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Roman Foods

Feeding an Army... and an Empire

Foods of early days

An early Roman diet consisted of:

  • meat
  • wild fruits
  • nuts

** many names derived from agriculture:

  • pecunia-money;pecu-flocks
  • Cicero-chickpea
  • Piso-miller
  • Caepio-onion
  • Porcius-porcus-pig

Early staples were:

  • grapes
  • olives
  • grain

Fruits

Early fruits were:

  • apples
  • grapes
  • pears
  • plums
  • quinces

because they were abundant and cheap

New fruits introduced later were:

  • apricots
  • peaches
  • pomegranates
  • cherries

These fruits were introduced by Lucullus at Cerasus at Pontus

**Lemons came at the third century**

**THERE WERE NO ORANGES!!**

Nuts that Romans ate:

  • almonds
  • filberts
  • hazelnuts
  • pistachios
  • walnuts

The Romans would introduced their fruits to wherever they settled.

Garden Produce

Vegetables mentioned were:

  • Artichokes
  • Carrots
  • Melons
  • Asparagus
  • Chicory
  • Onions
  • Beans
  • Cucumbers
  • Peas
  • Beets
  • Garlic
  • Poppy Seeds
  • Cabbage
  • Lentils
  • Pumpkins
  • Radishes
  • Turnips

Romans NEVER ate:

  • corn
  • poatoes
  • tomatoes

Early Roman veggies:

  • onions - later considered unrefined
  • beans - later considered too heavy
  • cabbage

The wealthy often imported veggies

Other common veggies

  • cress
  • lettuce
  • mallows

Seasoning used were:

  • poppy seeds
  • anise
  • cumin
  • fennel
  • mint
  • mustard
  • PEPPER from the Orient

Meats

Romans ate beef rarely. It was a mark of luxury and was eaten only on special occastions. When a cow had been sacrificed to the gods, the heart, liver, and lungs would be given to the priests, with certain portions burned on the altar. A reason why beef was rarely eaten was due to its size. Only the coldest weather could allow the beef to stay fresh. Cows were usually used for draft and dairy reasons rather than consumption.

Pork was the most popular. It had several names; sus, porcus, porca, and aper. There were fifty different ways of cooking pork as well as six kinds of sausages based on pork. In the religious ceremony suovetauralia (sus+ovis+taurus), the pig had the first place. Others meats such as mutton and veal was also consumed. Goat's meat was eaten by mostly lower classes.

Fowl and Game

Domestic fowls the Romans ate:

  • chickens
  • dicks
  • geese
  • pigeons

**MOST EXPENSIVE= PEACOCK=UP TO TEN DOLLARS FOR ONE**

Wild fowls the Romans ate:

  • cranes
  • grouse
  • partridge
  • snipe
  • woodcock

The Romans also bred wild animals such as hares and boars, which were roasted and served. The dormouse was considered a delicacy.

Fishes

In the early times, fish was rarely consumed by the Romans. However, before the end of the Republic, this item, either a fresh or rare fish, brought the highest price. There was mullet (mullus) and a kind of turbot (rhombus). Fresh fish were expensive. Rich men had fishponds to breed fish. Salt fish, imported from most Mediterranean harbours, were cheap. A common dish of salt fish, eggs, and cheese was especially popular. Oysters were a delicacy.

Dairy Products

Dairy products used by the Romans:

  • milk
  • cream
  • curds
  • whey
  • cheese (white cheese only... no yellow cheeses)

Cheese from:

  • ewe's milk was more digestible
  • cow's milk was more palatable
  • goat's milk was more popular, but considered less digestible

Honey was used as a sweetener. Salt was used for seasoning. It was first obtained by evaporating sea water, but later it was mined. Salt was a government monopoly, and the price was kept low.

Cereals

The general term for any grain grown for food is frumentum. The word "corn" also referred to grain, but not as the corn (maize) known today.

Romans ate:

  • wheat
  • barley
  • oats
  • rye
  • spelt- - far - its use was gradually only reduced to using for cakes of the confarreate ceremony

Preparation of Grain

The grain was pounded by mortar. The resulting meal was mixed with water and made into a kind of "puls". Men who ground the grain were called pistores or . In later times, bakers were also called pistores because the ground the grain as well as bake the bread.

Grinding the Grain

There was also a miniature version used by soldiers for turning grain. In the later times of the Empire, water mills were introduced.

Porridge to Bread

There were professional bakers as early as 171 B.C..Before that, bread was made by the mater familias or by slaves under her supervision. After public bakeries were open, home-made bread-making was not practiced unless the family was either wealthy or living in the country. The Empoeror Trajan(A.D. 98-117) made it custom to distribute bread daily to the unemployed, instead of giving grain once a month. Bakers were often organized into guilds, enjoying certain privileges and immunities.

