Hi from Albania. That's an amazing dish, when cooked properly. I followed the steps, according an old recipe, and it was a dream. It takes much love, time, and there are some secrets someone understands while cooking it itself. Better than most of the representative dishes I have ever tried. I feel kind of proud that I prepared a perfect moussaka. 🙂❤️
@dinos9607 Жыл бұрын
Be proud, it is not the easiest dish to prepare. Your Albanian intuition has certainly helped you to get it since the first time.
@freudvibes10 Жыл бұрын
@dinos9607 thank you Dinos, I appreciate it....😎
@Khsjsj7 ай бұрын
Share the secrets please
@Sherrie-w7j Жыл бұрын
This is the tastiest best flavor of food I have ever tasted. My best friends mother is from Greece and the first time I tasted this I couldn't get enough. I even dream about this dish...❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤😊
@rgjerde53 Жыл бұрын
I use to work in Chicago, where we had great Greek restaurants. Moussaka was one of my favorites. I live in Tennessee now, which has great food too, but not easy to find Greek food (other than the occasional gyros). I'm hoping someone opens a good Greek restaurant here in Knoxville -- if not, I'll have to wait until I get back to visit Chicago.
@Dinosaurusrex-i6l2 ай бұрын
no need for a restaurant when you have the recipe
@williamhornabrook80815 ай бұрын
Most Greek food is like healthy salads, but then they have this absolutely killer casserole. One of my absolute favourites. The eggplant + cheese + meat combo is just savoury heaven.
@vassilisioannou54882 ай бұрын
not true Greece has a massive veraity of dishes like Gigandes, yuvarlakia, stifado, augolemono, soutzoukakia, fakes, revithada, kleftiko, youvetsi, fasolada, pastitsio, spanakorizo, gemista, kokinisto, paidakia, patsa, briam, just to name a few.
@albertnash888 Жыл бұрын
I love Greek cuisine! Moussaka is one of my favorite dishes! I have got to dine at this restaurant when I visit Athens!
@VusalMusayev-s9w Жыл бұрын
90 percent of greeze cuisine is Turkish or Ottoman
@redjones8010 Жыл бұрын
Greece has some seriously fine cuisine. Moussaka is utterly superb.
@VusalMusayev-s9w Жыл бұрын
It is Ottoman Turkish cuisine not greeze
@MusicismoreImportant11 ай бұрын
@@VusalMusayev-s9wboth countries influenced each other
@Over9.k10 ай бұрын
@@VusalMusayev-s9wMan these jealous Turks under every Greece Video Greek cuisine is one of the best . If you havent been to Athens do it
@Wessel34538 ай бұрын
@@VusalMusayev-s9wThis dish is from France, Turks do not have bechamelsaus 😂
@THEBIGMEOW2 жыл бұрын
I love it ❤️ He even pulls the scraps into it.
@akisenv4 ай бұрын
the essence in Greek cuisine is offering food to family, to your neighbor, to someone that happens to visit and quite often just to someone strange that happens to pass by at lunch time.. Moussaka has that complexity that merge ingredients with preparation in a way that calls you to love cooking and imagining the finished dish even before even start the actually cooking.. it takes time and time is the most tasteful ingredient to this dish..
@Wessel3453 Жыл бұрын
I ate at this restaurant! Last month with my b-day! It was amazing!
@sachsgs25092 жыл бұрын
The authentic recipe had the eggplants and the meat sauce on top. It was the classic mousaka from Μικρα Ασια very old Greek recipe. Over the years potatoes were added to the dish and when bechamel was introduced from France to the region it was added to the top to create the mousaka we know and love today. One of my favorite Greek dishes 👌👌👌🇬🇷💙
@HONORTONUMERIC1232 жыл бұрын
Yup...
