A poem about maltose

The Book of Songs: "Purple tea is like pulp." Zheng Xuan wrote: "Lettuce is bitter and sweet as a clam."

Song Zhen Xiu De sent a preface to Zhou Tianji: "Ill-gotten wealth; As far away as dirt; Unfortunate and poor; Sweet as honey. "

This has something to do with sugar, which is malt syrup.

There's another one:

Wen Song Tianxiang's poem "Song Zhengqi": "Zhong Ding is as sweet as a cup of tea, and it is hard to get it."

This is more in line with your requirements, and it is the sugar in the story, just as a metaphor, not a direct description of sugar.

There is also: the geometry of life, no fragrant mash like honey in spring and summer (Du Fu's)

A statue of spring wine is so sweet that no one knows (Han Yu's)

Gao Xiao's poems are based on a strong aversion to sweet wine. (of Bai Juyi)

I hope I can give you some inspiration and explain that there are basically no ancient poems that directly write sugar. I tried my best.

Landlord, look again.