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Roman Sweets

“…next I sing of honey, the heavenly ethereal gift…” -Virgil

Roman Stuffed Dates

Our Thoughts:

These are a purely natural, gluten and sugar free powerhouse of nominess. The texture of chewy date is complimented by the crunchy nut filling, and the whole is dripping with honey. They fit perfectly with my mental preconceptions of Ancient Roman dining. Imagine reclining on elegant couches, opulent fabrics rippling underneath you toward the exquisite mosaic on the floor. Course after course of decadence is served, yet this dish stands apart as the epitome of simple, delicious sweets.

Go on. You know you want to.


Roman Stuffed Dates

DULCIA DOMESTICA: LITTLE HOME CONFECTIONS (WHICH ARE CALLED DULCIARIA) ARE MADE THUS: LITTLE PALMS OR (AS THEY ARE ORDINARILY CALLED) DATES ARE STUFFED—AFTER THE SEEDS HAVE BEEN REMOVED—WITH A NUT OR WITH NUTS AND GROUND PEPPER, SPRINKLED WITH SALT ON THE OUTSIDE AND ARE CANDIED IN HONEY AND SERVED.

Ingredients:

  • Dried dates, pitted
  • crushed nuts – hazelnuts and cooked chestnuts are perfect
  • cinnamon and long pepper (or black pepper), 1 tsp. per 1/2 cup of nuts
  • honey to cover the stuffed dates
  • a jar to store them in

Chop the nuts small, and mix with cinnamon and pepper. Carefully stuff this mixture into the pitted dates, taking care to not overstuff and tear the fruit. Place the stuffed dates in a jar, propping the dates up to keep the nuts from spilling out. Continue this process until the jar is full. Pour honey over the stuffed dates until all the crevices are filled.

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10 Responses

  1. QoB says
    March 24, 2012 at 10:36 am

    They look delicious, but if they’re smothered in honey, they’re hardly sugar-free. Processed-sugar-free, maybe?

    Reply
    • Claribel says
      January 17, 2014 at 8:12 pm

      That’s what I was thinking too. Honey is still sugar, just not refined cane sugar. And the dates themselves aren’t really sugar-free either.

      Reply
  2. Artemis97 says
    March 24, 2012 at 1:46 pm

    I made these for a school project once, but the recipe I had called for sauteeing the honeyed dates until they were carmelized. Fresh from the pan they were hot, sticky, and delicious, but once they cooled, they were nearly impossible to seperate from the plate! I like the sound of adding cinnamon to this. I’ll have to try making them again.

    Reply
  3. duckchick says
    March 24, 2012 at 2:08 pm

    Yummy in my tummy!! :D

    Reply
  4. The_Stargazer says
    March 25, 2012 at 12:31 am

    Honey is on average 82% sugar….

    Delicious, but certainly not guilt free!

    Reply
  5. Midge says
    March 25, 2012 at 3:34 am

    These would be amazing as part of a Roman-inspired summer dinner!

    Reply
  6. Lady Jess says
    January 16, 2013 at 4:25 pm

    These look delicious! I wonder if they can be made ahead of time and canned so they don’t spoil? I’d like to send a preserved jar home with each guest in a travel basket if they can be canned but I dont know if the honey and dates will stand up to the boiling water bath needed to seal the jar – any ideas?

    Reply
    • Needs Mead says
      January 16, 2013 at 7:19 pm

      I think they would travel really well. I had mine for months, without proper boiling etc, and they were as good at the end as they were freshly honeyed. Probably better, in fact.

      Reply
  7. PatW says
    April 3, 2014 at 12:31 pm

    Just made, and had a preliminary sample. Messy, but delicious. I ran the chestnuts in the food processor until they were very finely chopped, then added the hazelnuts, which I toasted and pulsed a few times. Added a little honey to the filling to help it hold together. Used large Medjool dates. I’ll give them a light sprinkle of salt before serving.

    Reply
  8. Ianna says
    May 28, 2021 at 9:53 pm

    These are so good! I have made them with pine nuts and walnuts and I used Timut Pepper rather than cinnamon with the black pepper which gives a very interesting and exotic flavour that surprises the palette and feels ancient more than modern.

    I believe they found remains of nut stuffed dates in Pompeii, I can’t find where they reported the exact excavation but this talks about what people ate (including these dates)http://www.pompeiitaly.org/en/food-drink/the-typical-dishes-of-ancient-pompeii/

    This is also a cool website dedicated to making ancient Italian Recipes with an original recipe before and after translationhttps://historicalitaliancooking.home.blog/english/recipes/ancient-roman-stuffed-dates/

    Reply

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