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GREECE |
There is no denying that when it
comes to being passionate about food, the Greeks are some of the best.
Greek cuisine is renowned for being flavorsome and fresh, incorporating
a wide range of spices, meats and vegetables. The food in Greece is
about tantalizing your taste buds and wherever you go you cannot help
but be surrounded by the amazing smells of food being prepared and
cooked and it really adds to your eating experience. In Greece, you
certainly come across a whole wealth of spectacular dishes. If you're
looking for some delicious Greek food to try,
here's a selection of the popular local dishes for you to try next time
you are in the country, in addition to Greece national dishes. A trip
to Greece is guaranteed to not only have you in awe of the history and
culture and people, but also in terms of the exquisite food you will be
introduced to.
Gyros
Gyros is the popular
traditional Greek fast foods. It is a dish of meat (pork or chicken and
rarely beef) roasted on a vertical turning spit and served with sauce (often tzatziki) and garnishes (tomato,
onions) on grilled pita bread.
To make gyros, pieces
of meat are placed on a tall vertical spit, which turns in front of a
source of heat, usually an electric broiler. If the meat is not fatty
enough, strips of fat are added so that the roasting meat remains
always moist and crisp. The rate of roasting can be adjusted by varying
the strength of the heat and the distance between the heat and the
meat, allowing the cook to adjust to varying rates of consumption. The
outside of the meat is sliced vertically in thin, crisp shavings when
done. It is generally served in an oiled, lightly grilled piece of
pita, rolled up with various salads and sauces. The pita and gyro meat
themselves are the only obligatory ingredients.
Fakes
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Fakes - Greek Lentil Soup [photo] |
Fake is a lentil soup
and one of the famous everyday Greek soups, usually served with vinegar
and olives and/or smoked herring. It refers to a variety of vegetarian and meat soups made with lentils. The soup may consist of
green, brown, red, yellow or black lentils, with or without the husk. Dehulled yellow and red lentils
disintegrate in cooking, making a thick soup. Lentil soup may include
vegetables such as carrots, potatoes, celery, parsley, and onion. Common flavorings are garlic, bay leaf, cumin, olive oil, and vinegar. It is sometimes garnished
with croutons or chopped herbs or butter, olive oil, cream or yogurt.
Souvlaki
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Souvlakia |
Souvlaki (plural souvlakia) is a popular Greek fast food consisting of small pieces of
meat and sometimes vegetables grilled on a skewer. Most common is pork,
sometimes lamb or chicken, often marinated in oil, salt, pepper,
oregano and lemon.
It may be served on the skewer for eating out of hand, in a pita sandwich with garnishes and
sauces, or on a dinner plate, often with fried potatoes. The meat usually used in Greece is pork, although chicken and lamb may also be used. In other
countries and for tourists, souvlaki may be made with meats such as
lamb, beef, chicken and sometimes shrimp
or fish (especially swordfish).
Tzatziki
Tzatziki is a Greek and Turkish meze or appetizer, also used as a sauce for souvlaki and gyros. It is made of strained yogurt (usually from sheep or goat milk) mixed with finely
chopped cucumbers, garlic, salt, olive oil, and sometimes lemon
juice,
and dill or mint or parsley. Tzatziki is always served
cold and with warm pita bread. While in Greece the dish is usually
served as an accompaniment, in other places tzatziki is often served
with bread (loaf or pita) as part of the first course
of a meal.
Skordhalia
Skordhalia or skordhalia/skorthalia is made by combining crushed
garlic with a bulky base—which may be a mashed potato, walnuts,
almonds, or liquid-soaked stale bread—and then beating in olive oil to make a smooth emulsion. Vinegar is often added. It is a thick garlic mashed
potato dip (sauce or spread, etc.) which is usually served with
deep fried
salted fish/cod (bakaliaros skordalia, i.e. fried battered cod with
garlic dip, a very popular dish). Skordhalia is also served
with fried
vegetables (eggplant, zucchini), poached fish, or boiled vegetables (beets).
It is sometimes used as a dip.
Pastitsio
Pastitsio, sometimes
spelled Pastichio, is a Greek baked pasta dish with a filling of ground
beef and béchamel sauce in its best-known form. The typical Greek
version has a bottom layer that is bucatini or other tubular pasta, with
cheese and egg as a binder; a middle layer of ground beef, veal or lamb with tomato and cinnamon, nutmeg or allspice; another layer of pasta; and
a top layer of sauce, varying from an egg-based custard to a flour-based Béchamel or a Béchamel with cheese
(known as Mornay sauce in France). Grated cheese is
often sprinkled on top. Pastitso is a common dish, and is often served
as a main course, with a salad.
Stifado
Greek Stifado dishes
are stews with pearl onions, red wine and cinnamon. They are easy to
recognize since they include a lot of onions. The most
commonly used are whole small boiler or pearl onions, but larger onions
can be used as well, and the quantity is often equal in weight to the
main ingredient. Stifatho dishes can be made with meat, poultry,
seafood, game (rabbit, venison, etc.), or another vegetable as the
central ingredient, with onions, wine or vinegar, tomato, and a
selection of spices (often including cinnamon) creating a flavorful
base. Generally made on the stovetop, there are a few stifatho
variations that can be made in the oven.
