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Listed 58 sub titles with search on: Local products  for wider area of: "GREECE Country EUROPE" .


Local products (58)

Ancient authors' reports

Amorgina

AMORGOS (Island) KYKLADES
(ta amorgina). Fine muslin textures made of a flax named from the island Amorgus.

Fine cloth was made at Chios

CHIOS (Island) NORTH AEGEAN

Anthrakion

A species of carbuncle found in the island of Chios.

Creta (Cretan terra=chalk or clay)

CRETE (Island) GREECE
Creta (sc. terra). Chalk or clay; so called from its abundance in the island of Crete (Creta), and so in Greek "Kretike ge". The creta proper was simply chalk; creta Eretria was a species of earth found near Eretria in Euboea and used in medicine as an astringent; creta Sarda was fuller's earth, used in cleaning garments; creta Cimolia was a better kind of the same; and creta Selinusia (from Selinus in Sicily) furnished women with one of their numerous face-powders. Of some species of creta, vessels were made. From the whiteness of chalk, it was spoken of tropically as denoting luck, contrasted with carbo. The feet of slaves exposed for sale were chalked (Juv.i. 111), possibly to aid in tracking them if they escaped; hence gypsati pedes in Tibull. ii. 3, 60. The word cretati is sometimes applied to candidates for office, from the white robes they wore=candidati.

This text is from: Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities. Cited Nov 2003 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


Zythos

Cervesia, Cervisia or Cerevisia (zuthos). Ale or beer; a beverage scarcely ever drunk by the ancient Greeks and Romans, although it was very generally used by the surrounding nations, whose soil and climate were less favourable to the growth of vines ...
The beer or barley-wine of Crete was known as korma or kourmi.

Coa Vestis

KOS (Island) DODEKANISSOS
   The Coan cloth or garments, mentioned by various authors, but most frequently by the Latin poets of the Augustan Age. From their expressions we learn that it had a great degree of transparency, that it was remarkably fine, that it was chiefly worn by women of loose reputation, and that it was sometimes dyed purple \ and enriched with stripes of gold. It has been supposed to have been made of silk, because in Cos silk was spun and woven at an early period, so as to obtain a high celebrity.

This text is from: Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities. Cited Oct 2002 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


The protropum wine

LESVOS (Island) NORTH AEGEAN
It is everywhere well supplied with fruits, but like Chios and Lesbos it is best in respect to its wine.(Strabo 14,2,9)

Olives & oil

Lesbos which exports olives and oil, and Chios, which is famous for wine.

Natural colour: Melian white

MILOS (Island) KYKLADES
A kind of white color, is said to be a mine of it in Melos

Melian opsidian

Like Thera, Melos is of volcanic origin, and produced obsidian, a black volcanic glass used for cutting tools, and other useful minerals throughout antiquity.

Samian ware (pottery)

SAMOS (Island) NORTH AEGEAN
Earthen-ware made of Samian (or other equally fine) clay, was well known, and was in vogue in Greece and Italy in the second century B.C., and was imitated by the potters of Gaul and Britain.

Samian earth (clay)

Aster Samius, a kind of Samian earth, whose nature and healing power are described in Plin. 35, 16, 53, § 191
Samian clay used as sealing-wax, and in Medicine.

The wine of Thasos

THASSOS (Island) MAKEDONIA EAST & THRACE
A still more delicious aroma is that of the wine of Thasos; its sweet bouquet delights the drinker for a long time, whereas the others lose their bloom and vanish quickly.

The marble of Thassos

The snow white of Thassos is generally accepted as the whitest marble in the world.