Breadmaking

Recipe:

  • Flour
  • Water
  • Salt
  • Yeast
  1. Add all ingredients together.
  2. Knead in trough or a simple machine
  3. Put in mold and bake in oven.
  4. Sprinkle water frequently to get a hard crust.

**Bread was baked in brick ovens. There would a fire in the oven with an opening to provide ventilation. A surrounding chamber contained the heat after the ash pit(usually from charcoal) had been raked out and the opening closed. There was also a receptacle for water for sprinkling the bread. After the oven had been heated, the vents would be closed, the fire raked out, and the dough would be left in oven left to bake.

Kinds of Bread

The best kind of bread was made from fine wheat flour.

Other kinds of bread:

  • bread
  • plebeius
  • castrensis
  • sordidus
  • rusticus
  • name
  • common
  • army
  • dark
  • country

made from...

  • coarse wheat flour
  • flour and bran
  • bran alone

During the first century, white bread was preferred over brown bread, although brown bread was more nutritious. Loaves were circular and flat, divided into slices of three to four parts. Cakes and confections were also produced in some bakeries.

The Useful Olive

Olives were second most important to wheat. The best olives came from Italy. The best oil came from not fully ripe olives, although the most oil came from fully ripe olives.

Olives were used as:

  • butter/fats
  • relishes/dressings
  • fruit(fresh/preserved)

Recipe:

  • olives
  • salt
  1. Sprinkle with salt and leave it alone for five days.
  2. After five days, shake salt off and dry in the sun or keep in boiled grape juice.

Half-ripe olives were picked with stems, placed in jars and covered with the best quality of oil. This was believed to retain the fresh flavor for more than a year. Green olives were pickled in strong brine, or crushed and preserved with spices and vinegar. This would be served as a relish. Aother relish used green, half-ripe, or ripe olives. The olives were chopped into pulp, seasoned with vinegar, coriander seeds, cumin, fennel, and mint. The resulting mixture was placed in jars. Oil was pour over to make it airtight. This would be served with cheese.

Roman Beverages

Grapes were consumed fresh and dried, but GRAPES WERE MAINLY USED FOR WINE!!!

Common beverages were:

  • water
  • milk
  • wine

Wine was usually diluted, with more water than wine. To drink undiluted wine was considered uncivilized by the Romans. Wine was usually cheap enough to be sold at a few cents a quart under the Empire. Mentioned in Latin literature were:

  • mulsum - 4 parts wine - 1 part honey
  • mulsa - water+honey fermented
  • apple cider
  • wine from mulberries and dates
  • cordials from aromatic plants
  • Mead

There was no coffee.. and tea only later empire... but we are not BARBARIANS... we cheat with coffee...

Largely composed from the website Rome Exposed, wuith Legio VI stuff added!

Simple Fare

During the Republic, the Romans ate frugally and sparingly. Their diet consisted of strictly vegetables and cold food. It was simple cooking and table service. The meals were usually prepared by the mother or slaves directed under her. There dishes were made from common crockery/wood and only spoons and fingers were used. During the Republic, EVERYONE of ALL CLASSES ate the same food. Family members sat around a table in the atrium on stools/benches. Dependents ate the same food, but apart from the family. There were no trained cooks. Even in the later times, when an extraordinary dinner was given, professional cooks were hired.

Luxurious living

Wars and travel led to the development of luxurious living to Romans.

The poor ate:

  • dark bread
  • vegetables
  • occasionally meat
  • cheap, diluted wine

On the other hand, some of the very rich overdid imitations of Greek living; they searched far and wide for exotic/costly food(i.e. Petronius Millionaire's Dinner Party) There was a separate dining room with dining couches and slaves served the food. In every rich household, there was a high-priced chef and assistants.

Hours for Meals

The Romans usually ate three meals a day. Some considered two meals more healthy, while others indulged in four, based on the time period, occupation and tastes of the individual.

In early times... In classical times
jentaculum - breakfast jentaculum - breakfast
cena - lunch prandium - lunch
vesperna - dinner cena - dinner

**merenda - in the early times, it referred to dinner, but later it referred to snack.

Formal Dinners

As Rome expanded, it became the norm to have late dinners. This was a social function because there was no other entertainment. A wealthy Roman would be either host or guest at dinner. In the country estates, dinners were less formal but were a "wholesome expression of genuine hospitality".

Dining Couches

Dining couches were lower and broader than common one. It was sloped from front to rear, with cushions at one end of the couch. Refer to diagrams.

Seating Guests

Usually a dining couch would seat three people, although a fourth person could be seated if he/she was a child or an intimate friend. There was often a space reserved for unexpected guests. Uninvited persons were called umbrae, meaning shadows.

