Vinegar
Feb 27th, 2013 |
By Peter Minakis
One of my favourite fish is monkfish or angler fish. In Greece they call this fish peskandritsa and it usally is big, it’s fugly but it’s versatile and delicious. If you’re the type that doesn’t want to fuss with pin bones, no worries. Monkifish is large, triangular with the the body tapering as you near [...]
Posted in Butter, Eggplant, Featured, Fish, Greek Wine, Herbs, Main, Olive Oil, Onions, Oranges, Peppers, Recipes, Vegetables, Vinegar |
7 comments
Feb 16th, 2013 |
By Peter Minakis
This recipe is as much about texture as it about taste. What I love about this recipe is that I’m using Greek yogurt to put the creamy in this coleslaw and there’s a minimal amount of mayonnaise and…no cream! Flavour-wise, I am relying on the flavours of cabbage and carrot, both finely grated – the [...]
Posted in Cabbage, Featured, Garlic, Olive Oil, Recipes, Salt, Side, Vinegar |
6 comments
Feb 13th, 2013 |
By Peter Minakis
This recipe features alot of ancient Greek ingredients: chick peas…this was the starch of the day before potatoes and rice. Then we have shrimp – fish and seafood were prominent in the ancient Greek diet and they still are a big part of the diet in today’s Greece. Oxymeli, a Greek compound word meaning “acid-honey” [...]
Posted in Ancient Greece, Featured, Garlic, Greek, Herbs, Legume, Lent, Olive Oil, Onions, Seafood, Spices, Vinegar |
7 comments
Dec 20th, 2012 |
By Peter Minakis
There’s a Constantinople dish from around 1900 called Gioulbasi. Traditionally, a leg of lamb is studded with garlic and stuffed with pieces of sharp, aged Greek cheese. The meat is wrapped in parchment paper and slowly roasted until the meat is fork-tender, aromatic and about to fall off the bone. In mainland Greece there are [...]
Posted in Cheese, Cherry, Christmas, Featured, Festive, Garlic, Greek, Greek Wine, Herbs, How To, Main, Oranges, Peppers, Sauce, Spinach, Stuffing, Vinegar |
5 comments
Sep 27th, 2012 |
By Peter Minakis
One of the downsides (there are few) to going to Greece is that lobster prices are astronomical. If you find live lobster at the market it will go for 60 Euros a kilo and at a seafood taverna you will likely pay 80 Euros a kilo for this delicacy. Fast forward to Canada, back from [...]
Posted in Bread, Breakfast, Brunch, Butter, Eggs, Featured, Frying, Herbs, How To, Lobster, Main, Poaching, Potato, Recipes, Sauce, Vinegar |
5 comments
Sep 16th, 2012 |
By Peter Minakis
Rather than have you search other recipes with the nest egg hidden in there, I’m posting the walnut skordalia recipe on its own. Skordalia is a dip/condiment most often paired with battered and fried salt cod and it is wither made with a base of stale bread or boiled potatoes. Down south in Laconia they [...]
Posted in Bread, Condiments, Dips, Featured, Garlic, Greek, Lent, Meze, Nuts, Olive Oil, Side, Vinegar, Walnuts |
4 comments
Jun 28th, 2012 |
By Peter Minakis
The frequency of my blog posts may have lessened a bit but I can assure you I’ve been cooking, keeping very busy with activities that [...]
Posted in Cheese, Cypriot, Dressing, Featured, Greek Grill, Herbs, Honey, Lemon, Olive Oil, Olives, Onions, Peppers, Pickling, Quick, Recipes, Sandwich, Snacks, Vegetarian, Vinegar |
10 comments
Jun 14th, 2012 |
By Peter Minakis
Stories of my ancestors were usually related by my mother or one of her sisters. Stories kept my family connected with my mother’s side of the family who mostly still live back in Greece. My mom would paint stories of how my grandmother was like, how my grandfather was like, how aunts and uncles were [...]
Posted in Amynteon, Appetizer, Featured, Garlic, Grapes, Greek, Greek Wine, How To, Meze, Olive Oil, Ouzo, Preserving, Vinegar |
11 comments
Apr 8th, 2012 |
By Peter Minakis
How many ways are there to prepare octopus? There’s grilled, boiled, baked, I recently tried “sous vide” (and it was fantastic) and now there is fried. Regardless of how you’re going to eat octopus the key is to tenderize it. The old-school way in Greece was to bash it on rocks at the beach, some [...]
Posted in Appetizer, Braising, Featured, Frying, Herbs, Honey, Lent, Meze, Recipes, Seafood, Vinegar |
12 comments
Apr 2nd, 2012 |
By Peter Minakis
In Greece, cauliflower is called “kounoupidi” and its a winter vegetable usually steamed/boiled or pickled and enjoyed throughout the colder months. Toursi are pickled vegetables and practically anything can and will be pickled from eggplants to beans, green tomatoes to peppers and onions to cauliflower. I made some Fakkes (classic Greek lentil soup) last week [...]
Posted in Featured, Greek, How To, Lent, Meze, Pickling, Quick, Vegetarian, Vinegar |
5 comments