Rice as a Foodstuff in Ancient and Byzantine Materia Medica
Abstract
The present study discusses dietetic qualities of rice and culinary recipes pertaining to its
preparation as demonstrated in ancient and Byzantine medical treatises compiled between 1st and 7th
cent. A.D.(Dioscurides, Galen, Oribasius, Anthimus, Alexander of Tralles, Aetius of Amida and Paul
of Aegina). The evidence (in the part touching on gastronomic applications of rice) also includes De re coquinaria attributed to Apicius.
The article consists of three parts. The first analyzes sources and modern literature to assess the impact of rice on the Greco-Roman and Byzantine agriculture. The results of the analysis confirm
the scholarly opinion that rice was never popular in the Mediterranean in the ancient and early Byzantine periods. A slow and gradual change in its status appeared along with the Arab agricultural
revolution.
The second chapter of the study is devoted to dietetic characterizations of rice and presents features attributed to the cereal over the ages. The authors come to the conclusion that the most frequent
characteristics of the crop which appear in the analyzed sources are its indigestibility, unwholesomeness,
astringency (styptic action) as well as the ability to slow down the work of the alimentary tract.
The final part of the article tries to retrieve from medical and culinary writings main culinary guidelines
according to which rice was prepared as food. The authors conclude that, as a rule, the cereal
was not used for bread baking, though it is likely that it was utilized in making cakes. Rice usually was the basis for preparation thick, gruel-like dishes which were normally compared to chóndros or póltos, less thick soups which were said to be similar to ptisáne, and watery, thin concoctions called
chyloi, created by diluting rice stock.
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