Associations

Saffron Producers Co-operative

KROKOS (Village) KOZANI

Civic Co-operative of Women

NYMFEO (Village) FLORINA

Cereals

Citrus trees

CHIOS (Island) NORTH AEGEAN
  Chios is called "myrovolos", meaning fragrant. That should not surprise you, since the fragrances of Kambos surround you from the very first moment you begin strolling through the green nucleus of the island. Narrow streets, high stone walls, thick, green leaves will emerge everywhere and surround you with their precious aroma.
  The cultivation of citrus trees was a new culture imported by the Genoans (1348-1566), who were cruel conquerors yet clever traders. As soon as they realized that the evergreen trees thrive on the water enriched soil deposits, they started to import them from Italy. Kambos exhibited these characteristics primarily, and was thereby transformed into a huge, orange orchard. The Chians also imported orange trees from Africa, since the tree’s cultivation was so successful. It is worth noting here that the tangerine trees were not imported by the Genoans, as many people want to believe, but by the Chian family of Horemi who imported them from India around 1860-62. They were first cultivated in the family’s orchard and were then planted in Kambos.
  Kambos is a region where the water deposits favor the cultivation of the "Esperides’ Golden Apples" as the ancient Greeks used to call the oranges. When one wanders the various paths of Kambos, one can use their sense of smell and imagination to ‘see’ the orchards through the huge, stone walls that surround them in order to keep the south winds and the winter's cold away. The trees are extremely sensitive to cold weather and high winds. The cultivators have paid a high price as a result of this sensitivity and have suffered major losses. Their experience has taught them to light small fires in between the trees on their estates in order to generate warmth and protect the trees. The leaves of the trees also create a green 'roof' that keeps the warmth of the fire between them and thus, protect the crop.
  The cultivators collect the fruits one by one and put them into boxes. Tangerine collection begins in November, while oranges are collected in December. The cultivators either sell their "golden fruits" or bring them to the Agricultural Association of Chios’ Citrus Cultivators and to other small sized manufactures in order to produce juice. For centuries, fruits were sold by piece. The collectors put them in groups of five and delivered them to traders. The German conquerors introduced the weighing method and it was so practical that it is stil used today.
  In the old days, Chios’ citrus fruits were exported to Constantinople (Istanbul) to the Black Sea, to Izmir, to Egypt and to the East by dealers that were freighting ships especially for that reason. Since 1930, as soon as the Associations first appeared, the Chians were also exporting to the countries of Eastern Europe.
  Today... Citrus fruits are not only consumed as fruits. The Agricultural Association of Chios’ Citrus Cultivators and to other small sized manufactures use these precious treasures to produce refreshments and fresh juices. Homemakers, as well as large manufacturers also make spoon sweets and essential oils from these fruits.

This text is cited May 2004 from the Promoting Tourism Prefectural Committee of Chios URL below, which contains images.


Commercial WebPages

Famous products

Mastic

CHIOS (Island) NORTH AEGEAN
The Wounded Tree
  If a trademark were to be established for Chios, then surely it would be the mastic tree. It is a gift and at the same time a curse since it has always been the bone of contention for conquerors. This evergreen tree called Schinos, belongs to the botanical family Pistachia. The average growth of the tree ranges from 6 to 10 feet tall and it begins to produce mastic at the age of 5 to 6 years old. This amazing tree thrives within the 21 mastic villages of southern Chios only.
  The oldest references to mastic have been traced back to Herodotes in the 5th Century B.C. The people of Ancient Greece chewed mastic to whiten their teeth and if you think about it, mastic was the unique chewing gum even then! During the Roman period, toothpicks were made from the mastic tree and the use of mastic spread to the harems of the East. Tradition says that God blessed the mastic tree which began to "cry" in 250 A.D., when St. Isidoros cried out in pain during his martyrdom.
The Magical Tears
  Mastic has a plethora of qualities and uses. It absorbs cholesterol, is an antibacterial acts as an oral antiseptic, aids digestion, tightens the gums, heals wounds and scientists recently discovered that when it is administrated in small doses it cures stomach ulcers.
  Aside from the medical aspects, these magical tears are used in distilleries to produce mastic liqueur and mastic-flavored ouzo called mastichato.
  There are also culinary uses for mastic. For example, mastic is used in baking and in sweets such as biscuits, mastic ice cream, and mastic sweets of the spoon.
  In a refined form, it is also used as the primary ingredient for toothpaste, shampoos, perfumes, in frankincense, and varnish.
Kendos- The Incision
  The collection of mastic begins when the mastic producers clean the area under the tree and they cover it with white clay so that the tears will stay clear and dry faster as they fall to the ground. The kendos begins in June and lasts through September.
  The mastic producers make an incision along the tree trunk in the shape of an arch with the kentitiri. Their day begins early before sunrise and they make their way to the fields with their donkeys in one of the most picturesque scenes ever seen on the island those days. The mastic growers are suitably dressed and well equipped in their endeavor, racing against the sun, trying to avoid his presence.
  The curing of the mastic tree ends before the sun reaches its highest point. When the tears have been coagulated, the mastic laborers use the timitiri to gather the precious crystals. Every little piece of this natural product is collected even if it is mixed with dust.
  The narrow streets of the mastic villages come alive as the mastic collectors start the tahtarisma (sifting), the cleaning of the crystals with soap and cold water, the drying and the scratching of the mastic tears. This is a social event.
  If you visit the mastic villages during that period you will feel the warmth of the people prevailing in every corner of the village.
  After all, isn’t this the real magic of mastic?

