A fact from Snail caviar appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the Did you know column on 12 February 2015 (check views). The text of the entry was as follows:
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The following content below was added to the article, but it is entirely unsourced. This article was recently promoted at DYK (see the nomination page), but this unsourced paragraph can disqualify the DYK entry. As such, moving the content here for the time being. Hopefully sources can be found to verify this information. NORTH AMERICA100021:29, 24 January 2015 (UTC)[reply]
As early as 49 BC, snails were being bred to meet the rich clients of such Fulvio Lippino, who would grant the requests from all over the 'Empire', as is wrote by Pliny the Younger,by Columella and in 'de rustica' of Marcus Terentius Varro, also snail caviar is mentioned in the 'de re Coquinaria' by Apicius. At his estate at Tarquinia Lippino had numerous nurseries, distinguished according to the different species: in this way could take separately the white "born in the countryside of Rieti," the Illyrian "characterized by extraordinary size," the African "that are very fruitful ", the unspecified soletane" rich much fame. "Were bred snails in pens near the house, called "cocleari" with a type of farming with a secret formula which then gave rise breeding type 'Roman - alla romana' or Roman snail - lumaca romana and roman caviar.In the Middle Ages the snails and snail caviar had their importance because they are considered a food "lean", but there is no doubt that at all times they have remained a food appreciated by the farmers. At the beginning of the nineteenth century they are in French cuisine and delicacies such as snail bourguignon recipe is already widespread in 1840.