Augustus’s menu
Cibaria viatica (travel and camp provisions, eaten with bread)

Moretum: cheese paste with garlic and herbs

PreservingReconstruction🧂 🍄 🫙facile15 min

A rustic paste made by grinding dry cheese, garlic, fresh herbs, salt, vinegar, and oil in a mortar, finished with a dash of garum. Green, pungent, and savory, it is spread on bread and keeps for several days: the legionary's snack.

Cibaria viatica (travel and camp provisions, eaten with bread)

A rustic paste made by grinding dry cheese, garlic, fresh herbs, salt, vinegar, and oil in a mortar, finished with a dash of garum. Green, pungent, and savory, it is spread on bread and keeps for several days: the legionary's snack.

Before I brought peace at Actium, I knew the camps, the dust, and the hard bread of soldiers. There, we ground cheese in the mortar with garlic, wayside herbs, a little salt and vinegar, until the paste turned green and bit the tongue. Spread it on your bread, and you will stand a day's march; it keeps, travels, and requires neither oven nor cook. A prince who has eaten this knows what he owes to those who carry his eagles.
Augustus
Ingredients
  • Dry sheep's cheesea good piece (base of the paste)
  • Garlic clovesa few (pungency)
  • Fresh herbs (coriander, celery, a very small amount of rue)a handful (freshness and color)
  • Salta pinch (seasoning and preservation)
  • Vinegara splash (acidity, aids preservation)
  • Olive oila splash (binder)
  • Garum (liquamen)a few drops (fermented umami depth)
How it was made : The *moretum* is celebrated in a short poem from the *Appendix Vergiliana*, which describes a peasant grinding garlic, cheese, herbs, salt, oil, and vinegar in a mortar for his morning meal. It was a popular, nourishing, and long-lasting preparation typical of rural and military Roman life. Rue (a bitter herb) was used in many ancient dishes but is used cautiously today.
Sources : *Appendix Vergiliana*, *Moretum* (ancient poem) · Columella, *De re rustica* (cheese preparations)