This text is cited May 2004 from the Promoting Tourism Prefectural Committee of Chios URL below.


Lentils

EGLOUVI (Village) LEFKADA

Potatoes & Beans

KATO NEVROKOPI (Municipality) DRAMA

The mussels of Municipality of Methoni

METHONI (Municipality) PIERIA

Figs

MESSINIA (Prefecture) PELOPONNISOS
  The fig tree is among the first fruit-bearing trees which were cultivated by Man ei Syria in the 4th millennium B.C. and it soon spread to the areas around the Aegean. In ancient Greece, together with the olive tree and the vineyard, it constituted one of the most important forms of nutrition.
  In Messinia and in the regions of Messini and Pylia the monofori fig tree of Kalamata is cultivated in 30.000 stremmata which gives excellent quality fresh as well as dried figs. The culitivation is favoured in the area by the climate which is semi-dry and the area produces about 6.000 tons of dried figs annually. During harvest, from the 15th August to the 30th September there are temperatures of 30 C which favour the ripening and the drying of the fruit.
  SYKIKI, which is a central agricultural partnership union, is responsible for the collection of the figs from the producers, the killing of germs, the promotion towards manufacturing where it is packaged in «tsapeles» and the final promotion towards consumption.
  The fig has a special place among the fruit because it is natural, tasty, nutritious and healthy while its qualities as an emollient and a mild laxative establish it as an important remedy.
  The fig is consumed fresh and is eaten unripe as a sweet as well as a dried fruit accompanying alcoholic drinks and includes calcium, phosphorus and iron and gives 2900.

This text is cited March 2003 from the Messenia Prefecture Tourism Promotion Commission URL below, which contains image.


Garden products

Watermelons

KOMI (Settlement) CHIOS
Luscious, red juicy watermelons are well known in Komi and Kalamoti.

Links

XANTHI (Prefecture) GREECE
Xanthi is worldwide known for its famous aromatic tobacco. In the old times, Xanthi gained prosperity due to the tobacco trade. Today, its progress is rapid. It has a large industrial area with a sugar factory, tobacco industries, flour industries, textile industries etc. It has also deposits of precious stones and Uranium.

This extract is cited May 2003 from the Prefecture of Xanthi URL below, which contains image.


Official pages

Products of Chios

CHIOS (Island) NORTH AEGEAN

EVRYTANIA (Prefecture) GREECE
  The wider area of Euritania County is also particularly known for the production of a wide variety of traditional, local products.
  Katiki, the Euritanian goat cheese, feta cheese, yoghurt and butter, local meats and cured meats, beans, noodles, pasta, chestnuts and walnuts, berries, black cherries, crab apples, figs and kumquats, honey, royal jelly and superb spoon sweets as well as wine, tsipouro and liquers are some of the local products that every visitor can obtain anywhere in the area of the Municipality of Karpenissi.
  The folk art products are of exceptional quality, hand made kilimia, pouches and woven material.

