antiquity — possibly chickpeas soaked or cooked with vinegar or sour grape juice.
Corn
The word "hummus" might originally have meant "sour chickpeas" rather than just "chickpeas.
Herman
That's a plausible etymology. It would explain why the word for chickpea in Arabic carries that sour connotation. The acid was always part of the concept, even if the specific acid changed over time.
Corn
From vinegar to lemon. That's the whole story in four words.
Herman
From vinegar to lemon, from fava to chickpea, from porridge to dip. The evolution is slow but directional.
Corn
There's something almost comforting about that. The idea that breakfast has been legume spread on bread in this region for thousands of years, and the details shift but the structure holds.
Herman
It's continuity without stasis. The tradition lives because it adapts.
Corn
Daniel, if you're listening — your breakfast is part of a lineage that goes back to the Neolithic. The lemon juice in your hummus is a relatively recent addition, but the act of spreading legumes on bread and calling it a meal is about as ancient as agriculture itself.
Herman
Ezra smearing it on his face is probably also an ancient tradition. I'd bet Neolithic toddlers did the same thing.
Corn
Some things really don't change.
Herman
They really don't.
Corn
Alright, one more angle before we wrap. The hummus-as-national-symbol thing — why does this particular food inspire such passion? Nobody goes to war over potato salad.
Herman
Part of it is that hummus is a daily food. It's not a holiday dish, it's not a luxury. It's what you eat on a Tuesday morning. That makes it intimate in a way that a celebration dish isn't. Claiming hummus is like claiming the breakfast table.
Corn
It's territorial in the most literal sense. This is what we eat in our homes.
Herman
And when a food is that fundamental, it becomes identity. It's not just what you eat — it's who you are. Or who you believe yourself to be.
Corn
Which is why the origin question matters so much to people, even though the actual history is messy and shared.
Herman
People want a clean story. My ancestors invented this, it's ours, end of discussion. But food history almost never works that way. It's always more interesting and more complicated than the nationalist version.
Corn
The nationalist version of food history is like the nationalist version of any history — it simplifies, it excludes, and it usually gets the facts wrong.
Herman
The real story — medieval cookbooks, Arab agricultural diffusion, Ottoman trade routes, Jewish migration patterns, modern industrial food marketing — is so much richer. It's a story about connection, not separation.
Corn
The answer to "where did hummus start" is: medieval Egypt, give or take, with roots that go deeper into the shared culinary traditions of the Levant. And the answer to "did biblical Israelites eat it" is: no, but they ate its ancestor.
Herman
That's the summary. And I'd add: the question of who "owns" hummus is probably the wrong question. The better question is how this particular combination of ingredients — chickpeas, sesame, acid, garlic — became so beloved across so many cultures that multiple nations now consider it their own.
Corn
That's the sign of a truly great dish. Everyone wants to claim it.


And now: Hilbert's daily fun fact.

Hilbert: In the nineteen twenties, a German anthropologist working in Vanuatu proposed that the islanders' traditional bamboo water flutes were actually precision instruments for measuring atmospheric pressure, based on the theory that the pitch changed with weather conditions. He published seventeen papers on this before anyone pointed out the pitch changes because the bamboo absorbs moisture and swells.
Herman
That's the academic equivalent of doubling down at the roulette table.
Herman
Here's what I'm left thinking about. We've been talking about hummus as a food with a traceable history, but the deeper pattern is that every cuisine is a palimpsest — layers of influence, trade, migration, and accident, all written over each other. The lemon that seems essential today was once an exotic newcomer. The chickpea that defines the dish displaced the fava bean that came before. What we argue about as timeless tradition is usually just the most recent layer.
Corn
In another few hundred years, hummus might have evolved into something else entirely. Someone will be writing in asking whether twenty-first century hummus is the same as what they're eating in the twenty-fifth century.
Herman
They'll probably be arguing about whether lab-grown chickpeas are authentic.
Corn
"Is cellular-agriculture hummus really hummus?" The threads write themselves.
Herman
And the answer will be the same — it depends on whether you care more about the ingredients or the idea. The ingredients change. The idea of legumes on bread for breakfast has been stable for seven thousand years.
Corn
That's a good place to land. Thanks to our producer Hilbert Flumingtop for the fact and the production.
Herman
This has been My Weird Prompts. Find us at myweirdprompts.com, where you can browse the full archive and subscribe.
Corn
Keep your hummus smooth and your questions sharp.
Herman
We'll be back next week.

This episode was generated with AI assistance. Hosts Herman and Corn are AI personalities.