---
title: 'Eating the Food of Homer''s Odyssey'
source: 'https://youtube.com/watch?v=UAvZlsKsPg8'
video_id: 'UAvZlsKsPg8'
date: 2026-07-14
duration_sec: 1592
---

# Eating the Food of Homer's Odyssey

> Source: [Eating the Food of Homer's Odyssey](https://youtube.com/watch?v=UAvZlsKsPg8)

## Summary

This video explores the food described in Homer's 'Odyssey', recreating two dishes: kykeon (a drinkable potion) and roast pork with barley. It also delves into the cultural and historical context of eating in ancient Greece, highlighting how food reflects social status and divine interactions.

### Key Points

- **Odysseus's Journey and Food** [00:00] — The video focuses on recreating dishes from Homer's 'Odyssey', emphasizing that Odysseus eats a lot of food on his journey home.
- **Kykeon: A Drinkable Potion** [00:51] — Kykeon is a drinkable potion described in the 'Odyssey', made with wine, barley flour, honey, and cheese. It was used by Circe to drug Odysseus's crew.
- **Ingredients for Kykeon** [03:14] — Kykeon requires 1/2 cup Pramnian wine (or dark dry red wine), 1 tbsp grated hard goat cheese, 1/4 cup honey, and 2 tbsp barley flour. The wine is watered down half and half.
- **Consistency Difference** [05:16] — The new kykeon is more liquidy than the porridge-like version made in 2020, due to using barley flour instead of whole barley groats.
- **Eumaeus's Pork Dish** [09:01] — Eumaeus serves Odysseus roasted suckling pig sprinkled with white barley meal, accompanied by honey-sweet wine.
- **Ingredients for Roast Pork** [10:41] — The pork dish uses 3/4 lb pork, olive oil, salt, barley flour, coriander, celery seed, and either cumin or fennel. The pork is coated in the flour mixture and roasted.
- **Food in the Odyssey vs. Reality** [12:34] — The 'Odyssey' emphasizes meat (especially beef), wine, and bread, while downplaying common foods like fish, fruits, and vegetables, reflecting heroic ideals rather than actual diets.
- **Polyphemus and Cheese** [14:00] — Polyphemus is a shepherd who makes cheese from sheep and goat milk. Cheese was a common food but seen as lower status in literature.
- **Maron's Wine** [16:27] — Odysseus uses a very strong wine given by Maron, which requires 20 parts water to 1 part wine, to get Polyphemus drunk.
- **Tiresias's Warning** [18:14] — The blind prophet Tiresias warns Odysseus not to harm the cattle of Helios on the island of Thrinacia, or his ship and men will be destroyed.
- **Sacrifice of Helios's Cattle** [20:41] — Eurylochus convinces the crew to sacrifice one of Helios's cattle, leading to their destruction by Zeus.
- **Tasting the Pork** [23:11] — The roast pork is simple but flavorful, with cumin or fennel as the dominant spice. It would be even better cooked over an open fire.
- **Tasting the Kykeon** [24:10] — The kykeon is much improved from the first version: more liquid, well-balanced, with honey sweetness. The cheese adds saltiness but is not essential.

### Conclusion

The video successfully recreates two ancient Greek dishes from the 'Odyssey', showing that with adjusted recipes, they can be palatable. The exploration of food in the epic reveals cultural values and social hierarchies of the time.

## Transcript

I feel like most people know&nbsp;at least the&nbsp;basic plot. Essentially, Odysseus is on a really&nbsp;long&nbsp;trip home after the Trojan War. but what usually gets overlooked&nbsp;is that&nbsp; he also eats a lot of food along the&nbsp;way.
So today I am going to recreate two of the&nbsp;dishes&nbsp; that are served to Odysseus on his journey&nbsp;home. So thank you to Wildgrain for sponsoring&nbsp;this&nbsp; video as we cook for Odysseus, Eh, still Tasting History.
