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Best Greek Recipes You Can Make at Home

Six Greek recipes from moussaka to tzatziki — olive oil, lemon, oregano, and feta do the heavy lifting.

Best Greek Recipes You Can Make at Home

Recipes in this piece

Moussaka
🇬🇷GreeceAdvanced
Meat Dishes

Moussaka

Three components built and assembled: roasted eggplant, cinnamon-spiced lamb and beef sauce reduced until thick, and a Greek béchamel enriched with egg yolks that sets firm during baking so the slices hold. Moussaka in the form most people know — with that custard-like béchamel top — is a 1920s creation by chef Nikolaos Tselementes, who added a French béchamel to an older layered eggplant dish. The result became the benchmark for Greek home cooking. The work is real but most of it is waiting: the sauce reducing, the eggplant roasting, the assembled dish baking and then resting. The rest time after baking is not optional.

120 min520 kcal6 serves
💪High protein
4.8
Souvlaki
🇬🇷GreeceMedium
Meat Dishes

Souvlaki

Pork cubes marinated in olive oil, lemon juice, garlic, and dried oregano, skewered and grilled over high heat until the edges char and the inside stays juicy. The marinade is deliberately simple — this is street food, not a restaurant dish, and the flavor should come from the quality of the pork and the smoke of the grill rather than a complicated spice blend. Souvlaki is served two ways in Greece: straight off the skewer with lemon wedges and a slice of bread, or wrapped in a warm pita with tomato, onion, and tzatziki. Both are correct. This recipe makes 8 skewers.

30 min380 kcal4 serves
Quick💪High protein
4.8
Spanakopita
🇬🇷GreeceAdvanced
Flour and Confectionery Products

Spanakopita

Layers of phyllo pastry brushed with olive oil encasing a filling of spinach, feta, fresh dill, spring onions, and eggs. The moisture in the spinach is the main technical challenge — any liquid that reaches the phyllo turns it soft rather than crisp. The filling must be squeezed very dry before anything else happens. The phyllo must stay covered while you work — it dries and cracks in seconds of exposure. Neither problem is difficult, both just require attention. This recipe makes a baking-dish pie that serves 6; it slices cleanly and is equally good warm or at room temperature.

70 min380 kcal6 serves
🌿Vegetarian
4.9
Saganaki
🇬🇷GreeceEasy
Appetizers and Sandwiches

Saganaki

A slab of firm Greek cheese dredged in flour and pan-fried in olive oil until the outside forms a thin golden crust and the inside becomes soft and yielding. The dish takes about 8 minutes from start to finish and must be eaten immediately — the crust stays crisp for only a few minutes before it softens as the cheese cools. A squeeze of fresh lemon over the hot cheese just before serving cuts through the richness and is not optional. Saganaki is the name of both the small two-handled frying pan traditionally used and, by extension, the dish itself.

10 min340 kcal2 serves
🌿VegetarianQuick
4.9
Tzatziki
🇬🇷GreeceEasy
Sauces and Dips

Tzatziki

Cool, garlicky Greek yogurt dip with grated cucumber, fresh dill, and a squeeze of lemon. The secret is squeezing every drop of water from the cucumber — skip that step and you get soup, not tzatziki.

10 min45 kcal4 serves
🌿VegetarianQuick🌾Gluten-free
4.6
Pastitsio
🇬🇷GreeceAdvanced
Cereal and Pasta Dishes

Pastitsio

Three layers baked in a deep dish: tubular pasta bound with egg whites, a cinnamon-and-clove spiced beef sauce cooked until very dry, and a thick Greek béchamel enriched with egg yolks that sets firm during baking. Pastitsio is sometimes called Greek lasagna but the comparison only goes so far — the warm spices in the meat sauce give it a depth that Italian ragù does not have, and the Greek béchamel is deliberately thicker and richer than anything on a lasagna. The dish requires time but all three components can be made separately and assembled the same day or the next.

