Thomas Aquinas’s menu
Arab-Sicilian Keep-Sweet (Preserved Confectionery)

Cubbaita — Sesame, Almond and Honey Brittle

PreservingDocumented🍯moyen40 min

A crunchy slab of caramelized honey set with toasted sesame seeds and chopped almonds, perfumed with cinnamon and citrus zest. It is cut into diamonds that keep for weeks: sweet, golden, and crisp.

Arab-Sicilian Keep-Sweet (Preserved Confectionery)

A crunchy slab of caramelized honey set with toasted sesame seeds and chopped almonds, perfumed with cinnamon and citrus zest. It is cut into diamonds that keep for weeks: sweet, golden, and crisp.

From my land of Sicily, beneath the gardens the Saracens once planted, comes this sweet that my nurse gave me as a child at Roccasecca. Melt the honey until it turns blond, throw in the toasted sesame and pounded almond, and stir constantly, for honey burns when neglected. Spread the hot paste on an oiled stone, cut it into diamonds before it hardens, and keep them: they sustain long roads and long fasts better than bread. Eat a piece, and remember that even the bitter labor of study deserves, sometimes, its share of honey.
Thomas Aquinas
Ingredients
  • Honeya good measure (binder and sweetener)
  • Sesame seedstwo measures (crunch, base)
  • Almondsone measure, chopped (richness)
  • Cinnamona pinch (flavoring)
  • Bitter orange or citron zesta little (Sicilian citrus flavoring)
How it was made : Cubbaita (cubbàita, giuggiulena) descends from Arab confections introduced to Sicily: honey, sesame, and dried fruits cooked together form a hard nougat that keeps for a long time without refrigeration — hence its role as travel provisions and festive treat. Refined sugar, cultivated in Sicily since Arab times, and citrus fruits complete this sweet repertoire long before the arrival of New World products.

See also