So, when I decided to cook something from&nbsp; the 'Odyssey', I knew that I had to do two&nbsp;dishes. Something new, of course, but then&nbsp;also this was just the perfect opportunity unpleasant things&nbsp;I've ever&nbsp;made here on the channel,
kykeon. Now I first made that way back&nbsp; in 2020 when I first&nbsp;started the channel. And the version that I made&nbsp;was more&nbsp; based on the description from the 'Iliad'.&nbsp; Now, I did make an updated version in&nbsp;the 'Tasting&nbsp; History' cookbook, but even that&nbsp;was still really
thick and probably should be&nbsp;best eaten&nbsp; with a spoon rather than drunk out&nbsp;of a cup. But the version that is described in&nbsp;the 'Odyssey'&nbsp; is definitely a drinkable potion. The drink is&nbsp;&nbsp; mentioned in book 10 when Odysseus and his&nbsp; crew find themselves on the aisle of Aeaea,&nbsp;&nbsp;
which while a mythical island is often suggested&nbsp; to have been off the coast of Italy south of&nbsp;Rome. Mount Circeo taking its name from&nbsp;the&nbsp;sorceress who lived there, Circe. Not to be&nbsp;confused with my cat Cersei, who is&nbsp; actually named after Cersei from 'The Game of Thrones'.
his crew end up meeting Circe, who&nbsp;invites them&nbsp;so kindly into her home. she set them upon chairs and benches,&nbsp;and&nbsp; mixed a mess of cheese and barley meal,
but then drugged&nbsp;it with wicked poisons&nbsp;to make them utterly forget&nbsp;their homes. And when they drank the potion she&nbsp;turned them into pigs with her wand,&nbsp;&nbsp; and Circe flung them&nbsp;some acorns, fruit, and&nbsp; mast - food greedily eaten&nbsp;by swallowing swine."
Maybe it was that&nbsp;she was trying to&nbsp;neutralize them. She saw them&nbsp;as a&nbsp;&nbsp; Regardless,&nbsp;what sucks for them is that while they&nbsp; looked like&nbsp;pigs, they still had the minds of men.
So that's&nbsp;depressing because they remembered&nbsp; everything that&nbsp;had happened to them. Now eventually Odysseus would&nbsp;also&nbsp;be given this kykeon, but he did not have the&nbsp;effects that they did because&nbsp; he had been given&nbsp;an antidote by the god Mercury.
"Plucked from the&nbsp;ground... black at the&nbsp;root, while the flower was&nbsp;white in milk. The gods call it moly, and to dig&nbsp;it&nbsp;up is a great labor for mortal men, Now despite what my&nbsp;doting mother says,&nbsp;&nbsp;
I am but a mortal man, and&nbsp;so I was&nbsp;unable to dig up this moly root. So&nbsp;I'm going to not include any of the wicked&nbsp; poisons&nbsp;that Circe added to her concoction. So for this&nbsp;non-wickedly poisoned&nbsp;version of kykeon, what&nbsp;you'll need is
1/2 cup or 120 ml of Pramnian&nbsp;wine.&nbsp;So, I'm guessing like me,&nbsp;&nbsp; And I think you do have&nbsp;to say it Pramnian, but that was the wine that&nbsp;grew on&nbsp;Mount Pramnos on the island of Ikaria.
And it was the wine that was said to be&nbsp;associated&nbsp;with the god of wine, Dionysus. Aristophanes said that it was a hard wine And therefore it should never be&nbsp;drunk without&nbsp;watering it down.
You can't drink this wine&nbsp;straight.&nbsp;That is how strong it is. So find the&nbsp;darkest and the driest red wine&nbsp;that you can and&nbsp;then mix it with some water. I am going half wine,&nbsp;half water. Then you'll need&nbsp; 1 tbsp of grated hard&nbsp;goat cheese like Kefalotyri.
