ABSTRACT

This book is an ethnography of the metamorphosis of rural foods and traditional dishes and of the making of cuisine and identity in contemporary Athens.

In the wake of the financial crisis in Athens in the mid-2015s, forgotten rural foods of the past are transformed into luxurious artisanal foods, while traditional dishes appear reinvented in fine-dining restaurants, after decades of darkness. How, and why is this all happening in a city of poverty, hardship and economic crisis? Through sensory descriptions and thick ethnographic material, it follows the Athenian affluent middle class in upscale delis and goes inside fine-dining restaurant kitchens, discussing the complex combination of cuisine, tradition, memory and identity, revealing the cultural logic and social aspects of cuisine. It demonstrates how cuisine emerges from very different, often contradictory social spaces, not only as an intellectual and aesthetic endeavour of chefs or as a revival of foods and foodways that link the country and the city, but also as interlinked with embodied memories and embedded in social relations and commensality.

This book will be of great interest to scholars and students in Anthropology and Food Studies.

part 1|57 pages

Cuisine in Athens

chapter 2|24 pages

The smell of the Greek rural

Greek cuisine in the 19th and 20th century

part 2|71 pages

Cuisine in delis

chapter 3|24 pages

Delis of distinction

Artisanal foods and the middle-class hunger for identity

chapter 4|22 pages

Inside Hara deli's kitchen

Commensality at times of crisis

chapter 5|23 pages

The case of the Greek olive oil

part 3|74 pages

Cuisine in restaurants

chapter 6|24 pages

Sheep's heads covered in gold

Chefs and the creation of high cuisine

chapter 7|22 pages

The taste of the Greek past

The senses, memory and food nostalgia

chapter 8|26 pages

Tales from Athenian restaurant kitchens

A fine-dining cuisine of need

part 4|10 pages

The metamorphosis of Greek cuisine

chapter 9|8 pages

Epilogue

Rural remedy