Sesame and Honey Itria
Toasted sesame seeds set in honey cooked to the hard crack stage, pressed into a slab and cut into diamonds. Crunchy, deeply sweet, with a faint bitterness from the toasted sesame — and keeps for weeks.
Toasted sesame seeds set in honey cooked to the hard crack stage, pressed into a slab and cut into diamonds. Crunchy, deeply sweet, with a faint bitterness from the toasted sesame — and keeps for weeks.
The road to me is long, mortal, and cold, and without inns. Prepare yourself as sailors and those laid in the tomb did: toast the sesame until it sings under the spoon, boil the honey until a drop hardens in cold water, mix the two with a quick motion and press them before they set. Cut into diamonds. This sweet does not mold, does not turn sour: it waits, faithful, as long as needed. Like me.
- •Sesame seeds — abundant (body of the sweet)
- •Honey — half the weight of sesame (binder and preservative)
- •Fine wheat flour (pinch, optional) — a pinch (structure, according to ancient itrion)
Sesame and Honey Itria
Toasted sesame seeds set in honey cooked to the hard crack stage, pressed into a slab and cut into diamonds. Crunchy, deeply sweet, with a faint bitterness from the toasted sesame — and keeps for weeks.
Why this dish? For the long journey of the shades to the realm where the mist of Achlys reigns, the Greeks knew a sweet that does not spoil: sesame bound with honey, placed in tombs and carried to sea. Provision for the dead as for the living on a journey, it is the offering that defies time — like a primordial goddess, older than the Olympians.
The road to me is long, mortal, and cold, and without inns. Prepare yourself as sailors and those laid in the tomb did: toast the sesame until it sings under the spoon, boil the honey until a drop hardens in cold water, mix the two with a quick motion and press them before they set. Cut into diamonds. This sweet does not mold, does not turn sour: it waits, faithful, as long as needed. Like me.
Ingredients (period version)
- Sesame seeds — abundant (body of the sweet)
- Honey — half the weight of sesame (binder and preservative)
- Fine wheat flour (pinch, optional) — a pinch (structure, according to ancient itrion)
Ingredients
- Golden sesame seeds — 200 g (base)
- Thick honey (preferably thyme) — 150 g (binder, caramelizes)
- Pinch of salt — 1 (enhances sweetness)
- Few drops of lemon juice — optional (prevents crystallization)
Method
- Toast sesame seeds dry in a pan, stirring, until golden and fragrant; set aside.
- Heat honey (with salt and lemon) over medium heat until the hard crack stage: a drop in cold water hardens.
- Off the heat, immediately stir in the warm sesame and mix vigorously.
- Pour onto an oiled surface or baking sheet, spread into a thin slab with an oiled rolling pin.
- While still pliable, score diamonds with a knife; let harden then break apart. Store away from humidity.
How it was made : Sesame and honey cakes are among the oldest attested sweets of the Greek world: Herodotus already mentions sesame and honey cakes among Mediterranean peoples, and they were placed in tombs. Waterless and rich in sugar, they kept for a long time — they are the direct ancestors of the Greek pasteli still sold today.
The contemporary twist : Cut into thin sticks and rolled in a few black sesame seeds for color contrast — an 'ancient' energy bar ahead of its time, ideal for hiking.
Sources : Herodotus, Histories (sesame and honey cakes) · A. Dalby, Siren Feasts: A History of Food and Gastronomy in Greece
Achlys · Charactorium
