Aristophanes’s menu
Opson (the savory accompaniment to sitos)

Tarichos with Olives, Preserved Fish

PreservingDocumented🧂 🍄facile20 min (plus desalting)

Salt-preserved fish, desalted then served with olives, oil, and a splash of vinegar. Salting concentrated the flavors into a powerful, deeply umami taste that enlivened the simplest meal.

Opson (the savory accompaniment to sitos)

Salt-preserved fish, desalted then served with olives, oil, and a splash of vinegar. Salting concentrated the flavors into a powerful, deeply umami taste that enlivened the simplest meal.

Ah, tarichos! Go to the Agora and listen to those merchants from the Euxine Pontus shouting the price of their salted fish as if they were selling gold! I desalt my pieces in clear water for a whole night, then drown them in oil, vinegar, and black olives. It's the fare of sailors and jurors, and I tell you: with a cup of wine, it beats all the rich feasts I mock on stage!
Aristophanes
Ingredients
  • Salted fish (tuna or mackerel, tarichos)a few pieces (umami base)
  • Black olivesa handful (accompaniment)
  • Olive oilgenerously (binder and smoothness)
  • Wine vinegara splash (acidity)
  • Dried oreganoa pinch (herb)
How it was made : Without refrigeration, salting was THE way to preserve fish caught far away (Black Sea, Spain). Tarichos traveled in amphorae and was a major trade item for Athens. The Greek *garos* (fermented fish sauce, ancestor of Roman garum) served the same umami register to enhance dishes.

See also