Posca - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posca
Posca From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Posca may also refer to the character on HBO's Rome. Posca was a drink popular in ancient Rome and Greece, made by mixing sour wine or vinegar with water and flavouring herbs. It originated in Greece as a medicinal mixture but became an everyday drink for the Roman army and the lower classes from around the 2nd century BC, continuing to be used throughout Roman history and into the Byzantine period. It was made by reusing wine spoiled by faulty storage and had important dietary advantages. As well as being a source of liquid, it provided calories and was an antiscorbutic, helping to prevent scurvy by providing vitamin C. Its acidity killed harmful bacteria and the flavouring helped to overcome the bad taste of local water supplies.[1]
Contents 1 Usage 2 Etymology 3 Recipe 4 Sources 5 References
Usage Posca was increasingly heavily used by the Roman army during the Republican period when it became a standard beverage for soldiers. The drinking of quality wine was considered a sign of indiscipline, to the point that some generals banned imported vintage wine altogether. Appian records both posca and wine as being among the provisions of the army of Lucullus in his Spanish campaign of 153 BC. It had evidently become part of the customary rations by the 1st century AD; the Gospels describe Roman soldiers offering Jesus sour wine on a sponge (flavoured with hyssop, an aromatic flower, according to the Gospel of John) during the Crucifixion. The Historia Augusta records that by Hadrian's time sour wine was a standard part of the normal "camp fare" (cibus castrensis). A decree of 360 AD instructed the lower ranks of the army to drink posca and wine on alternate days. Although it was primarily associated with soldiers and the lower classes, some higher-ranked Romans also drank posca to express solidarity with their troops. According to Plutarch, Cato the Elder was particularly noted for liking posca.
Etymology The word posca is derived from either the Latin potor (to drink) or from the Greek epoxos (very sharp). It was an unfamiliar beverage in the largely Greek-speaking eastern Mediterranean region, where sweet wines were preferred. As the Greeks lacked a word for posca, sources written in Greek, such as Plutarch and the Gospels, use the word oxos (vinegar) in its place (translated as acetum in the Vulgate Bible). The word eventually
18/05/2009 6:15 PM
Posca - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2 of 2
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posca
migrated into Greek from about the 6th century AD onwards as the Byzantine army continued the Roman tradition of drinking what they termed phouska.
Recipe No recipes for posca are known to have survived. An approximate recreation of the beverage can be made by combining 1½ cups of vinegar with ½ cup of honey, 1 tablespoon of crushed coriander seed and four cups of water. The mixture should be boiled in a saucepan to dissolve the honey before being allowed to cool to room temperature. After straining out the coriander seeds, it can be served.[2]
Sources Dalby, Andrew. "Posca", Food in the Ancient World from A to Z, p. 270. Routledge, 2003. ISBN 0415232597 Roth, Jonathan. The Logistics of the Roman Army at War (264 B.C.-A.D. 235), pp. 37-38. BRILL, 1999. ISBN 9004112715
References 1. ^ Showalter, Dennis E. Soldiers' Lives Through History, pp. 36-37. Greenwood Publishing Group, 2007. ISBN 0313333483 2. ^ Kaufman, Cathy K. Cooking in Ancient Civilizations, p. 182. Greenwood Publishing Group, 2006. ISBN 0313332045
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posca" Categories: Roman cuisine | Historical beverages This page was last modified on 12 May 2009, at 21:47 (UTC). All text is available under the of the GNU Free Documentation License. (See Copyrights for details.) Wikipedia® is a ed trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a U.S. ed 501(c)(3) tax-deductible nonprofit charity.
18/05/2009 6:15 PM