Cyprus - Eating Traditionally
Eating out to catch some local flavour is always the high spot of a holiday, but
where do you start when faced with the Cypriot menu at your local taverna.
In the course of your stay it is quite possible to try everything but why not
order a Meze and taste all the dishes at one sitting.
Meze is short for, Mezedhes, or little delicacies, and wherever you travel round
the Mediterranean they appear in some form or other. Share a meze in Cyprus and
you have tasted the true flavours of the island, for you may be served anything
up to:30 dishes. It is a complete meal, but, beware, don't be tempted to finish
every dish that arrives on the table, or you may feel as though you've eaten for
a week by the end! Just take a leaf out of a Cypriot's book and enjoy your meze
'siga-siga'or slowly, slowly.
Well, the decision has been made and your meze is ordered - what can you expect
to eat?
First come the olives, black and green, (elies) tsakistes with a dressing of
lemon, garlic, herbs, coriander seeds and oil.
Dips of tahini, skordalia, taramosalata and talattouri arrive with a basket of
fresh village bread and a bowl of salata horiatiki, village salad.
Octapodi krasato, octopus in red wine, karaoli yahni, snails in tomato sauce,
zalatina, brawn, and pickles of capers, kappari and pickled cauliflower, moungra,
are some of the unusual meze dishes that may arrive now.
Bunches of greens, some raw, some dressed with lemon juice and salt such as
carrots and kohlrabi, and some tossed in oil and bound with egg may fit into
your meze at this point.
Fish of some kind could be next on the menu.
Marida tiny sardine type fish or barbouni, red mullet which are usually served
very small, and kalamari or rings of squid are battered and deep fried,
accompanied with chunks of fresh lemon.
Grilled halloumi cheese and lounza smoked pork, come next followed by keftedes,
meat balls, the popular seftalia, grilled pork rissoles, and loukanika, smoked
Cyprus sausages.
Now for the composite dishes or casseroles such as afelia, moussaka and stifado.
Towards the end of the meal come the kebabs souvlakia, the ofto kleftico (meat
baked in a sealed oven), as well as pieces of chicken, arriving straight from
the grill.
But perhaps you are beginning to feel full now... No surprise - you've survived
your first meze!
Sit back contented in the knowledge that little else is to follow. Just some
fresh fruit, carefully prepared and segmented and, well, perhaps just a few
sugar dredged bourekia pastry filled with fresh curd cheese and honey .
|
|