This text is cited May 2003 from the Municipality of Karpenission URL below, which contains image.


LESVOS (Island) NORTH AEGEAN
Lesvos Olive oil
  It's quite difficult to imagine Lesvos without its silver trees under the endless Greek sunshine. Today, in Lesvos there are eleven millions (11,000,000) olive trees occupying an area of 465 thousands of acres, having an average production of 100,000 tons olives or 20,000 tons olive oil.
  Lesvian olive oil is incomparable in taste and flavor and has the best nutritional properties. In Lesvos are cultivated two varieties of olive trees:
- The variety "Kolovi" is local and occupies an area of 65% of the Lesvian olive grove at the south and southeastern of the island.
- The olive variety is called "Adramytini" occupies an area of 35% at the north and northeastern section of Lesvos.
  Like the other kinds of oils and fats, olive oil offers about 9 calories per gr. of weight. It has resistance towards the phenomenon of oxidation and is highly digestible. The fact that olive oil has the proper percentage of saturated and non-saturated acids makes it the basis of the Mediterranean Diet, which has been world serious illnesses and that contributes to man's long life.
  The last few years began the production of Biological Olive Oil. This was started at a place called Achladeri. Also the Lesvian olives after processing (carved or pickled) can become a very special delicacy.
Cheese of Lesvos and Lemnos
  Even in Homer's Odyssey we have an analytical description of cheese making from sheep-goat's milk. The result of this long termed experience through centuries in combination with the mild and salubrious climate of the islands is that the diary products of Lesvos and Lemnos have a unique position in the world.
  Traditional dairy products (with protected designation of origin) are Ladotyri Mytilinis, Feta, Kaseri and Kalathaki of Lemnos, unique in taste and flavor. The traditional cheese-making factories guarantee unique properties, as they only process the local high quality sheep-goat's milk - milk that under special conditions could be characterized as organic.
  The natural flora and the local tribes of sheep and goats are an additional guarantee for the milk's superiority. Of course another significant factor is the man-producer himself, who kept the traditional cheese-making methods, inheriting to the new generations a traditional and unique cheese (Feta, Ladotyri, Yraviera, Kaseri, Kalathaki ect).
  Ladotyri-cheese is produced in a traditional way in Lesvos from sheep's milk. Its name derives from the fact it is conserved in high quality olive. It matures for three months in underground storehouse or in cool spaces and it has a delicious taste.
  At last Kalathaki-cheese is made from sheep-goat milk, traditionally and only at the island if Lemnos. Its name derives from the fact that after its production it is placed in small baskets and it is stored there until the last step of maturing.
Salted fish
  Salted fish are characteristic products of the North Aegean Sea islands, and especially of the Province of Lesvos. Famous around the world are the Kalloni sardines. In Lesvos and Lemnos there are small industries for the processing and standardization of fishes for long period of time. Fish are cought on a daily basis by small island boats (psarokaeka) and the processing that follow is based on experience, which is inherited from generation to generation, enriched with the modernization of the proper machinery.
  Fish that are processed, are sardines, mackerels and tuna-fish, in a traditional way with pure natural sea-salt. The factors which give a superiority to the Lesvian salted fishes is the high quality of the fish and their natural environment especially in the two gulfs of Lesvos island (Gera's & Kalloni's).
Ouzo
  This drink is distinguished for its pleasant aggressiveness which brings balance to its flavour, causing a revolution to the senses and a pleasant recollection and joy for every special moment in life. A right and balanced ouzo, contains 46% alcohol (the max content), fact that gives it a passport to travel all around the world without being affected by climate or time, keeping its initial flavour and taste.
  Ouzo is a Greek drink, it has been connected with the Greek soul, hospitality, sea and sky, and is an art, which demands persistence and is full of challenges. It can be drunk with ice-cubes or without or with water. These additions convert its clarity into a white color, fact that confirms its high quality. It is mainly served with seafood.
Wine
  At ancient times Mithymna of Lesvos was considered as the nectar of the Olympus Greek Gods. In Lesvos there were vast vineyards, butt today they do not exist anymore. There is small ones- a kind of family-business-, which produce small, but of high quality quantities of wine.
  The island of Lemnos still remains a wine-producer island and its wine is widely known. The picturesque harbor of Myrina (capital of Lemnos) offers the proper scenery for the marriage between the original taste of tradition and the peaceful holidays at the island of Dionysus. The vineyards, which have been cultivated for centuries and are still being cultivated today, belong to the unique variety "Moschato Alexandryas". Their cultivation is a tradition and its roots are in the years of mythology.
  The picturesque and carefully cultivated vineyards are according to the European standards occupying an area of 6,500 acres and their production approaches 700kg/acre. As chemical fertilizers are not used, the producers can guarantee for the natural and high quality of the Lemnian wine.
Honey
  The visitor's attention will be drawn by white or light blue boxes in the bees to fill them with the excellent Lesvian honey. The honey, which is produced at Lesvos and Lemnos, is well known for its taste and thyme's flavour and can be purchased at the local market. It is processed with a traditional way, without using chemical additives, keeping its high quality and gaining day by day its fame. The visitor can try local honey with various flavors except thyme like pine tree and flower's flavors/s.
Pottery
  Lesvos was and still is one of the most significant and known centers of traditional pottery. Possibly due to the Lesvian clay's composition, Lesvos is full of traditional ceramic's workshop, which the natives call "Tsoukaladika". The most famous and significant were established and still today exist in Ayiassos and Mantamados, where pottery is a tradition inherited from generation to generation without any changes.
Woodcarving
  Woodcarving is another popular traditional art characteristic of the culture of the province. Experienced works were carving and still today carve the wood of olive trees, chestnut-trees and cherry-trees, converting it into various shapes inspired from the Christian life (items for monasteries or churches-iconostasis, throne of the Patriarch) or for the decoration of the Lesvian house, (consoles, sendouki), items immortal through time. Now days the woodcarving tradition continues is Ayiassos, Mytilene and Asomatos.
Also weaving still exists today. This popular art has been rescued through women who used to make their houses apparel (a necessary piece of their dowry) to the traditional loom. Fortunately our ancestors have rescued and still try to teach all these traditional techniques to the new generations. And today we can see all these young people to reproduce this popular art using the same techniques and methods.

