EATING HABITS OF CLASSICAL GREECE

Cooks

As far as we know from the relevant inscriptions, during the classical era cooking was the profession for men who were free citizens. From the Hellenistic period onwards though, cooks were specialised slaves. As Menander writes, the good slaves-cooks were paid a lot of money and had a prominent position in domestic affairs. 
In ancient times, there were quite a few collections of recipes but we only a few extracts have been saved. Most recipes and other details concerning nutrition can be found in "Deipnosofistis" which was written by Athineos who at the same time with the seven wise men, also accounts seven great cooks. The greatest were Agis and Rodos who made the best fish, Afthonias who made the best sausages and Nireas from Chios who made a divine fish-soup. 


Symposia/Feasts
The main meal of the day, the so-called "deipnon", for the ancient Greeks was dinner. "Symposia" were famous evening celebrations, a good opportunity for food, drink, chat and discussion. This is a habit still maintained today (in proportion) through home gatherings for dinner and nights out. The habit of drinking and then eating meze food, chatting, singing and dancing comes straight from the Ancient Greeks. All our ancestors did the same. 
And of course they ate dried fruit. They drank their wine in the "symposia" and they combined that with chatting, music, singing and "astafides" (raisins), "amygdala" (almonds), "erevintous (roasted chick-peas), "kastana" (chestnuts), dates, pomegranates, dried figs and fruit such as cherries, plums, grapes, quince, "Armenian apples" (apricots) and "Persian apples" (peaches). 


What kind of food were ancient Greeks eating?


Meat 
They did not have turkeys (these were imported from America) but they most certainly had chicken of various kinds, such as the ones of Chalkida, Tanagra or Rhodes. The Rhodes’ chickens would be very meaty but did not produce many eggs. The Ancient Greeks also ate, as we do, plenty of pork and goat’s meat but no big animals, such as cows which were used for farming. The poorer people ate cow’s meat usually during the great sacrifices of public religious celebrations. Also, there was a separate donkey meat market in Athens.
They also usually ate game. Wild boar, deer and birds were in the menu of richer people who also had the time to go hunting. They ate snails, too. It was also very usual (as it is actually today, in the country) for them to eat boiled meat which lasted longer. They would also though roast, char-grill or cook meat in a pot, known as "gastra". They also cooked it in various sauces with ingredients such as oil, salt, pepper, vinegar, dill, mint, thyme, cumin, oregano, fennel etc.

Dairy products 
Milk was a very usual dish accompaniment. Cheese, in great variety, was not just a usual "meze" but also an ingredient for delicious recipes. They made "tyrotarachos" (cheese and salted fish), "mytotos" (cheese, garlic pieces, oil, honey), "kykeonas" (cheese, barley flour, wine, thyme, herbs) and cheese rolls or pies (shredded cheese, flour, honey).

Cereal 
The Ancient Greeks cooked wheat in several ways: after peeling it in a mortar they boiled it in water and then served it with milk it which made it look whiter. They also cooked it without passing it through a mill, a recipe from Chios. This was wheat that they soaked in water for about ten days (changing that water regularly), then it was melted, they threw away its peel and they sun-dried the rest of it. It was with this material that they made bread and desserts.
They also made all kinds of "poltos" (pulp made of flour, water, spices), "ptisani" (barley flour) and "chondros" (wheat grain). Flour was prepared in wooden or stone mortars and in domestic mills and it was then sieved. In several places, such as the islands, they mainly used barley. A tradition which carries on until contemporary Greece is the "healthy" barley bread from Lemnos and Crete, which is sold in super-markets.

Breads 
They made several types of bread, which varied according to the ingredients ("maza" when from barley and "artos" when from wheat) or the existence of any pre-baking ("zymitis", "azymos") and the type of baking ("apopyrias", "epnitis", "sponditis"). The baker’s profession can be traced back to the beginning of the 2nd century B.C.

Vegetables 
Cabbage, cauliflower, leeks, lettuce, marrows, cucumbers, stalks carrots, radishes, bulbs, onions, celery, nettle, cress, and artichokes. Garlic was eaten by rowers as it was considered to be particularly nutritious. Also, broad beans or flour made from broad beans was used for bread, lentils, beans, peas and yellow peas. Olives and olive oil, were very popular, the latter always used in cooking pots to make them non-stick. Certain areas were particularly famous for the local olive oil, such as Attika, Samos, Sikyona (Kiato), Evoia, Fokida, Crete and Cyprus.

Fruit 
There were forty-four varieties of fig, thirty-two varieties of apples and six varieties of pears. Also, plums, quince, pomegranates, bitter oranges and possibly oranges and lemons. Grapes were eaten either fresh or dried and were also used for making wine while the boiled new wine was also used in baking cakes. Jujubes, carobs and dried fruit were also part of the Ancient Greeks’ diet.

Seafood 
Many varieties of fish were mainly eaten salted ("tarichi"). The area of Kyzikos in Asia Minor was famous for the export of processed tuna. Ieron, the Syracuse tyrant is known to have sent to Egypt one thousand barrels of salted fish, in the end of the 3rd century BC.
The Ancient Greeks ate plenty of seafood just like Modern Greeks, such as "trichides" (sardines), "melanouros", "lavrakas", "trigli" (red mullet), "sparos", "echinous" (sea-urchins), "kochyli", "astakos", "karides" (prawns), "sipies" (cuttlefish). These were either boiled, or roasted or fried.

Wines 
They were produced generally in the same way as they are today. What was different was the way they were stored as they did not use wooden barrels or bottles but amphoras. They produced all kinds of wine but they would drink it "watered", that is two parts of water for one part of wine.
Retsina which is an ancient wine of Attika, was probably made by mistake! They used to spread "retsini" (resin) on amphoras to make them water-tight and the wine would then acquire the taste of "retsini", hence the "retsina" wine. (Many centuries later, a certain mistake in the transportation seems to have triggered the discovery of champagne!!).
To improve the taste of wine, they also added seawater, chalk and several herbs. The most well known wines were made in Mendi of Chalkidiki, Naxos of Sicily, Thassos and Rhodes.


by Spyros Vasardanis at http://users.forthnet.gr/. Edited  to be posted by Leopoldo Costa

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