And you don't want to&nbsp;use pre-grated&nbsp;cheese because it does not melt&nbsp;as well. Unfortunately, it seems that my neck of&nbsp;the&nbsp; woods is having like a Greek cheese shortage&nbsp;&nbsp; because I called all around. I couldn't find any&nbsp; that wasn't pre-grated so that's what I'm using,
and I just have to go into this knowing&nbsp;that. So, do as I say and not as I do. Then, 1/4 cup or 85 grams&nbsp;of honey&nbsp;and two tablespoons of barley flour. So&nbsp;start by toasting the barley flour in a dry&nbsp; pan over medium heat for four to five minutes,&nbsp;&nbsp;
just&nbsp;until it starts to darken up and&nbsp;becomes fragrant. And then once it does,&nbsp;&nbsp; And I'm realizing now that I&nbsp;could have&nbsp;just toasted it in&nbsp;&nbsp; that saucepan so I didn't have&nbsp;to&nbsp;dirty up two pans, but here we are
just to warm&nbsp;the honey and then mix&nbsp;the flour and the honey&nbsp;together. you can add in the cheese which should... Again, mine wasn't great,&nbsp;&nbsp;
but&nbsp;eventually it did melt enough that&nbsp;I could add&nbsp;in my watered down wine. and then it can be drunk whenever you're&nbsp;ready to turn your guests into swine. Now like I said this is a very different&nbsp;consistency than the&nbsp;one that I made back in 2020.
That one was more porridge-like partly because&nbsp; of the wine&nbsp;to barley ratio that I used, and partly because&nbsp;I used full barley groats back&nbsp;&nbsp; And in today's version I am making I'm using&nbsp;&nbsp;
barley flour or barley meal which&nbsp;is more like what you&nbsp;would use to make a bread or something like that.&nbsp;And&nbsp; they still use it today in parts of Greece,&nbsp;&nbsp; namely on the aisle of Crete to&nbsp;make a sort of hard barley bread.
They call them paximadia or barley&nbsp;rusks,&nbsp;but really they're barley hardtack. I bought&nbsp;these when I was in Greece in 2023, 3 years ago,&nbsp;&nbsp;
and they're still just as hard as they&nbsp;were the&nbsp;day that I bought them. So&nbsp;&nbsp; good job to these, for their staying power. Now,&nbsp; if you don't&nbsp;want really hard barley bread, then
you want&nbsp;to probably make your own bread&nbsp; at home, like&nbsp;a nice soft wheat bread,&nbsp;&nbsp; a sourdough perhaps, using the bread&nbsp; from today's sponsor, Wildgrain. My favorite day of the month now is&nbsp; when my Wildgrain box arrives at my door
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or just click this&nbsp;QR code. And new customers&nbsp; will get $30 off of&nbsp;their first box,&nbsp;&nbsp; plus free croissants for life. And now&nbsp; on to our next dish. So after Circe turns&nbsp;&nbsp;
the crew back into humans, from pigs to&nbsp; humans, they kind of hang around for a&nbsp;&nbsp; while. Actually,&nbsp;a long while because it&nbsp; turns out Odysseus has the&nbsp;hots for her.
So they're there for a whole year.&nbsp;When&nbsp; they eventually do leave, though, they go&nbsp;through a bunch of different&nbsp; stuff. Odysseus goes&nbsp;to the Underworld. the passage between the monster&nbsp; Scylla&nbsp;and the whirlpool Charybdis
before ending up on&nbsp;an island filled&nbsp; with the sun god's sacred cattle. One of these men kills and eats one&nbsp; of the cattle,&nbsp;and in retribution,&nbsp;&nbsp; and kills all of the crew save for Odysseus.&nbsp;&nbsp;
So when Odysseus finally does get back&nbsp; to Ithaca where he's actually the king but has been gone&nbsp;for about&nbsp; 20 years, he is alas alone. Odysseus does&nbsp;not just waltz&nbsp; on into his old palace and say,
since he's&nbsp;been gone, a bunch of&nbsp; suitors have kind of taken&nbsp;over&nbsp;&nbsp; the place and are eating all of his&nbsp; food and&nbsp;are wooing his wife Penelope. Instead, Athena&nbsp;turns him into a beggar&nbsp; or kind of makes him&nbsp;look like a beggar
and sends him to his faithful&nbsp;servant and swine&nbsp; herd, Eumaeus's house. And here, Eumaeus shows him&nbsp;&nbsp; some of the first truly selfless hospitality&nbsp; that Odysseus has experienced in&nbsp;decades.
