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Oa Pnikta (Poached Egg in White Wine)
Oa Pnikta (Poached Egg in White Wine) is a traditional Ancient Roman recipe for a dish of eggs poached with fish sauce and white wine. The full recipe is presented here and I hope you enjoy this classic Ancient Roman version of: Oa Pnikta.
prep time
20 minutes
cook time
25 minutes
Total Time:
45 minutes
Serves:
4
Rating:
Tags : Baking RecipesAncient Roman Recipes
Original Recipe
Oa Pnikta (from Galen's On the Powers of Food)
Claudius Galenus of Pergamum (circa 129–200 CE), better known in English as
Galen. He was born in Pergamum (modern-day Bergama, Turkey), the son of Nicon, a wealthy architect. His interests were eclectic — agriculture, architecture, astronomy, astrology, philosophy — until he eventually concentrated on medicine. Galen was a proponent of
Hippocratic medicine and was so influential that he transmitted the teachings of Hippocrates right up to the Renaissance. As well as treatsies on the Hippocratic system of the
four bodily humours and writings on the structure and function of the human body he also reported the medical uses and effects of foods, which is where the recipe given below is derived.
Translation
Better than boiled and baked eggs are those called poached. The recipe for them is as follows: pour some olive oil, fish sauce and a little wine over the eggs, put hot water into a large basin in which is placed the pot containing the eggs, then cover everything with a lid. Put the basin over a flame until the eggs are of a moderately firm consistency. If they become too firm, they turn out like boiled and baked eggs, but if they are only just firm they are better digested than hard eggs and furnish the body with superior nourishment.
Modern Redaction
Ingredients:
6 eggs
3 tbsp
garum (or Nam Pla)
6 tbsp dry white wine
6 tbsp olive oil
Method:
Take six ramekin dishes and grease them with a tablespoon each of olive oil. Crack an egg into each ánd place into a large pyrex dish. Fill to half-way up the ramekins with boling water.
Very carefully pour a tablespoon of wine and half a tablespoon of garum. Cover with a lid (or aluminium foil) and place in an oven pre-heated to 190°C for fifteen minutes. Serve immediately.