“…Archaeological sources provide very valuable materials that deal with the use of raw materials in ancient times and can make a crucial contribution to the determination of the ingredients and additives used during production. A practical example of this are the archaeological research on the six dolia found in the 'Garum Shop' of Pompeii (Curtis, 1979;Curtis, 1983) conducted by a Spanish-Italian group (Bernal and Cottica, 2010;Bernal et al, 2013), which has allowed new interdisciplinary studies on experimental archaeology of small-scale garum preparations (García et al, 2014). For the archaeological remains of fish or fish sauces in ceramic vessels, studies have focused on organic compounds as fatty acids, sterols and acylglycerol, due to the great physicochemical stability of these compounds (Brown and Heron, 2004;Garnier et al, 2009;Evershed, 1993;Dallongeville et al, 2011;Garnier et al, 2003;Passi et al, 2015;Pecci et al, 2013a;Regert, 2011), that could serve as biomarkers for the identification of ingredients that cannot be detected by bone or pollen analysis (Evershed, 2008).…”