Monday, August 11, 2008

Orthodox Christian monk writes recipe book on meat- and dairy-free Greek monastic diet


Greek Orthodox monks look through a recipe book at the chapel of Mylopotamos, near the monastery of Great Lavra, on Mount Athos in Greece on March 18.
Publish Date: 8/9/2008
Derek Gatopoulos
The Associated Press
MOUNT ATHOS, Greece — In a secluded Orthodox Christian monastery, the phone is ringing again for Father Epifanios Milopotaminos.
Ever since he wrote a cookbook sharing his secrets for feeding his fellow monks, Milopotaminos’ cell phone rings constantly with requests to speak at seminars, appear on television and do cooking demonstrations.

He’s an unlikely candidate for sudden celebrity; in the nearly four decades since he took charge of cooking at the Mount Athos monastery, little about what he does has changed.
“It’s the same way meals were prepared 100 years ago, or 50 years ago,” Father Epifanios says of the meat- and dairy-free diet, much of it cooked over a log fire. “It’s a clean diet that people once ate across the eastern Mediterranean.”

This year he shared that diet, collecting 126 of his recipes in a book that provides a rare glimpse into life in this community of some 1,500 monks in 20 monasteries that strictly limits outside access, including barring women.

And people appear to like what they see.

“People are curious because we use different ingredients and different methods,” he says.
Father Epifanios already has appeared on a popular Greek cooking show, and his publisher, Synchronoi Ozizontes, says the leather-bound cookbook has sold 12,000 copies, a healthy figure for the local market.

Athens nutrition scientist Paraskevas Papachristou says books such as Father Epifanios’ get a great deal of attention because Greeks generally want to eat healthier.

Whether people actually make the recipes is another matter. Papachristou says the interest is at odds with an overall trend away from Mediterranean diets because people cook less and eat more convenience foods.

Published in April, “Cooking on Mount Athos” (so far available only in Greek) offers unpretentious, tasty recipes. Don’t expect arugula with balsamic vinegar. Rather, lots of chickpeas and bitter wild greens.

“Monks at Mount Athos don’t eat meat,” says Father Epifanios. “The word butter is never mentioned in the book, and we don’t add flour to thicken sauces. We just let the ingredients boil down.”

Father Epifanios’ catalog of recipes is divided into seafood — with and without backbones, according to different fasting categories — or vegetables. No desserts on the Holy Mountain.
Slow cooking suits the heavily bearded monks, who rise well before dawn and spend much of their day in prayer.

“We have a lot of time, without families, wives and children to tend to,” Father Epifanios says.
“Everyone has a secondary job. One monk may be a librarian, another may write books, or make wooden carvings, or weave prayer knots, or be an icon painter, an incense maker, a winemaker or a cook,” he says.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hey Soph!! I was going to email you a website that Cathy introduced me to (actually the food) but saw this article and thought I'd share it with all of your readers. It has food that is great for fasting, also has low carb, low fat, low sodium, etc. It looks to be a great site and we had "Chicken (NOT!) and Dumplings" the other night and it tasted like the real thing. The website is:
www.dixiediners.com.

Sophocles said...

Michelle,

Thanks for the link. I'll check it out.

If I had been invited there(ahem..) I could have tasted the "Chicken(NOT!) and Dumplings" but I was excluded as usual.That beautiful new car of yours is much more important, I realize.

But that's OK. I'll get over it, I'll manage somehow. I'll be OK. Don't worry.

Anonymous said...

You're a dork! You were invited but you had to water your moms plants!! Friday night, remember....LOL Your loss, it was good - we had some delicious salmon and shrimp!! Maybe next time you'll chose us over plants! haha

Sophocles said...

I'm glad this is happening over the impersonal Internet(*sniffle*) because this way (*whimper*) you can't hear my broken heart rattling in my chest(*sob*). Don't mind me. Besides, how can my pain be heard over that powerful engine of yours now? I just can't compete.

Anonymous said...

You are so silly!! ;-) It is a nice engine isn't it!?

Sophocles said...

That it is! :)