Moretum – Ancient Roman Herbed Cheese Spread (Roman Feast Recipe)
This dish was served as part of the Push for Pennsic 2004 – Early Roman Feast.
Originally published: June 29, 2025 | Updated: May 19, 2026
Updated 5/19/2026: This post has been expanded to current Give It Forth standards with additional historical background, Roman feast context, camp and Pennsic service notes, a recipe scaled for 8 diners, dietary notes, FAQ, internal links to the full Roman feast menu, and structured recipe data.
Moretum – Roman Herbed Cheese Spread
Course: Gustum (Appetizer)
Origin: Ancient Rome
Served: Cold or Room Temperature
Event: Push for Pennsic 2004 – Early Roman Feast
Historical Background
Moretum was a common Roman dish combining fresh herbs, garlic, cheese, vinegar, and olive oil. The recipe appears in a short Latin poem once attributed to Virgil, describing a farmer preparing this flavorful spread as part of his daily breakfast. Its name likely comes from the mortar used to pound and mix the ingredients.
Did You Know?
The Moretum poem details the rustic preparation of this dish and includes an ode to garlic. It offers a vivid look into the humble meals of rural Romans.
For an English translation of the Moretum poem, see the Poetry in Translation version here.
The poem gives us more than a list of ingredients. It preserves a little domestic scene: a farmer rising early, grinding garlic and herbs, mixing cheese with oil and vinegar, and eating the finished spread with bread before beginning his work. That makes moretum especially useful for interpretation. It is not an elite showpiece dish, but a practical food with strong flavors, simple ingredients, and deep roots in everyday Roman eating.
Garlic, Mortars, and the Roman Table
The name moretum is generally connected to the mortar, or mortarium, used to pound the ingredients together. This matters because texture is part of the dish. Moretum is not meant to be a delicate modern dip whipped into smoothness. It is a pounded spread: coarse enough to show herbs and cheese, but unified by olive oil and vinegar into something that can be scooped up with bread.
Garlic gives the dish its force. The cheese provides salt and body. Herbs bring freshness and color. Olive oil softens and enriches the mixture, while vinegar sharpens it and keeps it from becoming too heavy. Served beside flatbread, olives, sausages, vegetables, and wine, Moretum makes a Roman appetizer board feel complete.
Modern Interpretation
This version uses pecorino romano and fresh herbs like coriander and celery leaf to evoke the original blend. It is simple, pungent, and perfect with bread.
Pecorino romano is salty and assertive, which makes it a good modern choice for this dish. Fresh coriander, or cilantro, gives the spread a bright green herbal quality, while celery leaves echo the bitter-green flavors often found in older herb mixtures. If cilantro is not liked by your diners, parsley may be substituted, though the flavor will be milder.