Picture of round bread loaf and all its ingredients around.

Re-creating 2,000-year-old bread found in Pompeii, post-Vesuvius

The volcanic eruption in A.D. 79 carbonized buildings’ organic contents, including bread loaves. Now a culinary archaeologist has reinvented the recipe.

Photograph by REBECCA HALE
ByAnnie Roth
May 4, 2021
3 min read

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In A.D. 79 the eruption of Mount Vesuvius buried the Roman cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum in ash and pumice, and carbonized many of their organic contents—including the bread in Pompeii’s bakeries. Farrell Monaco, a culinary archaeologist, researched one popular bread’s history and has re-created the recipe. (See the full recipe here.)

Panis quadratus

In a Pompeii bakery they excavated, archaeologists found an oven full of charcoal-like loaves of this bread. It was named for the four indentations made with a string or reed so the loaf would more easily break into portions. (Pompeii's most recent finds reveal new clues to city's destruction.)

This loaf of panis quadratus was found in a Pompeii bakery, carbonized but intact. Farrell Monaco researched the ingredients and tools of the time to re-create the recipe for this bread.
Photo: DeAgostini, Getty Images

Leavens (starters)

The region’s bakers sometimes used leavens to incorporate live yeast into their bread dough. Unlike today’s typical starters of flour and water, those used by ancient Roman bakers often contained legumes or grape skins to boost fermentation.

Ancient grains

Triticum aestivum, bread wheat, was found alongside panis quadratus loaves during bakery excavations in Pompeii. As the Roman Empire grew, wheat became the main grain for baking. (Buried by Vesuvius, this ancient villa is an overlooked alternative to Pompeii.)

On the table

Dense, with a crunchy crust, the bread is ideal for soaking up wine, soups, and sauces, says Monaco. She grinds grain with a stone hand mill to match the coarseness of ancient Romans’ flour.

This story appears in the June 2021 issue of National Geographic magazine.