Historical evidence and mythology have extensively proved Cretans’ nutritional preferences throughout the centuries as well as their fondness for basic products.
I would like to introduce you to one of the tastiest and healthy cuisines in the world but also to a magnificent ancient civilization. Learn about the art of Cretan vegetarian nutrition and cooking.
Their diet is typically based on products that originate from the island’s farmlands and mainly includes plates of raw or home cooked greens, grains, pulses, vegetables, olive oil, and fruits. Cretan diet is based on fresh and natural products that are cooked in their original form without any addition in the preparation of the recipes of processed or complicated sauces and only enriched with fresh spices and aromatic herbs that grow on the island of Crete.
Vegetarian Food
The taste and aroma of Cretan plates are perfectly balanced and recipes are typically passed on from older women to younger ones, e.g. grandmother, mother, aunt, sister and so on, rather than from neighbor to neighbor, just like a class in school so that their food traditions last in time. Most of the dishes are very colorful and well presented (big variety and combinations of vegetables, pulses, and greens) in the Cretan diet, but the taste still comes before the presentation.
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Raw materials
Basic ingredients are greens, vegetables, fresh herbs, spices, and olive oil. With a recorded history and culture dating back to 2500 B.C. (more than 5000 years ago), the Island’s cuisine has been clearly influenced in a unique way over time and has evolved to its current state blending traditions from three different continents – Europe, Asia, and Africa. The Mediterranean Sea played a significant ‘role’ in Crete’s cuisine. The salt and iodine of the Mediterranean Sea around the island, make lands particularly fertile, fortifying and enriching the agricultural products with their presence. The diet of locals also includes fish and other seafood almost in the same proportion as meat.
Olive oil on bread, wine for the spirit, sweet for the soul…
Back to the origins. Homemade bread, olive oil, wine, and spoon desserts have nourished Cretans throughout the centuries until today, with no need to be supplemented with standardized, processed food.
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Cretan Food
Although not very rich in meat proteins, Crete’s cuisine never lacks in quality and quantity of foods, because housewives always cook creative dishes like casseroles, pies, stews, spoon desserts and so on, to the delight of real gourmands. Simple and healthy tastes support a centuries-old gastronomic tradition, so powerful and original that it features different specialties and traditional dishes at each and every festivity or local celebration.
Crete’s vegetarian – vegan tastes
Cretans discovered the healing properties of the greens and herbs of their island a very long time ago. Even today that modern, chemistry-based Medicine and Pharmaceutical industry have replaced the medicinal knowledge of our ancestors, Cretan farmers still collect greens and herbs from the mountains, mix them, and use them as natural and practical methods to heal their families.
As I’ve spent my childhood living in the city, I’ve never understood the need for a different and specific diet for each season. Later, as soon as I started to work in the tourism industry, with a particular fondness for alternative types tourism such as agro-tourism and ecotourism, I realized and came to the conclusion that Cretans have not adopted a vegetarian lifestyle intentionally, but rather because of their daily needs.
Taste of Crete
Also, the Greek Orthodox Church has largely contributed towards this lifestyle as they include the practice of Small Fasts (every Wednesday and Friday) and longer ones (Christmas, Easter, and August) among their precepts. Vegetables soups and pulses. Meat is out of the menu. Greens are eaten boiled an seasoned with fresh lemon juice and raw olive oil, or fried in olive oil; they are also used to fill the famous Cretan pies.
Ecologically, and spiritually minded, varied, balanced and especially tasty, Cretan food is said to be the ideal diet which ensures good health and long life. Research shows that people who eat according to Crete’s traditional ways, have less chance of suffering from heart disease, and are generally healthier even than people living in the neighboring Mediterranean countries. Their secret? Cretans typically eat twice as much fruit as other Europeans, a quarter less meat and more pulses. Think about it…