Agnodice’s menu
Tragemata (sweets of the "second tables," served at the symposion)

Sesame and Honey Itria

FestiveReconstruction🍯moyen30 min

Thin, crunchy sesame brittle bound with honey, a forerunner of Greek pasteli. Crisp, golden, fragrant: the sweetness of feast days, nibbled while drinking wine mixed with water.

Tragemata (sweets of the "second tables," served at the symposion)

Thin, crunchy sesame brittle bound with honey, a forerunner of Greek pasteli. Crisp, golden, fragrant: the sweetness of feast days, nibbled while drinking wine mixed with water.

On the days when the city honors the gods and meat smokes on the altar, I do not refuse a sweet. I toast the sesame until it sings under the spoon, drown it in hot Hymettus honey, and spread it thin on an oiled board. Sesame, you see, is thrown to young brides so they may be fertile — and I, who have seen so many women give birth, eat it willingly, thinking of all those lives.
Agnodice
Ingredients
  • Sesame seedsa good measure (crunchy base)
  • Hymettus honeyenough to bind (binder and flavor)
  • Olive oila drizzle (for the board)
How it was made : Ancient Greeks knew several sesame and honey sweets; the word *itrion* refers to fine dry pastries mentioned as early as Anacreon and Aristophanes. Since sugar was unknown, honey was the only sweetener, and sesame, imported from the Levant, carried a strong symbolic charge related to marriage and fertility — wedding cakes were made from it.

See also