Choosing two sucklings, he carried&nbsp;them&nbsp; in, slaughtered and singed them both,&nbsp;&nbsp; then&nbsp;cut them in pieces, and&nbsp; spitted them on skewers. Then,&nbsp;&nbsp; when all was well roasted, he served it&nbsp; to Odysseus, piping hot on the skewers,
sprinkling the&nbsp;meat with white barley meal.&nbsp; Then he mixed honey&nbsp;sweet wine in a bowl of ivy, urging him: 'Eat now,&nbsp;stranger - this is&nbsp; food that a servant can offer - suckling pig.
men that regard not the wrath of&nbsp; the&nbsp;gods, nor the call of compassion." Now while I could just roast a piece of pork plain&nbsp; and then sprinkle some raw barley flour over it,
it's going to be pretty gross - rather tasteless.&nbsp; And really, the sprinkling of the barley flour was&nbsp;&nbsp; actually part of a religious thing. They would&nbsp; do that in sacrifices and things like that.
more barley flour and actually&nbsp; coat the pork for some&nbsp;flavor. we know were being used during&nbsp;this period.
period that the 'Odyssey' is&nbsp; supposed to be&nbsp;taking place, the Mycenaean period about 1650 to&nbsp;1100 BC. Archaeology from palaces of this&nbsp; time&nbsp;show that coriander, cumin,&nbsp;&nbsp;
And while eaten by the&nbsp;wealthy, they would have&nbsp; also been something&nbsp;I think commonly available to&nbsp;&nbsp; the common man like a swine herd, so we're going&nbsp; to use some of those just to flavor up this pork.
So to make&nbsp;this pork dish served by&nbsp; Eumaeus to Odysseus, what&nbsp;you'll need is 3/4 pound or 340 grams of pork, any&nbsp;cut will do. 1 tbsp of olive oil, 2 tsps of salt,&nbsp;1/2&nbsp; cup or 70 grams of barley flour,
1 tsp coriander, 2 teaspoons celery seed&nbsp; and a 1/2 teaspoon of&nbsp;cumin or fennel. Both are very dominant flavors,&nbsp;so I&nbsp; wouldn't use both. I'd just pick one. in the olive oil and sprinkle&nbsp;with&nbsp; plenty of salt, rubbing it in.
Then leave&nbsp;those to sit for about&nbsp; 10 minutes while you add&nbsp;the herbs&nbsp;&nbsp; And then toss a few pieces of the pork&nbsp;into&nbsp; the flour mixture and get them coated all&nbsp;over. Then skewer each piece until&nbsp; an entire&nbsp;skewer is filled up.
if you have a barbecue&nbsp;or if&nbsp; you want to use your oven, you can pop it&nbsp;in the oven at 425° F, 220° C. Then roast them for&nbsp;about 18 to 20 minutes or&nbsp; until the pork is cooked&nbsp;all the way through.
It really does actually&nbsp;help get it&nbsp; out there. It helps the channel more&nbsp;&nbsp; than I can tell you or as much as I&nbsp; just told you. And I can take a look-
rather we can take a look&nbsp;at the other&nbsp; foods mentioned in the 'Odyssey'. Homer's 'Odyssey' is absolutely filled&nbsp; with talk of food, so I'm not going to&nbsp;&nbsp;
cover everything because we'd be here all&nbsp; day. Plus, it does kind&nbsp;of get repetitive. They ate these same kind of&nbsp;things&nbsp; pretty much throughout. So I'm going&nbsp;&nbsp; to&nbsp;pinpoint a couple of the most important&nbsp; instances where they eat something where&nbsp;&nbsp;
we can also glean something about&nbsp; what the Greeks of this period,&nbsp;&nbsp; or probably actually Homer's period which was some&nbsp; centuries later were thinking about&nbsp;food because
actually the food in the 'Odyssey'&nbsp;is not at all&nbsp; indicative of what the average&nbsp;person was eating, or even the wealthy people&nbsp;of&nbsp; Greece were eating at the time. Even though&nbsp;there are a few mentions&nbsp; of hunting, fishing,&nbsp;seafood,&nbsp;&nbsp;
fruits, vegetables, they are sparse,&nbsp; even though those were all staples of&nbsp;&nbsp; the&nbsp;diet. What you hear a lot more&nbsp; about is meat, namely beef, wine,&nbsp;&nbsp;
and bread. And the beef, or rather really any&nbsp; meat that is mentioned, is only ever cooked&nbsp;&nbsp; roasted. It's never boiled,&nbsp;which would be the&nbsp; more common way to cook meat&nbsp;in years to come.
