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Victus; Cibus

Generic terms for food. Both the Greeks and the Romans gave much attention to gastronomy, the latter people, however, getting their knowledge of scientific cookery from the former. The chief sources of our information are, apart from the many causal allusions in the classic writers in general, Athenaeus (whose Deipnosophistae is full of curious lore regarding food, cookery, and the ana of distinguished epicures), Pliny the Elder, and the pseudo-Apicius. (See Apicius; Athenaeus; Plinius.) As early as the second century B.C. there existed special dictionaries of terms employed in cookery. See Lexicon.

The articles of diet found in the ancient menus include most of the things that are eaten in modern times—the fish, flesh, and fowl at any rate. Of the fish, the mullet (mullus), turbot (rhombus), and carp (cyprinus) were especially prized. A sort of fish-sauce (garum), resembling anchovy-sauce or perhaps caviare, was also held in high esteem by gourmets. Oysters were dear in price and greatly liked, the best natives coming from Circeii. British oysters were imported from Rutupiae (Richborough), on the southern coast of Britain. Of meats, pork was held to be a dainty, whether as ham (perna) or in the form of glandulae, over which the parasite in the Captivi of Plautus grows so enthusiastic, or potted in the tucetum (q. v.). The breasts of a sow killed just after she had littered, but before she had given suck, were much sought, and the matrix (vulva) of the same animal, stuffed with onions, is often spoken of as extremely delectable. Sausages (botuli) were popular, but less the diet of the wealthy than of the poor, being hawked about the streets by itinerant venders. Beef and lamb were not very highly esteemed; nor was chicken a great dainty, capons excepted. Thrushes (turdi), pheasants (phasiani), fig-peckers (ficedulae), larks (alaudae), guinea-hens (meleagrides), and many other birds were sought as food. As in Italy and Southern France to-day, snails formed an esteemed article of diet. They were fattened on meal especially for the market, and sometimes attained to a huge size. The Romans served up dormice (glires) at expensive banquets. Maecenas introduced at Rome the flesh of young asses as a fashionable dish. The common people ate comparatively little meat, but made bread, fruit, salad, and the national dish puls (see Puls) their principal fare. Tripe (omentum) was also an especially plebeian dish. Oil was liberally used in the various dishes, as in Italy to-day. (See Oliva.) The most frequently mentioned condiments were salt (sal), pepper (piper), garlic (allium), leek (porrum), mustard (sinapis), and poppy-seeds. Asafoetida (silphium) was also used as a seasoning, its flavour being not unlike that of garlic. On vinegar, see Acetum.

The ordinary fruits and vegetables were sold in the markets: grapes, apples, pears, peaches, plums, oranges, figs, quinces, melons, pomegranates, nuts, and pease, beets, cucumbers (which were also pickled), lettuce, beans, onions, turnips, cabbages, cauliflowers, and radishes.

The skill of the pastry-cook did much towards making a formal dinner successful. Pastry was set upon the table in the most varied forms, animal and vegetable, some idea of which may be gathered from the Cena Trimalchionis. Eggs of paste were served which, when broken, revealed young birds inside delicately cooked in sauce that counterfeited the appearance of a yolk. Cakes and sweetmeats were made in great quantities, honey being used for sweetening them. (See Placenta; Scriblita.) Cheese entered largely into Roman cookery, especially into the manufacture of cakes, and the description of some of these as so made is very appetizing. (See Caseus.) Butter was not largely used, its place being taken by oil. (See Butyrum.) For the methods of making bread and for the various kinds of bread, see the article Pistor. Information regarding wines will be found under Vinum, and reference may also be made to the article Symposium. For beer, see Cervesia, and for other drinks, Calda; Posca. On the ancient notions regarding diet and the nutritive value of foods, see Diaetetica, and cf. Athletae; Cena.

On the whole general subject of food in antiquity, see Saalfeld, Küche und Keller in Alt-Rom (Berlin, 1883); Baudrillart, Hist. du Luxe Privé, etc., vol. ii. (Paris, 1880); and the special sections in Becker-Göll, Charikles; id. Gallus; and Friedländer's Sittengeschichte Roms. Prof. C. G. Herbermann has given an interesting table of the approximate cost of various articles of food in the Roman markets in his Business Life in Ancient Rome (New York, 1880). Cf. also the article Sumptuariae Leges.

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