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The growing demand for affordable meals has been met by magazines and a new batch of low-budget cookbooks, such as "The Cooking Economy" and "Family meals for euro5
-- 110 recipes for the financial crisis." But the dire wartime hardship has little in common with the current crisis. Even as the number of vacant stores and homeless grow by the day, Athens' coffee shops are busy and streets filled with new cars. During the occupation, dead bodies were collected off the street each morning, the hills were stripped bare of wild greens, and families had to keep round-the-clock guard of their backyard chicken coops. Raisins, olives, wild greens, and rationed bread became the nation's staples against mass starvation that claimed an estimated 300,000 lives. But for Nikolaidou, worrying signs of sudden poverty have arrived in this crisis, too. "There are children who go to school without enough to eat," she said.
"The circumstances were of course much more extreme. But there are people,
today, who open up their cupboards, and see little more than a bag of flour,
and think -- 'What can I do with that?'" Opting for cheap processed foods is the biggest mistake budget-conscious consumers can make, says chef F.T. Bletsas, the youthful host of the Greek TV show "Mama's Cooking." "Most people spend more than they need to and still eat badly," says Bletsas, who runs the English-language website
http://www.cookingeconomy.com/, spun out of a 2010 book on frugal dining. Bletsas, 31, honed his thrift techniques while living in Britain as an engineering student and later adapted his modest menus to Greece's renowned Mediterranean diet. His top picks for strapped shoppers include olive oil, tinned sardines, lentils and good-quality meat used sparingly. He has simple advice for Greeks laboring under the crisis. "Never, ever throw anything away: You can preserving it, freeze, cook it, reuse it or give it to someone who needs it more than you."
[Associated
Press;
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