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Thread: Yes, The Greeks Invented Cheesecake Too

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    Talking Yes, The Greeks Invented Cheesecake Too



    The first “cheese cake” was created on the Greek island of Samos, dating to about 2000 BC, according to archaeological finds, including carbon-dated cheese molds that contain a great deal of evidence of what the molds were used for.

    Greek brides and grooms were also known to use cheesecake as a wedding cake. It also became a custom for a Greek bride to bake and serve cheesecakes to her new husband’s friends as a gesture of hospitality. Incidentally, this concept eventually paved the way for wedding cakes to become a tradition that continues today.

    Food historians believe this delicious desert was served to athletes during the first Olympic Games held in 776 BC, as a form of energy to get them through their races and competitions.

    The simple ingredients of flour, wheat, honey and cheese were formed into a cake and baked – a far cry from the more complicated recipes available today.

    The writer Athenaeus is credited for writing the first Greek cheesecake recipe in 230 A.D. (By this time, the Greeks had been serving cheesecake for over 2,000 years but this is the oldest known surviving Greek recipe). The Greek physician Aegimus, wrote a book on the art of making cheesecakes (πλακουντοποιικόν σύγγραμμα—plakountopoiikon suggramma)

    The recipe was pretty basic: pound the cheese until it is smooth and pasty, mix the pounded cheese in a brass pan with honey and spring wheat flour, heat the cheese cake “in one mass”, allow to cool then serve.

    When the Romans conquered Greece, the cheesecake recipe was just one spoil of war. They modified it including crushed cheese and eggs. These ingredients were baked under a hot brick and it was served warm. Occasionally, the Romans would put the cheese filling in a pastry. The Romans called their cheese cake “libuma” and they served it on special occasions.

    According to Alan Davidson, author of the Oxford Companion to Food, Marcus Cato, a Roman politician in the first century B.C., is credited as recording the oldest known Roman cheesecake recipe— several centuries after the Greek recipe first appeared.


    As the Romans expanded their empire, they brought cheesecake recipes to the Europeans. Great Britain and Eastern Europe began experimenting with ways to put their own unique spin on cheesecake. In each country of Europe, the recipes started taking on different cultural shapes, using ingredients native to each region.

    In 1545, the first cookbook was printed. It described the cheesecake as a flour-based sweet food. Even Henry VIII’s chef did his part to shape the cheesecake recipe. Apparently, his chef cut up cheese into very small pieces and soaked those pieces in milk for three hours. Then, he strained the mixture and added eggs, butter and sugar.

    It was not until the 18th century, however, that cheesecake would start to look like something we recognize in the United States today. Around this time, Europeans began to use beaten eggs instead of yeast to make their breads and cakes rise. Removing the overpowering yeast flavor made cheesecake taste more like a dessert treat. When Europeans immigrated to America, some brought their cheesecake recipes along.

    Want to know more about the Ancient Greek culinary traditions, and what the Greeks ate back then? A good starting point is a book called The Philosopher’s Kitchen: Recipes from Ancient Greece and Rome for the Modern Cook. Another great book is called Courtesans and Fishcakes: The Consuming Passions of Classical Athens.

    Ancient Athenian Cheese Cake

    Archestratus wrote “Forget all other dessert, there is only one: the Athenian cheese cake with Attica honey from Hymettus.” From Archestratus Fragments from the Life of Luxury

    Filling:
    4 eggs, separated
    1/2 cup honey or sugar
    1 lemon, juice and rind
    1/2 cup flour
    1 lb. pot cheese (similar to cottage cheese)
    1 cup sour cream or yogurt


    Crust:
    1 cup crumbs from zwiback rusks
    1/4 cup ground walnuts or almonds
    2 tablespoons oil or butter

    In a large bowl, beat egg whites until stiff (with a sprinkle of salt). In a blender blend yolks, honey, lemon juice, rind, flour and cheese for a few seconds. Fold batter into egg whites using spatula. Fold in sour cream. In a separate bowl mix crumbs and nuts together. Grease the bottom and sides of a large cake pan or spring-form cake pan. Spread crumbs over bottom and sides. Pour mixture in cake pan and bake at 350(f)° for 45 minutes. Chill in cake pan 6 hours before cutting and serving.

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    Fresh fish, one of the favourite dishes of the Greeks, platter with red figures, c. 350–325 BC, Louvre

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    Bread in Ancient Greece


    Woman grinding grain in a basin. Circa 450 BC. (© Marie-Lan Nguyen (2007) / Wikimedia Commons / CC-BY 2.5)


    Female workers kneading bread dough; a flute player sets the work pace. From Thebes, Greece, circa 525–475 BC. (© Marie-Lan Nguyen (2008) / Wikimedia Commons / CC-BY 2.5)

    The Greeks could grow emmer and barley, but those didn't make great bread. Barley and emmer could be used for soups, stews, and porridges.

    Bread was often barley cakes or flat bread. Barley cakes were called "maza." The Romans called the Greeks "barley eaters." The poor's barley bread would often even contain chaff in it, as the flour wouldn't have been finely sifted.

    Greece wasn't a great place to grow wheat. It was imported. Consequently, wheat flour was very late to come along as a food item.

    Some ordinary households would have ovens made of pottery, allowing them to make their own bread. After the 5th century BC, when bakers appeared in the cities, bread could also be bought from stalls in the markets. Athens imported wheat from other countries, and a feature for which the market at Athens became known was the sale there of good wheaten bread. Commercial ovens were run by corporations during the night.

    By the 400s BC there were 50 to 70 different kinds of bread in Greece.

    Socrates didn't like whole grain bread; he considered it pig food.


    Female baker taking bread from the oven. Early 5th century BC. Found at Tanagra north of Athens, Greece. (© Marie-Lan Nguyen (2009) / Wikimedia Commons / CC-BY 2.5)

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    People would take posts like this more serious if 90% of your posts here weren't ridiculously stupid.

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    We dont know honestly if greeks invented cheese cake. Its just the earliest evidence of cheese cake. Someone from somewhere else could have brought the recipe to over there

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    lunacy.

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    I like when Hellenas claim and start to explain that tsifteli is greek.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Laberia View Post
    I like when Hellenas claim and start to explain that tsifteli is greek.
    Never ever claimed or started explaining anything like that, Wikipedia did that, not me.

    http://hellas2010.proboards.com/thre...teteli-ancient

    I just brought it here.

    Wellknown story to blame others for what others do...
    Haters gonna hate, trolls gonna troll, liars gonna lie, slanderers gonna slander and morons(all of the aforementioned) gonna be morons!

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    Post in the shoutbox.

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    check laberia's history, 80 percent of his posts are about Greece. sickening

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