Aristophanes’s menu
Tragemata (the sweets of the second course, with wine)

Plakous with Honey and Cheese, Symposion Cake

FestiveReconstruction🍯 🧂moyen50 min

A cake of thin pastry sheets filled with beaten fresh cheese and drizzled with fragrant honey, sprinkled with sesame. Rich, sweet-salty, it is the distant ancestor of Mediterranean honey pastries.

Tragemata (the sweets of the second course, with wine)

A cake of thin pastry sheets filled with beaten fresh cheese and drizzled with fragrant honey, sprinkled with sesame. Rich, sweet-salty, it is the distant ancestor of Mediterranean honey pastries.

And now, for the tragemata! When I beat Cratinus at the Dionysia, a plakous like this one was passed around between the couches! We beat fresh cheese with Hymettus honey — that thyme honey the bees of Attica know the secret of — spread it between the pastry leaves, sprinkle with sesame, and drown it all in still-warm honey. Eat it with sticky fingers, citizen, and drink on top: this is how a poet celebrates his crown!
Aristophanes
Ingredients
  • Thin wheat pastry sheetsseveral (structure)
  • Fresh goat/sheep cheesea good amount (filling)
  • Thyme honey from Hymettusabundantly (sweet binder and glaze)
  • Sesame seedsa handful (crunch and decoration)
How it was made : Plakous (from which the word 'placenta' derives, meaning flat cake) is described by ancient authors as a stack of pastry sheets, cheese, and honey. It was a festive dessert served at the symposion. Sugar did not exist: honey was the only sweetener, making these sweets precious.

See also