Official Web-Sites

To Likno

ELATI (Village) TRIKALA
Tel: +30 24340 71826
Fax: +30 24340 71826

Oil

Greek Association of Olive Oil

GREECE (Country) EUROPE

Olives

Olives and olive-oil

MESSINIA (Prefecture) PELOPONNISOS
  The olive tree, which is an evergreen tree that lives for many years, has been well-known since antiquity, the references made in the Bible, in mythology and in historical years and was thought of as a symbol of peace and fertility. The cultivation of olive trees in Messinia is mentioned in the homeric years and ancient vases for the storage of oil have been found in the area of the Palace of Nestoras as well as signs of grammiki (linear) writing type B dating back to the 12th century B.C. with the word EEAVON (ELAION) on them.
  The eatable olive of Kalamata, famous for its crunchy fruit, as well as the oil producing olive of Koroni, were first found, cultivated and spred from the Messinian Land. Because of the constant sunshine and the enriched with nutrients soil the produce is rich in aromatic elementsand it isbeneficial to the human circulatory system and the heart. 13,000,000 olive trees are cultivated in traditional family olive groves on the plains and the slopes of hills by small-scale producers. This is positive because it means that they themselves control the process of the ripening of the fruit and its harvest and produce 60,000 tons of olive oil of excellent quality and acidity from 0,3% to 0,6%, while the stable K270 varies from 0,09 to 0,13 and the K232 from 1,3 to 1,5. The conditions of cultivation, the method of production, harvest and the working on the oil by the 300 olive presses of Messinia, which work with stainless steel technological equipment and use natural processes like pressing and centrifugal force, constitute olive oil as a natural fruit juice with a rich aroma and a spicy taste, which keeps its nutrients unchanged by the process. Because the quality and its characteristics are solely due to natural and human factors, the messinian olive oil has been established as oil to have the name of its place of origin protected. The working on the oil, its filtering, its standardization as well as its promotion are done by small businesses which are based in Messinia.

