
Archaeologists have recovered pots of honey from ancient Egyptian tombs that date back more than 3,000 years and remain edible, magnifying the food’s remarkable stability.
🚨: 3,000-year-old honey jars found in Egyptian tombs were still edible.
Honey is the only food in the world that never rots. pic.twitter.com/EwpsJaBipw
— All day Astronomy (@forallcurious) July 7, 2026
This story connects to a June report by The Dallas Express about scientists baking bread using yeast revived from the 5,300-year-old Ötzi the Iceman mummy. Researchers cultured yeast from the mummy’s remains and produced sourdough bread described as “very good.”
Similar efforts include a 2019 project in which physicist Seamus Blackley and archaeologist Serena Love extracted dormant yeast from 4,500-year-old Egyptian ceramic vessels used for bread and beer. They baked loaves using ancient grains such as barley and einkorn. Blackley described the results as having an “incredible” aroma and flavor, per Smithsonian Magazine.
Honey in Ancient vs. Modern Contexts
Ancient Egyptians valued honey highly, using it in religious offerings, medicine, and preservation. It appeared in tomb goods for the afterlife, as seen in finds linked to Tutankhamun’s tomb from the 1922 excavation.
In antiquity, honey served as a wound treatment, sweetener, and preservative. Egyptian medical papyri document its application for infections and intestinal issues. Hippocrates later recommended it for sores, ulcers, and pain relief when mixed with vinegar.
Today, honey retains uses as a sweetener and in some natural remedies, though commercial processing often involves pasteurization and filtration. Raw honey preserves more enzymes, pollen, and antioxidants than heat-treated varieties. Modern honey differs mainly in production scale and potential dilution or heating, which can reduce some bioactive compounds present in ancient samples.
Lessons from Revived Ancient Microbes
These cases demonstrate how dormant microbes can survive for millennia under the right conditions. The Ötzi yeast and Egyptian pottery yeast projects show viable organisms persisting in mummies and ceramics.
Scientists note that such revivals aid research into ancient microbiomes, food science, and potential applications in biotechnology. The low-water, acidic environment that preserves honey also informs modern food preservation techniques.
No evidence suggests these ancient foods offer superior nutrition today, but they provide direct links to historical diets and microbial diversity lost in modern strains. Researchers continue sequencing DNA from revived yeast to compare it with contemporary varieties.
Similar stories include ancient, fermented foods from other cultures, where sealed conditions allowed survival of bacteria or yeast.
Provided by Dallas Express









