Akhenaten’s menu
Shabou en ouât (the road provision, tied in a cloth)

Travel Cake of Dates, Figs, and Almonds

TravelReconstruction🍯 🍄facile30 min + 1 h drying

A compact bar of mashed dates and figs, bound with honey, rolled in toasted flour and crushed almonds. Pure desert energy that lasts for days in a cloth without going bad.

Shabou en ouât (the road provision, tied in a cloth)

A compact bar of mashed dates and figs, bound with honey, rolled in toasted flour and crushed almonds. Pure desert energy that lasts for days in a cloth without going bad.

The road to Akhetaton is long, and the sun of my father Aten shows no mercy. My messengers, who carry the tablets of foreign kings, cannot drag pots along: so we crush dates and figs together, bind with honey, roll in toasted flour and almonds, and tie it all in a cloth. It does not spoil, it sustains a man for half a day's march. Slip one into your belt, traveler, and the disk will watch over your steps.
Akhenaten
Ingredients
  • Pitted datestwo handfuls (sweet base)
  • Dried figsa handful (base/binder)
  • Honeya spoonful (binder)
  • Almonds (imported from the Levant)a handful (crunch/fat)
  • Toasted emmer flouras needed (coating)
  • Imported cinnamon/cassia (optional)a pinch (flavor)
How it was made : Pressed fruit pastes (dates, figs) are among the oldest travel provisions of the Near East: very sweet, thus naturally preserved from spoilage, dense in energy. Almonds, sesame, and later cinnamon arrived via Asian trade routes, whose diplomatic intensity under Akhenaten is documented in the Amarna Letters.
Sources : William J. Darby, Paul Ghalioungui & Louis Grivetti, Food: The Gift of Osiris (1977) · Pierre Tallet, Histoire de la cuisine et de la gastronomie égyptiennes (2003)