This text is cited March 2003 from the Messenia Prefecture Tourism Promotion Commission URL below, which contains images.


Various

ASSOPOS (Municipality) LACONIA

ASTYPALEA (Island) DODEKANISSOS
  Dairy products such as: beaten feta cheese, mezithra, anthotiro cheese for spaghetti, ksialina (a type of yoghurt), oil cheese (cheese pieces in oil) etc.
  Fish and seafood: salted fish (bream, sardine), sun-dried fish “liokafta” (bream), octopus, sargos, orfos, fagri, sinagrides, white-bait, skari, red-mullet-“barbounia”.
  Other dishes: lobster pasta, garlic macaroni, chick-pea, lentil and courgette balls “keftedes”, black olives, stuffed courgette flowers “dolmades”.
  Sweets: Honey biscuits “melomakarona”, finikia, loukoumades, sesame pasteli, halva with honey, fried pancakes- “xerotigana”, crepes, syruped fruits (quince, orange, bitter orange, bergamot).
  Herbs-decoctions: sage, oregano, thyme, chamomile.
(Text: Manolis Makris)
This text is cited February 2004 from the Dodekanissos Union of Municipalities & Communities pamphlet.

Produce

CRETE (Island) GREECE
  The fertile soil of Crete yields a wide variety of crops, which are one reason why foreigners love to visit the island. Anyone who wanders through the colourful town and village markets, summer or winter and observes the thousands of foreign buyers will understand how much Cretan produce adds to their enjoyment of their stay. Crops are abundant, varied, delicious and healthy. European markets are packed with cucumbers, tomatoes, beans, courgettes and greens from the fields and hothouses of Chania, Messara and Hierapetra, and with table grapes from the famous vineyards of Archanes, Pedhiadha and Malevisi. In Cretan markets, you will also find oranges from Chania and Phodhele, bananas from Vianno, almonds from Mirabello, cherries from Geracari, watermelons and melons from the Messara plain, olives and olive oil from all over Crete, avocados from Chania, cheese and milk from the mountains, all sorts of herbal teas, vegetables and greens form the coastal plains, potatoes from Lassithi, and free-rang eggs from the villages. The mild climate, the sunshine and, in many places, the abundance of water, favour agriculture on the island. In two international medical conferences, noted scientists expressed the view that the Cretans are protected from heart disease by the olive oil and olives they consume. It is said that the salt wind from the sea gives the grass a special quality, which flavours the meat - the favourite food of both Cretans and foreigners. The salt air also fortifies the vineyards, which produce the famous Cretan wines and raki, the special liquor of Crete.
(text: MANOLIS DOULGERAKIS & UTE SCHACHTELE)
This text (extract) is cited February 2004 from the Heraklio Hoteliers Association tourist pamphlet.

The marbles of Doliana

DOLIANA (Small town) ASTROS
They were famous in the ancient times and they had been used to make many of the remarkable works of art of Arcadia and especially those of Tegea.

Chalvas

FARSALA (Town) LARISSA

Potatoes

FOUFAS (Village) KOZANI

HERAKLIA (Island) KYKLADES
The famous Iraklian honey, golden colored and of unique taste because the bees feed exclusively on Thyme. Iraklian cheeses of different types made from goat's milk and produced on small scale from the farmers themselves.
Fava: a kind of legume, which is made into a fine paste and served with olive oil.
Fresh fish and meat from local farmers.