@aokiaoki4238 Жыл бұрын
This is Nikolaos Tselementes Mousakas
@Mauesi Жыл бұрын
@@aokiaoki4238 exactly
@VusalMusayev-s9w Жыл бұрын
It is an Ottoman cuisine well documented
@msx9411 ай бұрын
Hmmm bechamel is a European invention@@VusalMusayev-s9w
@dinos9607 Жыл бұрын
Hi, Greek here. For God's shake moussaka is not a traditional dish. It was indeed based on a traditional recipe but the dish commonly known as moussaka was a "nouveau cuisine", a fusion cuisine recipe of the early 20th century, invented by a world-acclaimed Greek chef and cuisine author, Nikolaos Tselementes. Tselementes had studied in France and was a lover of the French cuisine. Influenced by the French recipe Hachis Parmentier he introduced bechamel (a non-existing recipe-item in original traditional Greek cuisine - neither creme is used, almost non-existent as well) and combined it with an aubergines dish called "moussaka" more akin to the recipe known as "papoutsakia" (or in Minor Asia as "imam baildi" in turkish) to eventually produce "moussaka". And I think in the same line it was him who invented "pastitsio". Since Tselementes was the first Greek chef to write books, his recipes became best sellers and every single housewife had at least one of his books inside so that by post-war, these recipes were popularised all over the country to the point that when tourism hit hard in Greece in the 1960s tourists thought these were "traditional Greek recipes". Since tourists liked these recipes, Greeks offered them in restaurants and thus it somehow stuck that "moussaka" and "pastitsio" are traditional Greek recipes. They are not. They are "fusion cuisine" rather than traditional Greek one. Yet they are nice recipes, if you have the time and patience to do them, certainly not for novices.
@seaeagle8976 Жыл бұрын
Very helpful, thanks. I suspected that these were not traditional.
@justinasbei Жыл бұрын
Define "traditional". By your thinking every generation of children are stuck in parents shoes unable to creatively re-invent their own identity. Appreciate your knowledge though.
@dinos9607 Жыл бұрын
@@justinasbei I don't disagree that tradition can be revisited and re-interpreted. Above I used the term "traditional" in the sense that the recipe had to be more than a 100 years old. Indeed there was a pre-existing "moussaka" yet one without bechamel and cheese and potatoes - this one was more akin to "papoutsakia" (i.e. aubergines with minced meat). What I wanted to highlight above was that the moussaka as we know it is a 100 years old recipe which started off as a novelty, as a fusion cuisine between Greek and French cuisine, the inspiration of a French-trained renown Greek nasterchef, Nikolaos Tselementes By all means, since Tselementes' recipe was loved so much by Greeks, same also for the similar looking "pastitsio" (pasta with minced meat and bechamel and cheese), they were embraced by Greek housewives and within a century they became "traditional" as well. So yes, in a way you can view them as traditional today, no problem with that. 1900s fusion cuisine can be viewed today as traditional, why not!
@thehoneyeffect Жыл бұрын
🤓 I now have an MA in moussaka 👍🏽
@seaeagle8976 Жыл бұрын
@dinos9607- I’d be grateful if you could recommend a good cookbook of traditional Greek dishes in English
@jpg_sig107 ай бұрын
The first time I ever ate Moussaka was during my wife's and my three-week honeymoon in Greece, over 30 years ago. We were on a ten-day tour of the Peloponnese, on a lunch stop in Sparta at the time. It was a fantastic dish. We loved it. Unfortunately, these days we can't find a restaurant anywhere here in the southwestern United States that makes good Moussaka - just finding Moussaka in this culinary wasteland is hard enough. We'll have to go back to Greece.
@HAIRHOLIC_12 ай бұрын
Or you could learn how to make it yourself. That’s what I do here in Switzerland too when I fancy some exotic foods that I can’t find over here, and to be fair with time I have even become quite skilled in replicating these dishes, so much so that my friends ask me for the recipes. It’s fun give it a go
@Wessel3453 Жыл бұрын
Can you please add numbers to this recipe? How much gram of beef? Potatoes? How much tomato purée? Etc. With what did he season the eggplants?
@stacyjobe66973 ай бұрын
Wow this looks delicious. I've never heard of it.
