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Home > Food and Beverages > Cooking > The History of Soy
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The History of Soy
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The soybean has a long history and a very long journey through out the world. This
journey, lasting almost 27 centuries, changed the world that we know
today. Soy products feed a large part of nearly every country's
inhabitants, as well as various non-edible uses. The soybean was first
cultivated by the Chinese. It then spread further throughout China and
to other countries around it. Some time after the domestication of the
soy plant, Europeans too learned about the uses of the soybean and they
started to grow it. Much later, with a hand from Benjamin Franklin, the
soybean made it's journey to America. The soybean has had a lengthy
journey, and one that has effected the whole world.
Soybeans
were first used as early as the 11th century BC by the Chinese.
Soybeans were honored by the ancient Chinese and the emperor Sheng-Nung
named it as one of the five sacred plants. Included with soybeans rice,
wheat, barley, and millet. Soybeans were used in this early
civilization both as food and also as a medicine. Perhaps the soybean
actually helped cure sicknesses because of the vitamins that it
contains. Centuries after the soybeans were being used by the Chinese,
they were domesticated and it is now said that they could be one of the
first crops ever to be grown by humans. It wasn't long after this when
the rest of the world learned about the benefits of the soybean.
Hundreds
of years after the Chinese first discovered the uses of the soy bean
and the domestication of the soy plant, other parts of the world
started using the soy bean too. By the first century countries such as
Korea started using the soybean. Soybeans also became more widely used
throughout china and had spread to Central and southern china. It want
until the 7th century when many other countries started using the soy
bean such as Japan, Indonesia, the Philippines, Vietnam, Thailand,
Malaysia, Burma, Nepal and northern India. Soy was commonly used as an
ingredient in the early ages of it's history and was used to make tofu,
miso, and tempeh. Meanwhile the other European countries still were
still not using the unfamiliar bean.
Long after Asia had started
using the soybean, in the 17th century, Europeans started using the
bean that they had seen in travels to Asia. Yet, even then all they did
was import soy sauce from China. Finally by the 18th century soybeans
were being grown in European countries. Much later, the first soy plant
touched American territory. In 1770 Benjamin Franklin sent his friend,
a botanist, seeds of a soybean. Unfortunately Franklin's attempt was
unsuccessful to spark the interest of America. The true time when
soybeans were finally introduced into America was when a ship full of
soy plants used as ballast landed at a dock. A few farmers interested
in the plant decided to try and grow them, at last the soybean was
being grown in America. Since 1929 the soybean crop has increased form
9 million bushels to over 2.8 billion bushels.
In America
soybeans began to flourish flourish, on the farms and on the markets.
In 1904 George Washington Carver a famous chemist discovered that
soybeans contain large amounts of protein and oil. Later on in 1919
William Morse helped found the American Soybean Association. Henry Ford
known for making automobiles made a car with all of the plastic made
from soybeans! However it wasn't truly until the 1940's when Soybean
farming rocketed.
Soy has a long history and despite it's long
journey,it still can not rest, for even today, people are still finding
new uses for soybeans.
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