Mulsum (drink)

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Mulsum was a Roman wine preparation made with honey .

Mulsum was considered by the ancient Romans to be appetizing, digestive, nutritious and life-extending. The latter by soaking the toothless bread in the Mulsum. Drunk warm, it should also have been a remedy for diarrhea. According to Pliny , Romilius Pollio, who is over a hundred years old, replied to the question of how he reached his old age: "Inside with Mulsum, outside with oil."

Mulsum was often served before a meal or with a starter (see food culture in the Roman Empire ). The starter course was therefore also called promulsis .

According to ancient sources, there were two or three ways to prepare mulsum: according to Pliny, by mixing tart wine with boiled honey, according to Columella , by mixing grape juice with honey, sealing it in a vessel and allowing it to ferment. Martial mentions the production by adding Attic honey to the Falerner wine, which was popular at the time . In the variant described by Palladius , the already fermenting grape must is sweetened with honey and fermented for a while. Vinidarius mixes wine and honey with spiced wine. Dioscorides uses salt as a seasoning ingredient and Apicius adds crushed pepper in his cookbook De re coquinaria .

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Remarks

  1. ^ A b Pliny, Naturalis historia 22, 113.
  2. Columella, De re rustica 12, 41.
  3. Martial, Epigramme , Book 13, Xenien 108
  4. ^ Palladius, opus agriculturae 11, 17.
  5. Vinidarius, Apici Excerpta , Lib. I. Epimeles, 2.
  6. ^ Dioscorides, de materia medica , Book 5, 14.
  7. Apicius, De re coquinaria , Book 1, Epimeles