Tuesday, 29 September 2009

The Greek Salad. Leave it alone!


Do you know, if you 'Google around a bit' or engage in a bit of 'Binging' you quicky become aware of just how many Interpretations of the famous greek Salad there are out there.

Its quite amazing. there are ingredients I have never heard of - one American recipe called for either mayo (God forbid!) or something with the horrendous name of 'Miracle Whip'. Then its goes on to plonk a potato salad in the middle of what no Greek would recognise as a Greek salad.

In Greece the humble 'Horiatikisalata' - Peasant or village salad (what we all know as Greek Salad) is enshrined in law. Put too few olives or miss a few grams of feta and you could get a fine. No really. I think its the same if you put some other foreign ingredient too. Shifty taverna owners like sometimes to 'bulk' the salad out with cheap lettuce or white cabbage. Well, they are on a days outing to the magistrates court if they get discovered or complained about.

There is a good reason for this, in my opinion. Although I rarely stick to a recipe when cooking and I am one to suggest that sometimes 'traditional' can be improved upon and, why not? All traditions have to start somewhere. But in the case of the Greek salad, I will defend it to the hilt.

Why? Because its about as damn perfect a salad as you could hope for. Rarely for Greek cuisine, it has a dish which is up there with the greats; Nicoise and Caesar spring to mind. The uncommon way all the ingredients compliment each other is wonderful, right down to the juice left at the bottom of the bowl - a heady mix of tomato juices, bits of onion, little bits of feta, vinegar and, of course, Greek olive oil.



For the record, here's what should make a Greek Salad. Nothing left out, nothing added in: Cucumbers, tomatoes, sliced onion, sliced green pepper, black olives, feta cheese, oregano, a dribble of vinegar and some healthy glugs of the best olive oil you can find (Cretan, naturally).

Oh, and half a loaf of bread for the juices at the bottom!

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