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Monday, January 22, 2018

Introducing Greek Culture to Juilliard Graduate Florence Paget by Savvy Mom Ruth Paget




Introducing Greek Cuisine and Culture to Juilliard Graduate Florence Paget by Savvy Mom Ruth Paget 


Thanks to Detroit’s large Greek population, I learned about Greek culture beginning at the age of 9.

My mother and I would go to Greektown with my high school buddy on the weekends and order Greek village salads that had no lettuce – that is an authentic village salad.

The village salads in Greektown had ringlets of green, yellow, and red peppers; black, salty olives; tomato quarters; ringlets of purple onion; and feta cheese.  We ate this salad with thick slices of Greek bread. 

Greeks allow soaking up salad of dressing with a piece of bread; it is not considered bad etiquette in a restaurant as it is in France.  The Greeks use red wine vinegar, olive oil, and rigani – an herb like oregano in their salad dressing.  I think it is the purple onion, feta cheese, and rigani trio that make it taste so good.

Next, we would have pastitio (Greek pasta with ground lamb, tomatoes, and béchamel sauce), moussaka (eggplant casserole with béchamel sauce and melted grated cheese), spanakopita (spinach and onion with melted feta cheese baked in a buttered phyllo dough), and cheese (Greek halumi cheese) phyllo pies.  Of course, I ate a big piece of baklava for dessert.  I could eat like this, because I walked all the time.

In the sixth grade, my social studies project was all about Greece and the products the US could export to Greece to earn money (cars and sewage systems) and what the US could import from Greece (olives and cruise packages to the Greek Isles).

When I was in high school, I wrote about the Byzantine Empire of Greece for National History when I was at Cass Technical High School.

In a nutshell this is what I concluded in my paper, the Byzantine Empire survived for so long, because food was organized and distributed in an organized manner.

My paper placed in the top five for the Detroit Metropolitan Area, but I considered myself the winner when my peers were asking me to read it over and over at lunch in Greektown.

When I went to college at the University of Chicago, my roommate was a Greek-American, who lived in the Chicago suburbs.  In addition to my coursework at UChicago, I would go to go to my Greek roommate’s house on the weekends.   I ate Greek lemon chicken there and melamakarona cookies (butter cookies dunked with grated walnuts on top) while I drew Japanese characters over and over.

I did other Greek activities with my roommate.  I went dancing at Maids of Athena and Sons of Pericles parties at the height of Michael Jackson’s and Prince’s fame.

My roommate’s mother also ran dances for immigrants from her village in Crete.  I learned traditional Greek dances with the Greek yia-yias (grandmothers).

I went to Easter masses at the Greek Orthodox Church and the midnight dinner after that.  During spring break, I went to Greek Independence Day and was able to talk with Greek-American writer Harry Mark Petrakis about writing.  He told me to just keep writing to develop my storytelling skills.

Other “Things Greek” I have done include going to a Greek icon exhibit at the Detroit Institute of the Arts.  Icons are painted using strict outline forms.  Variation can only happen with subtle color changes, but that is it.  Also, each side of an icon’s face is either the good eye or the “evil” eye.

I studied Byzantine manuscript illumination, my senior year of college at UChicago.  Byzantine manuscripts are small and frenzied images in text.  They contain a lot of Biblical code language that is not always in the text.

When I went home to Detroit for Christmas vacation from the UChicago one year, I went to see a performance of Oedipus Rex performed in ancient Greek on a round stage.  I read the play before I went in English and like the chanting and minimal movements that convey what is happening.

This is non-verbal communication.  Non-verbal communication is not the same in all countries, but I understood what was happening in ancient Greek theatre.

Later in life, when I lived in France, we took a vacation to Greece for two weeks.  We hiked up to the Acropolis from the Plaka in Athens.  We visited the Parthenon and the Erechthyion with its caryatids of female figures holding up the roof of their temple – Hestia’s Temple?

From Athens, my husband and I went to Crete and visited the entire island.  The highlights of our time there were visits to the ruins of Heraklion and the Archaeological Museum that depict Minoan Culture with its dancers leaping over charging bulls, goddesses wielding snakes, and symmetrically designed necklaces.

In California, my husband Laurent and I took our daughter Florence to Epsilon Restaurant a few times in downtown Monterey, but mostly we do our Greek outing at the Greek Festival in downtown Monterey on the Wharf.  We buy food, participate in the Greek dances, and pretend we are on a cruise in the Greek Isles in the Pacific Northwest.


By Ruth Paget, author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France

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