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The Ancient Greeks and food One of the most
delicious home-made desserts now sold throughout the year in most patisseries, is the
so-called "melomakarona" (which translates as "honey-cake" or
literally as "honey-pasta"). This is a dessert known since the Byzantine times
as "finikia" ("palm-tree fruits"), a name still used in many Greek
areas.
Finikia (melomakarona) were so named due to their colour resemblance to the palm-tree
fruit, the dates. The ingredients used for making melomakarona (flour, oil, walnuts and
honey) can be traced in our country from the dawn of civilization.
It is not certain whether melomakarona/finikia were known in Ancient Greece. It is
possible that they were included in a group of desserts generally known as
"plakountes" (cakes) which were made from first class flour, oil, dried fruit,
milk, eggs and honey and were shaped either by hand or wooden moulds. It is certain that
the cakes known today as "skaltsounia" (turnovers) were included in the
"plakountes" group.
But let us have a look at the diet of Ancient Greeks during the classical era.
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