In fact, Athenaeus, who lived&nbsp;a&nbsp; thousand years, give or take,&nbsp;&nbsp; "Where does Homer say&nbsp;that&nbsp; any of the Achaeans ate fish? So I think it's most interesting to&nbsp;explore those&nbsp; times when either they were eating&nbsp;forbidden beef
or when they were forced to eat&nbsp;other meat like&nbsp; when they were on the island of&nbsp;the Cyclops. which is the home of&nbsp;the one eyed&nbsp; race of giants known as the Cyclops.
And in need of food, they end up at the&nbsp; cave of&nbsp;one of the Cyclops named Polyphemus. 15th&nbsp;century terracotta figurine of Polyphemus,
which I can only imagine was the inspiration&nbsp;for&nbsp; the alien in the 1980s movie 'Mac and Me.' Anyway, Polyphemus was a&nbsp; shepherd of sheep and&nbsp;goats. Greek hero could eat, they&nbsp; were really a&nbsp;B tier meat.
The S tier meat being beef, of course,&nbsp; but in a pinch they could eat that. But the&nbsp;thing is those meats were really&nbsp; more associated&nbsp;with kind of common people. Even more common was&nbsp;the fact that Polyphemus&nbsp; was taking the milk of&nbsp;these animals and making&nbsp;&nbsp;
cheese. Again, people were eating cheese&nbsp; during this period, people in all tiers. We know from archaeologists that&nbsp;everybody&nbsp; was eating cheese. But in literature,&nbsp;&nbsp; it's seen as a food for the common&nbsp; people. But when you are starving,&nbsp;&nbsp;
you are allowed to eat anything, I guess. And so, Odysseus and his men creep&nbsp; into the cave of Polyphemus. he had more lambs and kids&nbsp; than his pens could&nbsp;hold...
bowls,&nbsp;and milk pales into which&nbsp; he milked were swimming&nbsp;with whey. When they saw all this, my men begged&nbsp;me&nbsp; to let them first steal some cheeses,&nbsp;&nbsp; they would then return,&nbsp;drive down the lambs and&nbsp; kids, put them on&nbsp;board and sail away with them."
It really kind of makes you feel&nbsp; bad for Polyphemus. He's&nbsp;just gone&nbsp;&nbsp; through all of this work to raise&nbsp; these sheep and goats and milk them&nbsp;&nbsp; and make the&nbsp;cheese and then these&nbsp; yahoos come in and steal&nbsp;everything.
At this point, he is the one who has&nbsp;been wronged,&nbsp;&nbsp; but he's about to do something that really&nbsp; kind of makes the audience turn on him. Odysseus and then takes&nbsp;two of&nbsp; the men and smashes them into&nbsp;&nbsp;
the ground. "Then he tore them limb&nbsp; from limb and made ready&nbsp;his supper. marrow, and entrails,without&nbsp; leaving anything uneaten...
with human flesh,&nbsp;he washed it&nbsp; down with a drink of milk..." And here too we get an insight into what the&nbsp; Greeks of the time were eating and specifically&nbsp;&nbsp;
drinking. Because in order to escape, Odysseus&nbsp; decides he needs to get this cyclops drunk. And so he pulls&nbsp;out a wine which is&nbsp; supposed to be the best kind&nbsp;of wine.
It was given to him by the Thracian&nbsp; Maron&nbsp;for thanking him for not killing him. "Maron... gave&nbsp;me seven talents of&nbsp; fine gold, in a silver mixing&nbsp;bowl,&nbsp;&nbsp; with twelve jars of sweet wine, unblended,&nbsp; and&nbsp;of the most exquisite flavor....
When he drank it,&nbsp;he mixed twenty&nbsp;parts of water to one of wine, so&nbsp;marvelously sweet that it was&nbsp;impossible to&nbsp;stop from drinking." As I mentioned earlier,&nbsp;the Greeks&nbsp;would always water down their&nbsp;wine.&nbsp;&nbsp;
Only barbarians drank undiluted&nbsp;wine, but usually it was, you know,&nbsp;&nbsp; one part wine,&nbsp;maybe two parts water,&nbsp; three parts water,&nbsp;four parts water. So a wine that needs twenty parts&nbsp;water&nbsp;has to be something really, really strong.
