Another non meat and very traditional dish. I make it in the winter when cabbage is fresh and cheap
I'd add thinly sliced carrot too. Gives it a bit of colour and lots of dill for flavour
Another non meat and very traditional dish. I make it in the winter when cabbage is fresh and cheap
I'd add thinly sliced carrot too. Gives it a bit of colour and lots of dill for flavour
A greek tradition. No feasting or fasting involved.
These red and white bracelets protect the wearer from the fierce (?) Spring sunshine.
This tradition began thousands of years ago and is still strong today.
The colours, red and white, celebrated Persephone's return from the Underworld, rebirth and new growth.
It's celebrated in a similar way all over the Balkans. In the northern hemisphere summer is not far away
My girls and then my grandchildren made these bracelets at school every March 1st twisting red and white thread. They are supposed to wear them till 31st March
At the end of the month or at the sight of the first swallow the thread is to be tossed in a tree for the swallows of spring to find and weave into their nests. K says the tradition here is to throw it up onto the roof tiles.
Last year I hung mine on the lemon tree where it remained till the winds of winter. We have lots of swallows but they don't build their nests anywhere close by
During winter there are only 2 catamarans daily between Poros and Athens. One in the morning and one at 5pm. We were finished and at the harbour at 1 and had a 4 hour wait for the evening boat. The passenger waiting room was padlocked. Thank goodness there were toilets, sparkling clean too, a canteen and an open air seating area
I bought K a can of beer and a bag of chips and went off to explore the harbour shopping district
The day after that celebration of shellfish and ouzo we were up at 6am to catch the 8am catamaran to Athens. It was a freezing morning and I was glad to walk up the gangplank into the warm lounge of the high speed catamaran. I haven't travelled on one of these for years. I loved the trip. It was quiet onboard, the seats were wide and comfy and the sea was smooth. I had a seat beside a large window and enjoyed the sights. Small rocky islets came into view, then the islands of Angistri and Salamima and the backside of Aegina with its sheer cliffs, narrow enclosed bays where they met the sea. Then the container ships anchored and waiting their turn to enter the Port of Piraeus and finally the port itself with a huge cruise ship tied up to the tourist wharf and the big boats which steam overnight to Crete. I remember them from our years living at the Navy Base on Crete though that route is now covered mainly by high speed catamaran in half the time
It has been a busy few days. Monday was the big day of clean eating to celebrate the beginning of Lent. No dairy, no eggs, no meat and only seafood without blood. That meant a lot of shellfish, octopus, squid, vegetables and all sorts of lentils and other pulses.
The most traditional food today is the lagana, flatbread, and taramasalata. That's salted fish roe mushed up with breadcrumbs, lots of oil and a bit of onion and lemon juice.
Yes, it's another fiesta, a long weekend, 3 days of celebration
All of Greece is celebrating, each district, town, village in their own traditional fashion
It's the beginning of Lent tomorrow and this Saturday and Sunday everyone is out celebrating the end of Carnival.......
Except us.
What's going on?