Posts Tagged ‘Greek food’
Zorba approved…
In taste memory of last weekend’s Easter feast, I give you…
Greek Chicken Shish kebabs (serves 4)
4 bamboo skewers (6-inches long), soaked in water for 15 minutes
⅛ cup extra virgin olive oil
juice and zest of half a lemon
1 tablespoon EACH dried Greek oregano and Fridge Whisperer: Lusciously Local no-salt dried vegetable seasoning
1 pound boneless/skinless chicken breast, cut into ½-inch cubes
• Whisk together oil, lemon juice, lemon zest, oregano, and vegetable seasoning and toss with chicken to evenly coat.
• Let rest at room temperature for 15 minutes to allow flavours to meld, then thread on to skewers and grill on medium heat until thoroughly cooked, approximately 15 minutes. Alternatively, place prepared shish kebabs on grill pan and broil on middle rack in preheated 375F oven for 15 to 20 minutes, turning kebabs after 10 minutes, or until chicken is no longer pink inside.
Lemon-Oregano Rice (serves 6)
This recipe can be made in an electric rice cooker too. Just follow manufacture’s instructions.
2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
½ cup finely chopped yellow onion
1 large garlic clove, minced
2 Knorr chicken cubes
1 tablespoon dried Greek oregano
1 tablespoon Fridge Whisperer: Lusciously Local no-salt dried vegetable seasoning, or same amount Mrs. Dash
2 cups raw parboiled long grain rice
4 cups water
zest of two lemons
• Set a large heavy bottomed saucepan with a tight fitting lid over medium heat and add oil.
• Add onion and cook 5 minutes.
• Add garlic, chicken cubes, oregano, vegetable seasoning and sauté 5 more minutes.
• Add rice and continue cooking for 5 more minutes.
• Stir in water.
• Reduce heat to low, cover, and cook 20 minutes or until all water is absorbed and rice is al dente, then fold in lemon zest and season with kosher salt and freshly ground pepper to taste.
Foodie@Large: unorthodox deconstruction…
My mind’s eye keeps travelling back to December 2010 and my first bite of “fundraiser moussaka” purchased from the back kitchen at the Greek Orthodox Church in Oshawa, Ontario. It’s the best I’ve ever eaten. And what with growing up in my best friend’s Greek kitchen in the early ’70s and living a stone’s throw from Toronto’s Greektown for a lot of my life, suffice to say, moussaka is in my blood.
I can’t tell you how happy I was to return to the church kitchen this afternoon and find the same ladies behind the counter dishing out homemade, front-scratch lemon-oregano rice, roasted potatoes, shish kebabs, spanakopita, dolmades, baklava and, of course, their decadent multi-layered moussaka.
I tried chatting them up in hopes they’d talk moussaka-speak. But they’re crafty, this lot of blessed cooking babes. They feigned not understanding, shook their heads collectively, spoke to one another in their mother tongue.
It’s not that I don’t want to support their cause. I do! It’s just that I really want to try my hand recreating their dish in my own kitchen. Perfected, I could whip up a pan of moussaka at midnight should the fancy take me.
I couldn’t trust myself to stay the course and not eat the test subject before deconstructing it so I bought two portions of moussaka. I chowed down the first piece in record time. God. Just like I remembered. So friggin’ good it ought to be illegal. Or at least cost more than the paltry $4 they charge. This is a regular Thursday afternoon fundraiser for the church. They’re never going to reach their building fund goals with these prices. This thought must have been playing on my mind because I told the lady to keep the change from my sawbuck.
Satiated, I went to work on the second piece of moussaka, ever-so-gently pulling back the layers, a notebook and pen at the ready to record my findings.
For one thing, they use ground beef, not traditional ground lamb which is way more expensive and wouldn’t allow them to dish it out at four bucks a pop. What I couldn’t figure out is whether or not they cook off the potato and eggplant slices before assembling the moussaka. I’ve made moussaka countless times and always par-boil the potatoes and oven bake the eggplant slices before incorporating them into the dish. But the texture of the potatoes and eggplant in the fundraiser moussaka was way different than mine. I’m thinking they’re cooked off first but maybe using a different method. Perhaps they steam the potato slices and pan fry the eggplant?
Time and testing (and re-testing) will tell.
Annunciation Of The Virgin Mary Greek Orthodox Church
hosted by The Hellenic Orthodox Community of Oshawa in the church hall,
261 Bloor Street East, Oshawa, ON L1H 3M3
(905) 728-5969 eat in or take out
Catering for all occasions call (905) 725-3083
Greek food served every Thursday 11 am to 4 pm
Foodie @ large: Greektown WAY east of the Danforth…
- Lunch brigade at the church hall
- Mousaka
- My amazing Greek lunch… and dinner!
I adore Greek food but, sadly, in my neck of the woods its, well, sadly lacking, in anything that resembles good taste. (See my “Eater Beware” rant). After umpteen miserable attempts to source a good Greek food joint in Durham Region I’d resided myself to trekking into Toronto’s east end Greektown on the Danforth to get my fix.
You can imagine my utter delight as the Annunciation of the Virgin Mary kitchen brigade — headed by Thomas Chryssovergis and flanked by servers Koula and Bessie (click on the photo to see Bessie complete) — uncovered the chafers and let me peek ‘n sniff at what they’d created from scratch just hours before I’d arrived. Real Greek food! All handmade with loads of love. And quality ingredients (this nose knows) like pork tenderloin for the kebabs and real lemons and hand rolled pastries and layers of thickly sliced Yukon Golds between the meatily layered mousaka.
All offerings can be purchased al a carte or you can opt for the mixed plate which, of course, I did.
It was love at first bite.
Succulent pork souvlaki sided by a dollop of garlicy tzatziki sauce; a Greek salad they dressed after I’d placed my order. A hardy salad laced with creamy sheep’s milk feta and earthy kalamatas; two huge juicy all-beef meatball covered in a rich tomato sauce spiked with subtle hits of oregano; lemon-herb rice; a spinach spanakopita roll; and the best darn mousaka I’ve ever tasted in my life (including mine!). What did all this amazing food cost? Try $7.50 including tax and all the free smiles you want.
Annunciation Of The Virgin Mary Greek Orthodox Church
hosted by The Hellenic Orthodox Community of Oshawa in the church hall,
261 Bloor Street East, Oshawa, ON L1H 3M3
(905) 728-5969 eat in or take out
Catering for all occasions call (905) 725-3083











