This is one of those recipes that proves simple really can be spectacular. Horiatiki Salata, or Greek Village Salad, is what you’d find on nearly every table across Greece. The word Horiatiki means “village style”, and it’s sometimes called a peasant salad because it uses humble, fresh ingredients that anyone in a village garden might have on hand. No lettuce. No frills. Just pure, fresh flavour.
1English cucumberhalved lengthwise and sliced (If using cucumbers that have a thick skin or too many seeds, you can peel the skin and scrape out the seeds)
½red onionthinly sliced
½green bell pepperthinly sliced (optional, but traditional)
12-16Kalamata oliveswith or without pits. Never buy olives that come in a can.
150gabout 5 oz block of Greek feta cheese (preferably sheep’s and/or goat's milk), left whole or sliced
2tablespoonsquality extra virgin olive oil
2teaspoonsred wine vinegar
1-2teaspoonsdried Greek oreganoto taste
Sea saltto taste
Instructions
Arrange Vegetables: In a shallow bowl or plate, arrange tomato wedges, cucumber slices, red onion, green pepper, and olives.
Feta: Top with the feta block or cut into 4 pieces. Traditionally, the feta is served on top so it doesn’t break apart. Each person can break off what they want and crumble it if they prefer.
Dressing: Drizzle with olive oil, red wine vinegar and sprinkle generously with oregano and a pinch of sea salt. Taste and adjust the ingredients as per your liking.
For Serving: Serve with crusty bread. Wipe the plate clean and don’t let any of that tomato-olive oil-vinegar goodness go to waste!
This salad is best served right after it’s made, at room temperature, to let the flavours shine. TIP:Never refrigerate this salad before serving. Once tomatoes get refrigerated, they become mushy.
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Keyword greek peasant salad, greek salad no lettuce, horiatiki greek salad, horiatiki salata, peasant salad, village greek salad