Anaximander’s menu
Poton — the meal-drink that sustains the stomach on the road

Kykeon of wandering—barley, watered wine, and grated goat cheese

TravelDocumented🍋 🍄facile10 min

A thick, nourishing drink: toasted barley flour stirred into wine diluted with water, with grated goat cheese and a touch of herbs. Tangy from the wine, salty-umami from the cheese, it is the "meal you drink" of Ionian sailors and walkers.

Poton — the meal-drink that sustains the stomach on the road

A thick, nourishing drink: toasted barley flour stirred into wine diluted with water, with grated goat cheese and a touch of herbs. Tangy from the wine, salty-umami from the cheese, it is the "meal you drink" of Ionian sailors and walkers.

On the road to Sparta, or standing on the deck of a ship seeking the shores of the Pontus, one does not light a fire. So I stir my barley flour into watered wine, I grate a little cheese from our goats, I mix in a fragrant herb, and I drink my meal in one go. The body holds, the mind stays clear to observe the stars and correct my map. The man who measures the world must first know how to stand steady.
Anaximander
Ingredients
  • Toasted barley flour (alphita)a good handful (nourishing base)
  • Wineone part (liquid base)
  • Watertwo to three parts (dilute the wine)
  • Hard goat cheeseto grate (umami and body)
  • Herbs (mint or pennyroyal)a few leaves (aroma)
How it was made : Kykeon (κυκεών) is attested as early as the Iliad and Odyssey: Homer describes Circe and the beautiful Hecamede preparing it with barley flour, grated cheese, and Pramnian wine. A ritual drink at the Eleusinian Mysteries, it was also the ordinary restorative of travelers and workers. The family-friendly version replaces wine with tangy grape juice.
Sources : Homer, Iliad, book XI (Hecamede's kykeon) and Odyssey, book X (Circe) · Andrew Dalby, Siren Feasts, Routledge, 1996