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Greek cuisine is the cuisine of Greece or perhaps of the
Greeks. Given the geography and history of Greece, this style
of cookery is typical of Mediterranean cuisine, with strong
influences from Italy, Middle East and, to a lesser extent,
from the Balkans. The basic grain in Greece is wheat, though
barley is also grown. Important vegetables include tomato,
eggplant, potato, green beans, okra, and onions. The terrain
has tended to favour the production of goats and sheep over
cattle, and thus beef dishes tend to be a rarity by comparison.
Fish dishes are also common, especially in coastal regions.
Olive oil, produced from the trees prominent throughout the
region, adds to the distinctive taste of Greek food. Some
dishes use filo pastry. Too much refinement is generally considered
to be against the hearty spirit of the Greek cuisine. Traditionally,
Greek dishes are served warm rather than hot.
Appetizers

Pikilia
- Meze is a collective name
for appetizers.
- Dips are served with loaf
bread or pita bread. In some regions, dried bread ('paximadhi')
is softened in water.
- Tzatziki, yoghurt with cucumber
and garlic puree, used as a dip; it comes from the Turkish
beverage or soup cacik.
- Taramosalata, fish roe mixed
with boiled potatoes or moistened breadcrumbs.
- Spanakopita, spinach wrapped
in filo pastry.
- Tyropita, cheese (usually
feta) wrapped in filo pastry.
Many other things are wrapped in filo pastry, either in
bite-size triangles or in large sheets: kotopita (chicken),
spanakotyropita (spinach and cheese), hortopita (greens),
kreatopita (meat pie, using ground meat), etc.
- Saganaki, fried cheese.
- Dolmades grapevine leaves
stuffed either with meat or rice and vegetables. From the
Turkish 'dolma' = 'stuffed'.
- Avgolemono soup, chicken,
meat, vegetable, or fish broth thickened with eggs and lemons
and rice.
The so-called Greek Salad is known in Greece as Village/Country
Salad (Horiatiki). In Greece, it consists of tomato, cucumber,
onion, and sometimes green peppers garnished with olives and
feta cheese, and dressed with olive oil and oregano. Abroad,
it also sometimes includes lettuce (even iceberg lettuce!),
which is completely unknown to the Greek version, and foreign
to its genius.
- 'Pikilia' simply means an
'assortment'.
Some dishes served in Greek restaurants (especially outside
Greece) are not Greek at all, for example hummus bi tahini,
the famous Lebanese dip.
Famous Greek dishes

A plate of feta cheese, a traditional Greek cheese
- Moussaka (eggplant casserole).
There are other variations besides eggplant, such as zucchini
or rice, but the eggplant version ("melitzanes moussaka")
is most popular, so "moussaka" alone is assumed
to mean with eggplant.
- Kleftiko: lamb slow-baked
on the bone, first marinated in garlic and lemon juice.
- Stifado: beef slow-baked
with red wine and cinnamon.
- Souvlaki, lamb and vegetables
grilled on skewers, or in general, anything grilled on a
skewer (chicken, pork, swordfish).
- Gyros, meat roasted on a
vertically turning spit and served with sauce (often tzatziki)
and garnishes (tomato, onions) on pita bread; a popular
fast food. Sometimes confused with souvlaki served in a
similar way. The same dish is called döner in Turkish,
which is the noun derived from the verb "dönmek"
(to turn, to revolve).
- Boureki, similar to kreatopita,
from Turkish börek.
- Pastitsio, a macaroni, meat,
and Bechamel sauce casserole.
Desserts

Several types of baklava
- Baklava, a popular sweet
dessert, of filo pastry layers with nuts, sugar, honey,
cloves. Related to the Turkish baklava, Lebanese baqlawa.
- Loukoumas
- Loukoumia
- Yoghurt with honey
- Galaktoboureko, custard between
layers of filo. From Turkish börek.
Drinks

A bottle of ouzo
- Wine is the most common drink
in Greece. Until the 1980's, most wine in Greece was mediocre
in quality at best, but more recently it has come up to
international standards.
- Beer is widely drunk; common
brands include Heineken, Amstel, Mythos, Henninger, and
Kaiser, all of which are produced locally, some under license.
- Ouzo (an 80-proof clear alcoholic
beverage that is flavored with anise; it turns milky white
with water or ice; the best said to be produced on the island
of Lesbos). It is similar to French pastis.
- Tsipouro or (esp. in Crete)
'raki' (Mostly home-brewed, a clear drink similar to ouzo,
often with higher alcohol content, and usually not flavored
with herbs.
- Retsina (a white wine that
has some pine tar added, originally as a preservative, but
nowadays for the flavor; this is an Athens region specialty.
It should not be aged.).
- Mavrodafni Sweet, liquor-style,
red wine with higher alcohol percentage than normal.
- Metaxa, a brand of sweet
brandy, 40% alcohol content.
- Greek coffee (formerly called
Turkish coffee), made by boiling finely-ground coffee beans,
and is served thick and strong, and often sweetened.
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