‘A Culinary Voyage’ by Theodore Kyriakou – Book Review
Jun 28th, 2009 by admin
Theodore Kyriakou’s A Culinary Voyage Around The Greek Islands is another of Quadrille Publishing’s ‘traveleating’ books that I have chosen to review as part of my new Book Reviews series. I particularly love reading about people’s food journeys and would have very much enjoyed the sailing trip around the Greek Islands undertaken by food writer and chef Kyriakou (who founded The Real Greek chain of restaurants) as a means of collecting together the mouthwatering recipes for this book. Leafing through the pages and gazing at the gorgeous photos by food photographer Jason Lowe, I can almost feel the sun and Aegean sea breeze on my face.
Interestingly, the recipes are organised into chapters representing the different times on a typical sailing day, so there are intriguing breakfast dishes under ‘At The Mercy Of The First Breakfast‘ (trahana soup with manouri cheese, thyme honey and strawberries; bougatsa (warm savoury filo pie); omelette with honey and sesame seeds); and heartier dishes under ‘Cooking While Heading Into A Thunderstorm‘ (revithosoupa (chickpea soup);elephant bean casserole with orange and fennel) and ‘Dinner Time Under The Night Firmament‘ (pot-roasted eel; rabbit spread; slow-cooked veal cheeks). Towards the back of the book you will find a brief guide to the Greek Islands, a calendar of flowers, festivals, sounds and smells, and a useful glossary of Greek ingredients.
As always, I struggled to choose a dish to replicate, simply because there were so many I would have liked to have tried. Any of the seafood ones would have been perfect, as would the meat dishes. However, in the end I selected a most simple dish.
Koliosalata – smoked mackerel salad dip
Ingredients: (serves 6 plus)
- 370g smoked mackerel
- 60ml extra virgin olive oil
- juice of 1 lemon
- bunch of dill, finely chopped
- 150g strained Greek yoghurt (I used Greek-style yoghurt, but click here for more information on strained yoghurt)
- salt & freshly ground black pepper
- good bread, to serve
What to do next:
Clean the fish and remove bones and skin.
With a fork, mix the flesh with the oil, lemon juice, dill and yoghurt. Add a little salt (but not too much as the mackerel is already salted) and plenty of black pepper. Mix well in order to make a pulp with a smooth-coarse texture, similar to the texture of taramasalata.
Serve with good bread.
I’m so glad I chose to prepare this, because we were busy gardening and this eaten with chunky fresh bread was perfect on a hot sunny day! It was almost like being on one of the Greek Islands…
Thank you to Quadrille Publishing for sending the book for me to review. And do have a look at some of my other book reviews on World Foodie Guide.





That book from Quadrille sounds intriguing. I had to look up trahana (tiny pasta made from wheat or cracked wheat) and a sailing trip is a wonderful way to collect recipes – a great literary device!
Yes, I like this way of making mackerel dip. Yogurt instead of cream makes for a much lighter dish. And meant you could get back to gardening afterwards!
Simple is good, and as I develop my taste for fish this one sounds delicious, and I know hubby will love it. Actually, I know what he will say, “what took you so long to make this one” Thanks for sharing
As a fellow “travel food writer” I am intrigues by the book, particularly the sumptuous photographs. Will certainly recommend this to others in my circle.
Elisabeth – it’s a great way to collect recipes! Exactly the type of journey I’d like to make one day, whether by boat or train or car…
OysterCulture – you didn’t use to eat or like fish? Husband only started eating fish a few years ago, but only once in a while. Hope yours will like it!
Laurie Soileau – great to hear from you and I do hope you and your friends like it. I have reviewed other similar books which you’ll find under Recipes and Book Reviews…
Helen Yuet Ling
Sounds great. What are the more difficult recipes like, have you tried them?
Lizzie – not yet! Too many meat and seafood dishes that wouldn’t go down well at home and that I would struggle to eat on my own. But I will go through the book again and try something else soon, perhaps reducing the serving size…