Greek cooking essentials.....
Essentials
The wooden pestle and mortar belonged to my mother in law
I think the brass one came from her too
The brass one we still use to pound nuts or spices, nutmeg, cloves, mastiha, mahlepi
The large one is for pounding garlic and potatoes for skorthalia, or was, before the day of the food mixer.
And
A large bottle of red wine. Agioritiko is the most popular red grape variety in our area. It has notes of spicy plum, so they say. A good cheap red, I say.
3 bottles of local olive oil which stay on our bench
One bottle is from last year's harvest, used in cooking
The glass bottle has the fresh oil for salads
And a spray bottle
Fresh fish from our Saronic Gulf
A typical size for fish around here
The fishmonger scales and guts them
K fries them
The cat gets the leftovers
The fish are called lithrinia in greek. Red or Grey sea bream says Google translate.
As usual here they're fried whole. Good eating but so many bones and greasy fingers. I'd love fillets but they don't often fillet fish here. They'd lose all their taste, they say, without the head and backbone
This photo was taken on a misty Winter's morning
A fresh baked loaf. It rose slowly all night in the fridge. Bread making this way is convenient and always makes a excellent loaf.
I mix the flour, water and yeast the night before. I don't Knead it much at all. The bowl is covered and left in the fridge. Early the next morning it has doubled in size. I take out the bowl, leave it an hour to warm up a bit. Punch it down and out it into the baking tin. Leave for half an hour to rise a little and bake.
This one was for grandson Jamie who was going back to Athens after the Easter break to finish off the year's studies
Thyme and basil
And there's oregano, rosemary, parsley and sage in the garden too






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ReplyDeleteJamie will love the fact you have baked for him. ❤️❤️
ReplyDeleteI hope so. The last time he was here I baked a loaf for him to take back but he left early and his sister and aunt ate it instead!
DeleteAll good stuff there. Your herbs look very healthy. Mine are still feebly trying to grow!
ReplyDeleteHerbs thank goodness survive in my garden, sometimes for years. They're about all that survives. I love herbs 😅
DeleteWhat a good yiayia you are to bake bread for him.I’m sure he appreciates it.
ReplyDeleteI’ve never thought to buy a spray bottle and put the oil in it. I buy the olive oil spray cans. I think i might just steal your idea
I bought that spray from Shein for a few pence. It's very handy
DeleteWhen I think of Greek cooking, I think of Olive Oil, Lemon, and Oregano.
ReplyDeleteBy jove, you've got it. Add a bit of garlic too. For Italian swap the oregano for basil
DeleteGood, tasty ingredients, for good, tasty eating.
ReplyDeleteAdd some sunshine and a glass of something local. Perfection
DeleteGood food only needs simple ingredients. Perfect.
ReplyDeleteLocal and seasonal fish are still affordable as is the oil though we use it sparingly. Fresh from the frying pan it's full of taste. We had a tomato sprinkled with oregano and bread and that was it
DeleteI'm thinking the cat would love the leftovers. I actually can't stand wine but we only use Olive oil here although I'm sure it's not a good quality one as yours probably is. Have a great week.
ReplyDeleteLook up Elle-oil. One of my neices imported Poros oil and is selling it in NZ. She is is up in the Bay of Plenty though
Deleteelle_olive_oil
DeleteOh, I love your herb garden! Mine is just now getting started. I need to re-seed mine with Greek oregano, and my other plant is still plagued with (I think) cutworms. What ever it is it doesn't bother anything else but the oregano.
ReplyDeleteOur oregano has lived a few years. We're lucky
DeleteYou cook so much that makes my mouth water! I really should try making bread, but am scared I will get addicted, and well... we really don't need too much bread (being a far arse! lol)
ReplyDeleteI only make it for special occasions now or I'd devour it all. The aroma is amazing
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