@dagothex Жыл бұрын
My fav dish of all time ☺️❤️
@rodperez15974 ай бұрын
I love my moussaka,as well as my spanakopitta,(I hope I spelt it right),dying for a traditional Greek coffee....and please the desserts are heavenly...
@betacam2355 ай бұрын
I was taught this recipé many years ago by a half Greek-half Scottish girl.she said the trickiest part is the bechemel based sauce, and that done properly it should have the consistency of blancmange, ie it should be self supporting even when deep. I thought she used yoghurt in it but I may be wrong.....anyone else heard this?
@JapieEister Жыл бұрын
That's great I'll try it myself
@primate902 жыл бұрын
We have moussaka in Turkey as well but for some reason Greek version is more deliciousssss
@HONORTONUMERIC1232 жыл бұрын
Whichever version comes first it always looks authentic and tasty..... But regarding some varieties from particular standard dishes taken from the first version can be made more delicious by adding particular spices(grounded) and particular cheeses(grated) ....
@leonardonetagamer2 жыл бұрын
Based
@TurquazCannabiz Жыл бұрын
Biz besamel sosu kullanmiyoruz, ondan
@sahtesarisinmuzaffer8 ай бұрын
Bechamel sauce balances the bitter taste of eggplant and enhances umami taste in the dish. That's why.
@abdulazizm9919Ай бұрын
Yummy looks delicious chef however, we calling it a مسقعة in Saudi Arabia, it one of the popular dishes that our moms made is several occasions ❤
@roysenpai62792 жыл бұрын
المسقعه هي طبق عربي وسميت بهذا الأسم لأنه يمكن اكلها وهي بارده ايضا طبعا تختلف عن هذه النسخة لأنها لا تحتوي على صلصة الباشاميل وشكرا ❤️
@wideawake56309 ай бұрын
One of my favorite dishes as a Detroit kid. Now I make it for Easter but mine is vegan.
@xDshiv583 ай бұрын
Challenge accepted. I'm definitely going to learn how to make this.
@AsNatureIntended13 Жыл бұрын
I've cooked it veganized and healthyfied and the dish is truly amazing.
@dinos9607 Жыл бұрын
Greek cuisine though certainly not vegan at all, has nonetheless a very large number of vegan recipes which are delicious. Try the pumpkin "meat"-balls (kolokuthokeftedes)... they are literally a drug that should be banned. When mum makes a mountain of them, it is levelled to zero in no time. Your meat loving friends who snob vegan recipes will love them, just tell them "it is a traditional old recipe" for them to overcome the anti-vegan snobbism and try them. I am a carnivore, so I should know better if some vegan recipes such as this one are superb.
@zg3746 Жыл бұрын
@@dinos9607Also vegan gemista are soo good
@seaeagle8976 Жыл бұрын
ugghh
@sherrytitus5345 Жыл бұрын
Could you supply recipe as to amounts of flour, oil, etc for bechamel sauce. I would like to replace potatoes with turnips as it fits better in my diabetes diet. Thanks for approximate recipe.
@DWFood Жыл бұрын
Sure, here is one: 30 grams butter, 30 grams all-purpose flour, 240 milliliters milk - Salt, pepper, and nutmeg to taste! Using turnips as a replacement sounds interesting!
@sherrytitus5345 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for your reply. The recipe was a dream, used eggplant and turnips. Also put some lamb in with the ground beef. Thank you so much for the video.
@SL-sd3sg2 жыл бұрын
Love this dish, I’ve made it often but use lamb mince 🇬🇧
@DWFood2 жыл бұрын
Sounds great!
@pennychurchward1481 Жыл бұрын
I also. Since my childhood I have been making it with lamb and I prefer it. Beef tastes too much like lasagne. I also use nutmeg
@AsNatureIntended13 Жыл бұрын
Minced lamb sounds like straight up from a Horror movie. Keep those poor animals off your place. I use brown lentils instead.
@HermannClauss2 жыл бұрын
Moussaka actually is an Ottoman dish. However it is originally Arabic. The name is even arabic. Yes there are Balkan ( Greek, Bulgarian, Serbian, etc. ), Turkish, Lebanese and Syrian versions.
