And Aristophanes, in his Acharnians, says—
Cheesecakes, and cakes of sesame, and ἴτρια.
And Sophocles, in his Contention, says—
But I, being hungry, look back at the ἴτρια.
There is mention made also of ἄμοραι. Philetas, in his Miscellanies, says that cakes of honey are called ἄμοραι; and they are made by a regular baker.
There is the ταγηνίτης, too; which is a cheesecake fried in oil. Magnes, or whoever it was that wrote the comedies which are attributed to him, says in the second edition of his Bacchus—
Have you ne'er seen the fresh ταγήνιαι hissing,
When you pour honey over them?
And Cratinus, in his Laws, says—
The fresh ταγηνίας, dropping morning dew.