Alexander II of Macedon’s menu
Symposion drink (oinos kekramenos)

Macedonian Wine with Honey and Water (Banquet Kykeon)

DrinkReconstruction🍯 🍋 🫙facile10 min

A red wine sweetened with honey and diluted with water in the krater, scented with a hint of resin or thyme — the shared drink that opened the Macedonian banquet.

Symposion drink (oinos kekramenos)

A red wine sweetened with honey and diluted with water in the krater, scented with a hint of resin or thyme — the shared drink that opened the Macedonian banquet.

They say in the southern cities that we Macedonians drink like barbarians, wine barely wetted. Let them chatter! Into the krater I pour the wine of our hills, a measure of honey, spring water, and I stir before filling the phials. The first cup goes to the gods, the second to the heroes, the third to friendship — and only then can the night sing. Drink with measure, stranger, for wine too pure confuses even kings.
Alexander II of Macedon
Ingredients
  • Red wine from Macedonia or Thraceone measure (base)
  • Spring watertwo to three measures (dilution)
  • Honeya spoonful (sweetener)
  • Thyme or pine resina pinch (fragrance)
How it was made : Greeks drank wine diluted with water in a krater; drinking it neat was considered barbaric excess — a reputation that the Macedonians, heavy drinkers, indeed carried. Honey, resin (whence modern retsina), and aromatics corrected often harsh wines. The symposion always began with libations to the gods.
Sources : Athenaeus of Naucratis, Deipnosophistae (the krater and mixed wine) · Plato, Symposium (ritual of the symposion)

See also