120 min550 kcal6 serves
4.8

Greek recipes that taste like a taverna by the sea

Greek cooking runs on olive oil, lemon, oregano, and feta. Four ingredients that show up in nearly everything and somehow never get boring. The cuisine is built around simplicity, but the kind of simplicity that takes a few thousand years to refine. Nothing is accidental.

Six recipes from the Greek kitchen. Some take time, some take fifteen minutes, all of them taste better than they have any right to given how short the ingredient lists are.

Moussaka — the Greek lasagna that's better than lasagna

Layers of fried eggplant, spiced lamb mince, and a thick béchamel top. It takes about two hours from start to finish and most of that is passive. The cinnamon in the meat layer is what makes it distinctly Greek rather than just a Mediterranean casserole.

Salt the eggplant slices and let them sit for 30 minutes before frying. This pulls out moisture and bitterness. Skip this step and the whole thing turns soggy. The béchamel on top needs to be thick, almost like a custard, so it holds its shape when you cut portions. Egg yolks stirred in at the end give it structure.

Moussaka recipe

Souvlaki — street food perfection

Pork neck, marinated in olive oil, lemon juice, and dried oregano, threaded onto skewers and grilled. Takes 30 minutes including marination if you're in a hurry, though overnight is better. The char on the edges is half the flavour.

Rub dried Greek oregano between your palms before adding it to the marinade. This crushes the leaves and releases the oils. The difference between sprinkled oregano and crushed oregano is the difference between okay souvlaki and souvlaki that makes you close your eyes. Serve in warm pita with tzatziki, tomato, and raw onion.

Souvlaki recipe

Spanakopita — the spinach pie that feeds a crowd

Spinach, feta, dill, and eggs wrapped in layers of buttered phyllo pastry. Every Greek grandmother makes this differently, and every version is right. This one produces a crispy, golden pie that feeds six to eight people for very little money.

The filling must be completely dry before it goes into the phyllo. Squeeze the cooked spinach in a clean kitchen towel until nothing drips out. Wet spinach makes the pastry bottom soggy and there is no fixing that after baking. Brush every single layer of phyllo with melted butter. Every one. The crispiness depends on it.

Spanakopita recipe

Saganaki — fried cheese in two minutes

A thick slab of cheese, dusted in flour, fried in olive oil until golden. That is the entire recipe. Squeeze lemon over it at the table and eat it while it is still hot and slightly gooey in the center.

Use a firm cheese that holds its shape when heated: graviera, kefalograviera, or halloumi. Soft cheese melts into the pan and becomes a mess. Get the oil hot enough that the cheese sizzles immediately. Thirty seconds per side, no more. Serve with bread to mop up the olive oil.

Saganaki recipe

Tzatziki — the sauce that goes with everything

Strained yogurt, grated cucumber, garlic, olive oil, and dill. Five ingredients, zero cooking. The sauce appears next to grilled meats, on top of salads, inside pita wraps, and eaten with bread on its own.

Grate the cucumber and squeeze out every drop of water. Wrap it in a towel and wring it like laundry. Watery tzatziki is thin and bland. Thick tzatziki with visible cucumber shreds and a punch of raw garlic is the real thing. Let it sit in the fridge for an hour before serving so the flavours merge.

Tzatziki recipe

Pastitsio — baked pasta that nobody makes at home but should

Think of it as Greek bolognese baked with béchamel. Tubular pasta layered with cinnamon-spiced meat sauce and a generous blanket of creamy béchamel on top. Baked until the surface is deep golden and the whole kitchen smells like a Sunday in Athens.

The pasta needs to be slightly undercooked before assembling since it finishes cooking in the oven. Mix an egg into the pasta layer. This sounds odd but it binds everything together so the portions hold their shape when you serve them. Without it, the pasta slides apart.

Pastitsio recipe

The Greek pantry

Dried Greek oregano (the mountain kind, not the supermarket jar), good olive oil, lemons, feta in brine, and full-fat Greek yogurt. That covers 90% of Greek cooking. The oregano matters more than you think. Greek oregano is stronger and more floral than Italian or Mexican oregano. If you can get it from a Greek shop, do.

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