the drink offered at the beginning of the Roman dinner in conjunction with the "gustus", what we would call the course of appetizers. Also for mulsum there...
3 KB (385 words) - 03:17, 13 May 2024
Mead (category History of alcoholic drinks)
traditional fermented drink with a taste of honey and an alcohol content of 4.0% Morat: a blend of honey and mulberries. Mulsum: Mulsum is not a true mead...
48 KB (5,460 words) - 05:43, 3 May 2024
of Cures documents that clustrum was distributed to people together with mulsum on important holidays such as Saturnalia.: 103 Hazan states that bruschetta's...
8 KB (762 words) - 14:23, 15 May 2024
Food in ancient Rome (category History of food and drink)
grave. Romans drank their wine mixed with water, or in "mixed drinks" with flavorings. Mulsum was a mulled sweet wine, and apsinthium was a wormwood-flavored...
40 KB (5,301 words) - 04:04, 8 March 2024
Ancient Roman cuisine (section Alcoholic drinks)
raisin wine, for which the earliest known recipe is of Carthaginian origin; mulsum, a freshly made mixture of wine and honey (called a pyment today); and conditum...
30 KB (3,696 words) - 15:50, 15 May 2024
method like the Süssreserve. In Roman times, this was done in preparing mulsum, wine freshly sweetened with honey and flavored with spices, used as an...
15 KB (1,611 words) - 14:49, 25 March 2024
meat left over from the night before. They also drank wine-based drinks such as mulsum, a mixture of wine, honey, and aromatic spices. 1st century Latin...
40 KB (4,042 words) - 12:21, 9 May 2024
first time – et primus mulsum domi meae bibere coepi ipse, cum interea nihilo minus paene cotidie in convivio omnibus dare<tur> mulsum’ [i.e. 'And [then]...
19 KB (2,574 words) - 20:45, 14 January 2024
Many types of drinks involving grapes and honey were consumed as well. Mulsum was honeyed wine, mustum was grape juice, mulsa was honeyed water. The...
58 KB (7,593 words) - 03:12, 10 April 2024
obtained through several types of manipulation (e.g. by adding honey, or mulsum; using raisins, or passum; by boiling, or defrutum). However, the sacrima...
138 KB (19,051 words) - 15:08, 3 May 2024