But that means it is the perfect wine to&nbsp; get a cyclops drunk when drunk undiluted. So after&nbsp;Polyphemus has several&nbsp;bowls of it, he passes out, giving Odysseus the opportunity to stab him in&nbsp; his&nbsp;one eye so that they could make their escape.
it turns out that&nbsp;Polyphemus had like&nbsp;a really famous and powerful&nbsp;dad, Poseidon, the god of earthquakes and&nbsp;the sea. And so when Poseidon learned&nbsp;&nbsp;
that Odysseus had poked his son's eye&nbsp;out, he got mad and basically&nbsp;said, okay, well, your trip back to Ithaca&nbsp;is&nbsp;going to be a very unpleasant one. So the next&nbsp;time that Odysseus had the opportunity&nbsp; to annoy one of the gods, he really tried
He was even warned&nbsp;two times to not make this mistake again.&nbsp;&nbsp; The first was when he was in the Underworld and the&nbsp; blind prophet Tiresias told him that
you already&nbsp;made Poseidon mad, but I think- I think that you&nbsp;can still make it home to Ithaca all right. You and your men as long as you don't screw things&nbsp; up when you're on the island of Thrinacia.
"There you&nbsp;will find the sheep and cattle belonging to the&nbsp;sun-god Helios, who sees and hears all. If you&nbsp;leave these flocks and herds unharmed, you may&nbsp; yet after much hardship, reach Ithaca.
But if you&nbsp;harm them, I predict the complete destruction&nbsp;of your ship and your men and when you arrive,&nbsp;in another's ship, you will find your home overrun&nbsp;by men eating your food and wooing your wife."
Now the audience already knows that this is happening.&nbsp; We have seen that his home is overrun by a bunch&nbsp;&nbsp; of suitors who are eating all of his food and who&nbsp; are wooing his wife Penelope. But at this point,&nbsp;&nbsp;
Odysseus doesn't know that. So, he still has&nbsp; some hope that uh things might turn out just dandy.&nbsp;&nbsp; Now Odysseus sees Circe, the sorceress, again,&nbsp;and she too warns him, you're going to run into&nbsp;some cows
that belong to Helios. Don't touch&nbsp;those cows. Don't do it. And so maybe because&nbsp;she felt bad about turning his crew into pigs,&nbsp;she even gave them a bunch of food so that&nbsp;they wouldn't be tempted to eat those darn&nbsp;cows.
Unfortunately, they ate pretty much all&nbsp;of the food. But "They were forced to&nbsp;wander in search of game, fish, and foul,&nbsp;whatever might come to their hands.
Now today&nbsp;we might think of fishing and hunting as manly&nbsp;pursuits, but in Homer's time less so because&nbsp;they were the pursuits of the common people.&nbsp;&nbsp; Wealthy, or heroes, didn't need to hunt for their&nbsp; food or fish for their food because
they had&nbsp;domesticated animals that were there to feed them. It was only poor people who couldn't afford those&nbsp;animals that had to do the hunting and fishing.&nbsp;But again, they were hungry and so they needed to&nbsp;do what they needed to do. Unfortunately, in every&nbsp;group,
there is always someone who screws it up&nbsp;for everyone else. And on Odysseus's crew, that&nbsp;man was Eurylochus. While Odysseus was sleeping,&nbsp;Eurylochus convinced the others that so long as&nbsp;they sacrificed one of the cows to the gods&nbsp;
and then promised to build a temple to Helios when&nbsp; they got back to Ithaca, they should be good&nbsp;to eat just one of them. And while this was a bad&nbsp;thing for them and for Odysseus, it's a good thing&nbsp;for us
because it's going to give us a glimpse&nbsp;into the sacrificial practices of the day in some decent detail.&nbsp;&nbsp; Essentially, they get the&nbsp;cow and then they stand around it and pray and&nbsp;take oak leaves
and put it onto it because&nbsp;they had run out of barley. And originally,&nbsp;&nbsp; "After they prayed they killed the cows and butchered them; they&nbsp;cut out slices of the thigh,
wrapped them in two&nbsp;layers of fat, and laid pieces of raw meat on&nbsp;top of them. They had no pure wine to pour over&nbsp;the flaming sacrifices, so kept pouring on&nbsp;a little water from time to time and roasted&nbsp;the entrails over the fire. When the thighs&nbsp; were done and they had tasted the inner parts,&nbsp;&nbsp;
they cut the rest up small and put the pieces&nbsp;on spits." Now for me, waking up to the smell of&nbsp;bacon cooking is just one of the best experiences&nbsp;a person can have. For Odysseus, waking up to the&nbsp;smell of beef cooking was really not a good thing.
