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Pharmakon-drink (remedy of the Hippocratic tradition)

Oxymel, the honeyed vinegar of physicians

RemedyDocumented🍋 🍯facile15 min

A sweet-and-sour drink of honey and vinegar diluted with water, sometimes flavored with herbs. Refreshing and tonic, prescribed by Greek medicine; it was drunk diluted to quench thirst and soothe sore throats.

Pharmakon-drink (remedy of the Hippocratic tradition)

A sweet-and-sour drink of honey and vinegar diluted with water, sometimes flavored with herbs. Refreshing and tonic, prescribed by Greek medicine; it was drunk diluted to quench thirst and soothe sore throats.

At my age, and in the heat of Sicily, this is the drink I keep near me when calculation dries my throat. Melt the Hyblaean honey in vinegar, dilute with spring water: the sour and the sweet balance like the two arms of my scale, and the right mixture quenches better than wine. Physicians give it against fever, and I assure you — nothing clears the mind like a cool sip between two demonstrations.
Archimedes
Ingredients
  • Hyblaean honeyone measure (sweetness, remedy)
  • Wine vinegarhalf a measure (acidity)
  • Spring wateras needed to dilute (dilution)
  • Herbs (thyme, mint)one sprig (fragrance, optional)
How it was made : Oxymel (oxy- "sour" + meli "honey") appears in the Hippocratic corpus as a therapeutic drink for acute diseases. The ratio varied depending on whether the aim was to quench thirst or to heal; it was often prepared as a storable concentrate.
Sources : Hippocratic corpus, On Regimen in Acute Diseases · Andrew Dalby, Food in the Ancient World from A to Z, Routledge, 2003