Spetzofai
Spetzofai (or
spetsofai) is one of the most classic dishes in Greece. Spetzofai is a
braised sausage with pepper and tomatoes. It is a hearty dish originally
from the Mt. Pelion region and, of course, a specialty of the mainland
area around Mt. Pelion and Volos.
Grilled octopus
The octopus (octopus
vulgaris) will be on the menu of every seafood tavern in Greece and
practically every Greek restaurant outside of Greece. Greeks enjoy
octopus in a stew, with pasta, made into a salad with olive oil and
wine vinegar but the most often ordered octopus is the grilled
octopus. You should try Octapodaki tou Yiorgou
(grilled octopus with lemon, oregano and olive oil).
Achinosalata
Traditionally, in
Greece, the sea-urchin is eaten freshly opened with just a squeeze of
lemon. Achinosalata is sea-urchin eggs in lemon and olive oil.
Mezedes or
meze
In Greece, mezé, mezés, or mezédhes (plural) are small dishes,
hot or cold, spicy or savory. Seafood dishes such as grilled octopus may be included, along with
various salads, sliced hard-boiled eggs, garlic-bread, kalamata olives, fava beans, fried vegetables, melitzanosalata (eggplant salad), taramosalata, fried or grilled cheeses
called saganaki, and various fresh Greek
sheep, goat or cow cheeses (feta, kasseri, kefalotyri, graviera, anthotyros, manouri, metsovone and mizithra). Other offerings are fried sausages, usually pork and often
flavored with orange peel, bekrí-mezé (the "drunkard's mezé", a diced pork stew), and
meatballs like keftédes and soutzoukákia
smyrnéika.
In Greece, meze is served in
restaurants called mezedopoleíon and tsipourádiko or ouzerí, a type of café that serves ouzo or tsipouro.
Tiropita (Tyropita)
Tiropita is a Greek layered pastry food, made with layers of buttered
phyllo and filled with a cheese-egg
mixture. Regular tiropita fillings
usually consist of feta cheese, egg, butter and
yogurt. However, "kasseropita" contains kasseri instead of feta cheese and,
unlike regular tiropita, does not contain yogurt. Tiropita can also be made in a
large pan and cut into individual
portions after baking. The individual form is sold in bakeries
throughout Greece, where it is a popular breakfast and snack
food. Alternatives to tiropita are spanakopita, a pie with spinach, as well
as bougatsa. In Greece, one can find many
varieties of Tyropita:
- Kourou: Surrounded by a thick pastry.
- Sfoliata: Surrounded by puff-pastry.
- Xoriatiki: Made in a Tapsi pan.
- Tyropitakia: Bite-sized.
- Skopelitiki: Made in the shape of a twirl.
Tiropita is usually
eaten mid-morning by Greeks, who are not accustomed to having
"breakfast" in the traditional western-European sense. Specifically,
shortly after awakening and before going to work, Greeks typically
consume coffee (either Turkish or cold, i.e., frappe) accompanied by
cold water and, on occasion, bread with butter and honey. Approximately
one to two hours later (mid-morning), tyropita (more commonly) or spanakopita are consumed.
Spanakopita
Spanakopita is a Greek
savory pastry
with a filling of chopped spinach, feta cheese (sometimes in combination
with ricotta cheese, as it is less
expensive, and adds creaminess), onions or scallions, egg, and seasoning. The filling
is wrapped or layered in phyllo (filo) pastry with butter and/or olive oil, either in a large pan from
which individual servings are cut, or rolled into individual triangular
servings.
Spanakopita is mostly eaten as a snack in Greece, and it can be an
alternative to tyropita.
Bougatsa
Bougatsa is a Greek breakfast
pastry consisting of semolina custard, cheese, or minced meat filling
between layers of phyllo. Greek bougatsa is prepared
from phyllo dough wrapped around a
filling. After it is baked, it is cut into serving pieces and served
hot. If the filling is semolina custard, then the pastry may be
lightly dusted with powdered sugar or cinnamon. All are delicious and popular
among Greeks for quick breakfast eats.
Baklava
Baklava is a rich,
sweet pastry made of tissue-thin layers of
filo pastry filled with chopped nuts and drenched in syrup or honey.
Galaktoboureko
Galaktoboureko is a Greek dessert of semolina-based custard (sometimes flavored with
lemon, orange, or rose) in between layers of phyllo. It may be made in a pan,
with phyllo layered on top and underneath, or rolled into individual
servings (often approximately 10 cm long). It is served or coated with
a clear, sweet syrup.
Greek Yoghurt
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Greek Yoghurt with honey (photo) |
Greek yoghurt, Strained yoghurt or yoghurt cheese is yoghurt which has been strained in a
cloth or paper bag or filter to remove the whey, giving a consistency between
that of yoghurt
and cheese, while preserving yoghurt's
distinctive sour taste. Most strained Greek yogurts
have no added fats and are made of real milk.
Strained yoghurt is used in Greek food mostly as the base for tzatziki dip and as a dessert, with honey, sour
cherry syrup,
or spoon
sweets
often served on top. A few savoury Greek dishes use strained yoghurt.
In Greece, strained yoghurt, like
yoghurt in general, is traditionally made from sheep's milk. More recently, cow's milk is often used,
especially in industrial production. Another Greece must-try food
is definitely a yogurt with honey.
Text source [
1]
I wish I'd read this BEFORE going to Greece!
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