Places of Honour

A guest approached the dining couch from the rear, and lie on the left elbow. Diners reclining on the middle couch had the highest couch on his/her left, and the lowest couch on his/her right. The lowest would usually be reserved for the host. If the host alone of the family was present, the two least important guests reclined beside him. If the consul was present, the place designated C on the middle couch was assigned to him. Refer to diagrams.

The Curved Couch

In the early Empire, there were couches for a round table. These couches were called sigma, after the Greek alphabet. The places of honour would be at the ends. The one at the right end of the couch would be the place of the consul.

Furniture and Tableware

In the dining room, other than the table and the couches, there was a sideboard. It varied from a simple shelf to tables of various dimensions to open wall cabinets. Its purpose was to show off silverware. The tables held serving dishes and certain formal articles (i.e. silver salt shaker and offering to gods.) There were no indications of dates. In Augustus' time, ordinary dishes were made of Arretine ware, which were inexpensive and unattractive. Later, graceful glassware and silver services became common. The costs and beauty of tableware were reflective of an individual's means and taste.

From Eggs to Apples

Dinner was often divided into three parts:

  • gustus - appetizers
  • cena - dinner proper
  • secunda mensa - desert

Late Dinner

The dinner hour signalled the end of the day's work. This varied with the season and the social position of the family. It usually started in the middle of the afternoon(between the ninth and the tenth hour) and would at least last for three to four hours. Banquets starting before the ninth hour were called tempestiva convivia, or early dinners. Guests usually conversed through the dinner, although in some houses a trained slave read aloud. In wealthy families, entertainment such as music, dancing and juggling would be provided by hired professionals. At an elaborate dinner, souvenirs were sometimes given.

Serving the dinner

Guests were ushered into the dining room, where the gods were solemnly invoked. This was the equivalent of saying grace. The sandals were taken off and water with towels were carried around for hand-washing. Each guest brought his/her own napkin.

How food was served:

  1. dishes of food came on tray
  2. dishes removed from tray and removed from table
  3. dishes placed on tray and passed in regular order
  4. once the dishes have been passed all the way around, they were placed on tray and removed from table

Between the chief parts of the dinner, the table was cleared and wiped with a cloth or sponge. Water and towels were passed to guests. Between dinner and dessert, there was a lengthy silence while offering to the lares were made with wine, salt, meal, and other ordinary articles of food.

Some etiquette observed with secunda mensa:

  • when ready to leave, guests called for their sandals
  • thus, soleas poscere, meaning "to ask for one's sandals", refers to preparing to leave

Comissatio

Comissatio refers to conversations with drinking in the late hours. The Latin word convivium refers to "living together", which Cato the Elder declared the better choice than the Greek work symposium, meaning "drinking together." Younger men inclined to the Greek view, where dinner proper was followed with a drinking revel. This was referred to as comissatio or compotatio. These gatherings were disapproved due to the amount of wine consumed, lower tone of occasion, questionable amusements, and adoption of certain Greek customs. Such customs included the use of perfumes and flowers, selection of a master of the revels, and a different method of drinking. Perfumes and flowers were used in belief that they delayed intoxication. After dessert and wine, diners annointed themselves with perfumes and put on crowns of flowers. Roses were most popular, thus, it became associated with wine-drinking.

Master of the Revels

The "Master" was chosen by the highest dice tossed. He usually called on some god or sweetheart for luck when throwing the dice. He was then declared the REX BIBENDI - master of the revels (magister, arbiter).

This person determined the water:wine ratio, the drinking rules(dubbed "leges insanae" by Horace), entertainment by the guests, and the penalties/forfeits for rule-breaking.

Drinking Healths

The rex bibendi ordered wine to be mixrd in a large bowl and served in goblets. The ladle would hold approx. a twelfth of a pint. All had to drink the same amount at the comissatio. Wine was drunk in "healths" to an individual. Often the number of letters in a persons' name would be equal to the number of twelfths pints to be drunk in one swallow. Gambling was common at these gatherings. Sometimes, guests spent the evening wandering from house to house, staggering, disrupting the night.

Banquets of the Vulgar Rich

These banquets occurred in the alst century of the Republic and the time of the early emperors. Vulgar nobles and newly rich alike would give ostentatious display of furniture, tableware and food. In present day, these would be considered grotesque and revolting. Examples include: 22 courses to a single cena, wine for hand-washing. Lucullus was reported to have spent $10 000 dollars for a dinner.

 

  • Johnston, Mary. Roman Life. Glenview, Ill. 1957.
  • Microsoft. Encarta 97 Deluxe. Microsoft Corp: Redmond, 1996
  • Rome Exposed Website
  • LEG VI Ferrata Fidelas Constans * 104 Hunters Wood Drive * Summerville * SC * 29485 * 843-437-5587 * The Iron Legion!