And he says a little prayer to the gods who were&nbsp;going to be mad and then goes and chastises his&nbsp;men and then kind of resigns himself to the fact&nbsp;that they are screwed.
Then they actually&nbsp;keep eating the cows. They kill like six more,&nbsp;but eventually they get off the island and Zeus&nbsp;sends a thunderbolt and destroys their ship,&nbsp;kills all of the men. Odysseus is the only&nbsp;one that survives.
Eventually, he makes it&nbsp;alone to Ithaca where Eumaeus makes him a dish, And here&nbsp;we are the kykeon and roast pork with barley&nbsp; served to Odysseus in Homer's 'Odyssey'.
So I'm going to start with a piece of the pork&nbsp;here. I'm not sure that like the crusting is&nbsp;actually going to make like a crunchy crust, but&nbsp;it does- it is going to give it some texture.&nbsp;&nbsp; And again, it's there more for the flavor. Smells&nbsp; good. Definitely smells like the cumin.&nbsp;&nbsp;
That is the dominant odor. If you're going to use&nbsp;fennel, that's going to be the dominant odor. So you don't really need that much in comparison&nbsp; with the other spices. Here we go. [chomp chomp]
Simple, but rather&nbsp;flavorful. I think if it was over an open fire,&nbsp;even better. You're going to get a lot&nbsp;more of the, you know, open fire flavors.
But the pork is nicely done. And now, my friends,&nbsp;the kykeon. I am having flashbacks to the&nbsp;first time that I drank this.
This is much&nbsp;more liquidy. It is more like a thick&nbsp; wine rather than a watery porridge. It's a pretty color. There are still a bit&nbsp; of pieces of cheese kind of floating in it,&nbsp;&nbsp;
but I think a good deal of it&nbsp;kind of integrated. Anyway, cheers.
Okay. I actually think that I saved this. That I've made&nbsp;a version that is something a human would want to&nbsp;consume.
Has a lot more honey in it. The wine is&nbsp;watered down, so it just mixes better. It's not super strong of any one flavor. The thickness&nbsp;from the barley flour, it is thicker than&nbsp;regular wine would be,
but it's not chunky like&nbsp;when you use full groats. The cheese is not&nbsp;necessary. Not just because of- there is kind of a&nbsp;texture to some of the pieces that haven't melted,&nbsp;but
it's more that it's just it's a rather&nbsp;salty cheese and they would have all been rather&nbsp;salty. But it's actually pretty good. Not so&nbsp;good that I actually need to keep drinking it,&nbsp;but I don't hate it.
And I hated the first one. I will say that. So I'm going to&nbsp;call that a win in my book. No wicked poisons,&nbsp;no baneful potions, so there is that. But,
you know, other than that, it's pretty spot-on,&nbsp;I think. Who knows? Homer was not really writing&nbsp;a recipe book. He was just writing down, you know,&nbsp;we were lucky to even get the information&nbsp; that he actually left us.
Anyway I think that I'm also going to do a video on&nbsp; maybe what the Trojans would have been eating,&nbsp;&nbsp; what we know about Trojan food. So
maybe&nbsp;keep an eye out for that. I haven't started the&nbsp;research and I never really know. So, I maybe&nbsp;I shouldn't even mention this. Hopefully I find some good information. I can&nbsp; make a Trojan meal from the 'Iliad'. Anyway,&nbsp;&nbsp;
I'll see you next time on Tasting&nbsp;Mythology on Tasting History.
