• @[email protected]
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    943 days ago

    This got me for a second until I looked up the actual object.

    It’s made from sandstone, not oatmeal.

    Baking powder wasn’t invented until the 1800s.

    • @[email protected]
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      3 days ago

      It’s made from sandstone, not oatmeal.

      Maybe the one in Edinburgh Castle now is a fake and it got swapped out with the real oatmeal one before England stole it 😂

      Baking powder wasn’t invented until the 1800s.

      They could’ve used trona 😅

      • @[email protected]
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        53 days ago

        There’s also natron and potash which have been known since antiquity, but I can’t find any reference to them being used as leavening agents before the early Industrial era.

        Sodium carbonate (washing soda) is used in baking to encourage browning, but it doesn’t produce carbon dioxide when heated.

        You need sodium bicarbonate (baking soda) which is only a small constituent in trona, and without knowing how to concentrate it, or that you can, it’s unlikely it would have been used as a leavening agent before the advent of modern chemistry. You’d have to add so much that it would ruin the batter or just turn it bitter.

        Sodium bicarbonate (baking soda) turns into sodium carbonate when heated in an oven, which is used by amateur chemists sometimes to make the carbonate if they don’t have it on hand.

        Baking powder is a combination of baking soda and a food-safe dry acid, which react when water is added. This wouldn’t have been invented before the chemistry of acids and bases was discovered.

    • @iAvicenna
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      123 days ago

      god dam it I wanted it to be real

  • @niktemadur
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    133 days ago

    Must have been originally forged by the McDonald clan.

  • @[email protected]
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    153 days ago

    How was it used to crown monarchs? I’m having trouble imagining the scones role in the crowning procedure.

      • @Madison420
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        153 days ago

        Yes and no.

        It’s a national symbol of Scotland stolen by England after putting down Scottish rebellion. There’s another large stone very important to Ireland that was also stolen by the English.

        They then had the Scottish stone put into the seat of a throne so the king or queen sits on Scotland and they had the Irish stone put into basically a footstool and kings and queens would rest their feet on Ireland.

        It’s a diss track via furniture and old rocks.

          • @JK_Flip_Flop
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            43 days ago

            It’s the name of a small village on the site of an Abbey where the kings of Scotland were traditionally crowned.

    • @pulsewidth
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      42 days ago

      66cm x 42.4cm x 26.67cm and 152kg converted from old fogey to metric.

      So yeah big and heavy I’d say.

    • @SirSamuel
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      63 days ago

      Amazing, and thank you for summoning me

      It is highly likely this was the inspiration for the Scone of Stone, but I’m not aware of Sir Terry talking about it. The wiki editors certainly see a connection tho, and I think it’s a fair assumption to make that this is the thing and the whole of the thing