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| Appetizers Recipes for foods to get the appetite going. |
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The Kretans have their own version of a greek bruschetta called Dakos. We use "paximadi" which is a very dark dried bread made out of bulgur wheat. During the German occupation of WWII when it was difficult to come and go to the bakery people would bake their own bread at home. To preserve it they would dry it and it keeps indefinitely. It is the most used bread in Krete. They make many varieties these days using white bread, sesame, etc, and you can buy it at mediterranean specialty stores, though Kretans to this day prefer the bulgur wheat version.
To be eaten easily the bread is rehydrated by being run under the faucet until it is wet. Leave on aplate and within 2-3 minutes it is soft enough to eat. Our everyday after school snack was this bread, drizzled with fresh olive oil, topped with a freshly crushed tomatoes, sprinkled with salt and oregano, and sometimes topped with crumbled feta. |
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And yet, when I was growing up, our neighbors down the block wouldn't touch it, because they associated it with deprivation.
I don't know if they were from Crete or not. We just knew them as Greek. But I remember the argument that took place when they had a family reunion and somebody brought paximadi. Goodness, it's been decades since I even thought of them. I have friends who won't eat game for the same reason. The grew up dirt poor, and game was all they had to eat. So now they associate it with poverty. Although the differences blur among toasts, the hallmark of bruschetta is that it's first toasted---ideally on a grill---and then rubbed with raw garlic and brushed with olive oil. This is how it differs from, say, crostini, which may or may not have the garlic rub. |
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| Anchovy & Cherry Tomato Bruschetta | Mama Mangia | Appetizers | 0 | 07-05-2006 06:14 PM |