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The Oldest Cheese Ever Found Was Buried With A Mummy

  • Madison
  • 2 hours ago
  • 2 min read
Turns out the Bronze Age was way ahead of us on fermentation. Here’s how.

Before cheese boards were curated for Instagram or mozzarella topped every late-night pizza, ancient humans were already perfecting dairy fermentation. And in one of the most unexpected places imaginable, archaeologists found proof: not in a pot or a pantry, but in a tomb.


In 2003, deep in China’s Tarim Basin—a windswept desert in modern-day Xinjiang—researchers unearthed something that stopped them cold: chunks of preserved cheese buried alongside naturally mummified bodies from the Bronze Age, roughly 3,600 years ago. Thanks to the bone-dry desert air, the cheese survived the millennia, tucked into the clothing and bags of the dead like a snack for the afterlife.


kefir cheese

Fast forward to October 2024. A team of scientists, including paleogeneticist Dr. Qiaomei Fu from the Chinese Academy of Sciences, published a groundbreaking study in the journal Cell. They sequenced the ancient cheese’s DNA and discovered it was made using a method strikingly similar to how we make kefir today—a tangy, probiotic-rich fermented milk product.


In short: these weren’t primitive cheese-makers tossing milk into the sun and hoping for the best. They were using a mix of lactic acid bacteria and yeast to preserve milk without refrigeration—a combo that not only extended shelf life but also packed a gut-health punch. Long before anyone uttered the word “probiotic,” these early humans were harnessing the power of microbes.


kefir cheese, milk

Wait—What Even Is Kefir Cheese?

If you’ve never tried kefir cheese, imagine something halfway between Greek yogurt and farmer’s cheese. It’s thick, spreadable, and zings with a gentle sourness. Great on toast, in dips, or spooned over roasted veggies, it’s made by fermenting milk with kefir grains (a mix of bacteria and yeast), letting it thicken at room temperature, and then straining off the whey. What’s left is a creamy, cultured cheese that’s loaded with beneficial microbes.


Unlike cheddar or mozzarella, kefir cheese isn’t mass-produced in the U.S. You’ll have better luck finding it at a Middle Eastern or Central Asian market—like LA’s Shalom Produce or Maryland’s Yekta Persian Market—than at your local big-box grocer.

But maybe that’s part of the appeal. Kefir cheese is ancient, intimate, and a little bit mysterious. And it has staying power: the kind of food that doesn’t just survive the ages—it defines them.


Cheese as More Than Just Food

What makes this discovery even more fascinating isn’t just the age or science—it’s the symbolism. The cheese wasn’t tossed aside or forgotten. It was deliberately placed with the dead. That speaks volumes.

This was more than nourishment. It was a ritual. A gesture. A statement. The ancient people of the Tarim Basin didn’t just know how to make cheese—they knew it meant something.

So next time you’re arranging your favorite cheeses for a weekend hangout, maybe throw in a dollop of kefir cheese. Not because it’s trendy, but because it’s timeless.


 
 
 

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