Apollodorus of Damascus’s menu
Mensa secunda — end-of-meal sweets, and sweet provisions that keep

Damascus Dates Confit in Honey (dulcia domestica)

PreservingReconstruction🍯facile20 min

Pitted dates, stuffed with walnuts and pine nuts, peppered, then confit in hot honey with a touch of salt. A dense sweet that keeps and closes the meal—or comforts the traveler.

Mensa secunda — end-of-meal sweets, and sweet provisions that keep

Pitted dates, stuffed with walnuts and pine nuts, peppered, then confit in hot honey with a touch of salt. A dense sweet that keeps and closes the meal—or comforts the traveler.

Back home in Syria, the date is queen; we have it on every table, from the palm to the counter. I open it, I replace the pit with a walnut or pine nuts—as one fills a formwork before pouring—, I roll it all in salt, then I confit it in hot honey. The salt bites, the honey coats, the pepper awakens: this is how, in Rome, I bring my country into the mensa secunda. Keep them cool, they will endure whatever journey you wish to make them take.
Apollodorus of Damascus
Ingredients
  • Datesa handful (base fruit)
  • Walnuts and pine nutsenough to stuff (filling)
  • Peppera turn (contrast)
  • Salta pinch (salty contrast)
  • Honeyas needed (confiture)
How it was made : Apicius describes "dulcia domestica": pitted dates, stuffed with walnuts, pine nuts, or pepper, salted, then cooked in honey. Sweet, salty, and peppery coexisted without fuss on the Roman table, where the boundary between dessert and main course did not exist as ours does.
Sources : Apicius, De re coquinaria, Book VII ("Dulcia domestica")

See also