ITHAKI (Island) IONIAN ISLANDS
  Oil and wine are the island’s main products. Both of them have been important throughout the island's history and since they were exported to foreign markets they became one of the island's resources. The cultivation of olive trees and the production of oil have been recorded since the Homeric epics. The consumption of wine as part of a meal and as a means of celebrating pleasant events is very important in the Odyssey.
  The vineyard cultivation has never stopped on the island. Particularly, during the Venetian period, raisin was the most important product and it was exported to the surrounding islands and to other areas. Vineyards still cover various fields on the island and the wine produced is of superb quality.
  Cattle-raising and cheese-making are equally developed in Ithaki. Last but not least, apiculture is also included among the inhabitants’ activities. The island’s flora gives the raw material for the production of superb honey.
  Using all these products women prepare delicious pastries and famous dishes like "rovani", "savoro" and meat prepared in the special kettle called "tserepa".
This text (extract) is cited January 2004 from the Assoc. of Local Authorities of Kefalonia & Ithaca tourist pamphlet.

Traditional foods and sweets

KARPATHOS (Island) DODEKANISSOS
  Foods: various kinds of bread and barley donuts which accompany the local salty cheese or the meriari (made from full cream milk), the small pastries, kouloumbotes olives, sesame, egg and thin “kouloures”- biscuits, makarounes, vegetable pies, drilla, mezithra ofto (goat’s meat stuffed with rice), pihti, kavroumas, sitaka and others.
  Sweets: xilikopites, baklava (made very differently from the usual baklava), sweet mezithra cheese pies, sweet sesame pies and sitakopita etc.
(Text: Manolis Makris)
This text is cited February 2004 from the Dodekanissos Union of Municipalities & Communities pamphlet.

Local products

KEFALLONIA (Island) IONIAN ISLANDS
  In Cephalonia the famous VQPRD Rombola, a white, sweet-smelling wine is produced. Other wines are Mavrodafni and White Muscat. Vine-growing activates enterprises for the wine production and trade in Greece and abroad (Calliga, Rombola Co-operative, Mantzavino, Metaxa Estate, Gentillini, Sklavos Estate, Vitoratos Wine Factory). Sklavos Estate produces certified biological wine.
  The olive oil production is 2500 tons a year and its special characteristic, which adds to its high quality, is that the olives are collected directly from the trees.
  The Cephalonian cheese-makers are renowned all over Greece and abroad. Based on traditional techniques they produce high quality feta cheese as well as hard cheese and skim-milk cheese.
This text (extract) is cited January 2004 from the Assoc. of Local Authorities of Kefalonia & Ithaca tourist pamphlet.

Traditional foods and sweets

MEGISTI (KASTELORIZO) (Island) DODEKANISSOS
  Foods: goat stuffed with rice (usually at Easter), salantroumasi (stuffed onions), saitia (rice with onion, mint and tomato), many varieties of fish (swordfish, tuna, sea-beam), etc.
  Sweets: koutoumari (round pan-fried pastry with sugar, cinnamon and cloves), halva, “straba”- crooked (baklava with kneaded pastry sheets) and others.
(Text: Manolis Makris)
This text is cited February 2004 from the Dodekanissos Union of Municipalities & Communities pamphlet.

Apples

MILOCHORI (Village) KOZANI

MOURIKI (Municipality) KOZANI

SANTORINI (Island) KYKLADES
  Wine: The famous wine since antiquity is today bottled by 8 wineries. Nikteri (dry, white) and Visanto (sweet, white) are the best known types of Santorini wine.
  Tomatoes: Before 1960 tomatoes where one of the island's main products. Today only one of the 9 tomato canning factories operates for the canning of the small, but full of nutritious Santorini tomatoes.
  Fava: Cultivated traditionally, is the well-known fava (yellow pea) of Santorini. Premature garden products (peas, beans and others) are cultivated in recent years on the island, mainly in the district of Exomiti.
(Text: Manolis Lignos)
This text is cited February 2004 from the Municipality of Thera tourist pamphlet (2003-2004).

Viniculture

Ariousios wine

KOUROUNIA (Village) CHIOS

Raisins

MESSINIA (Prefecture) PELOPONNISOS

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