Greek Salad and SouvlakiThis is Di! Today is Greece's independance day, so we had to celebrate. Why? Because it's a reason to eat Greek food! I looked up some recipes on the internet that were so easy and turned out so well, that I had to share! Our menu consisted of Greek kabobs called souvlaki, white rice, and Greek salad with baklava for dessert. Then enjoy your favorite Greek movie like My Big Fat Greek Wedding or Mama Mia.
Keep in mind I had to convert the measurements, so they aren't exact.
Souvlaki
3 lbs tender pork or beef (I used a pork roast)
3 T olive oil
Juice of 2 lemons
3 T oregano
1 T thyme
Salt and Pepper
Cut meat up into cubes removing any fat or gristle. Thread on to skewers (if you're using wood skewers they need to be soaked in water for a few minutes) brush with olive oil, season with oregano, thyme, and lots of salt and pepper.
I cooked mine on a grill pan under a sheet of aluminum foil. This traps the heat in so they cook faster and more evenly. Over medium heat, they need about 3-5 minutes per side. You can use a thermometer to check if they're done, it should register at 170 degrees. These are also good cooked on a bbq or you could broil them in the oven.
When thoroughly cooked, put the skewers on a plate and pour lemon juice over them. I garnished it with some lemon peel, that is why you see yellow chunks on it in the picture.
Greek Salad
Make a yummy salad with romaine lettuce, cucumbers, tomatoes, feta cheese and Greek olives. Top with red wine vinegar and olive oil or your favorite salad dressing.
Baklava
Filling:
1 lb chopped walnuts (since my mom is allergic, I used almonds, and that was really good too!)
1/2 c. sugar
1 t. cinnamon
Mix together in a bowl
Pastry:
8oz. Fyllo dough (you find this in the refrigerator section of the store)
1/2 c. melted butter (you may need more)
Butter the base and sides of a 9X13 pan. Put a sheet of fyllo dough on the bottom of pan, brush with butter, then another sheet and brush with butter, repeat five times. Keep in mind the dough may be too big for the pan, but it will shrink. Sprinkle some of the filling on. Layer more dough with butter brushed between each layer 3 times. Then sprinkle more filling, then layer 3 more sheets brushed with butter. Add the remainder of the filling. Layer the rest of the dough (there should be about 8 sheets left). Be sure to put a lot of butter on the top layer so the pastry gets nice and brown. Cut the pastry halfway through-don't cut it all the way to the bottom-in diamond shapes with a sharp knife. Bake at 375 degrees for 15 minutes then reduce heat to 350 and bake 20 minutes longer. Cool, pour the syrup over the top. It will be a little soupy, but that just makes it yummy. The pastry slowly soaks in the liquid, so this dish is good for days after it's made.
Syrup:
1 c. sugar
1 c. water
2 cinnamon sticks or 1 t. cinnamon
2 t. lemon juice
a few pieces of lemon peel
2 T honey
Put all the ingredients except the honey in a saucepan. Dissolve the sugar in the water simmer for 6-8 minutes. Add the honey, simmer 5 minutes more until it thickens.
I got these recipes from http://www.greek-recipe.com/


2 comments:
OH MY GOSH! This food looks amazing. I wish you didn't live an hour away so I could come over and snitch! I LOVE greek food. The baklava looks heavenly.
Fantastic cooking.
Wow! I am so impressed! I, too, wish I could have snitched. Maybe I'll have to get cultured and try Greek food soon. It looks awesome.
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