@Mauesi Жыл бұрын
Partially yes, the Greek Moussaka by the greek chef Nikolaos Tselementes from the 1920´differs from the Ottoman/Arabic which is of course based on. He added the Potatoes, the Bechamel and changed the minced beef to more to the Italian recipe of Ragout alla Bolognese
@منجدوجدومنزرعبلح-ح8ك Жыл бұрын
So what does mousaka mean in Turkish?😂😂😂😂
@User-vz4xm Жыл бұрын
Arabs can’t let Greeks have their land nor their dish. Gotta take everything from them
@PilarX2 Жыл бұрын
Wtf you talking about. I'm lebanese and I guarantee you no Syrian or lebanese know clue about this recipe. Moussaka's not an Arabic word
@VusalMusayev-s9w Жыл бұрын
It is not greeze cuisine but Ottoman
@hyacinthe72 жыл бұрын
I like to add white and black sesame on top of the bechamel before putting the mousaka in the oven.
@rochditidjani Жыл бұрын
This is not a step by step way to make a traditional Moussaka. This is just an overall way to show how this traditional dish is made.
@kimimaex Жыл бұрын
My french ass was chocked with that olive oil base bechamel but I forgive him as he explained why 🤣
@invisiblecurious8562 жыл бұрын
I always think this is a greece lasagna, lowkey.
@DWFood2 жыл бұрын
We're sure you're not the first to say such a thing
@invisiblecurious8562 жыл бұрын
@@DWFood you bet
@HONORTONUMERIC1232 жыл бұрын
@@invisiblecurious856 yeah...
@victorha9923 Жыл бұрын
pastitsio usually gets that moniker
@nillyk5671 Жыл бұрын
But healthier
@abdullaha46782 жыл бұрын
Anybody knows what’s the resturant’s name?
@stefanrichter4825 Жыл бұрын
Basically, most restaurants on and around Plakka serve excellent moussaka
@shyamsundarrajan2469 Жыл бұрын
Seeing the diplated partheon in Athens makes me want to see Athens at it's classical splendor
@lovehope482211 ай бұрын
Im curious on spice variations and possibly cheese variants
@wideawake56309 ай бұрын
I put vegan feta into the bechamel recipe as well as a little nutmeg. I do the potato base, then eggplant, I put Syrian allspice in the "meat" layer which, for me is a chunky marinara with lots of pignolis then a spinach layer, then tapenade.repeat... Top with bechamel.
@FlavioBelisario58228 ай бұрын
ALL HAIL GREEK!♥
@DSmith-e5e8 ай бұрын
What could we substitute the eggplant for?
@johnperrry215 Жыл бұрын
Good God that is lovely¡
@pedromacias40758 ай бұрын
for the bechamel did he put butter and olive oil only but it looks white.?
@MrJjeter4 ай бұрын
What is the name of this restaurant?
@joraroar4 ай бұрын
I would also like to know
@Lividbuffalo Жыл бұрын
The way the narrator says his name😂
@SandraJane-bd8im Жыл бұрын
I am wondering why if tou fry the potatoes why you wouldn't fry the sliced aubergine ina little olive oil too? 🤔
@DWFood Жыл бұрын
Perhaps the eggplants would then be "sealed" by the oil and could not absorb the aroma of the Sauce - just a guess...
@hardminder Жыл бұрын
did the narrator say ''it's time to blanch the bechamel'' ? How is it possible that it got aspproved and made it all to way here? It'S a cookin channel for christ's sakes. Mind-boggling.
@jiwarindu669010 ай бұрын
Mouzakka means MAKING IT COLD in Arabic. It is Arabian food. CMIIW
@blotski Жыл бұрын
eggplant 🇺🇸 🇳🇿 🇨🇦 aubergine 🇬🇧 🇮🇪
@chlopgotuje Жыл бұрын
Łaciate polish milk is staing on the table (left) Good point!!!
@mitchferrer31476 ай бұрын
Greece? While Turkey and Greece have made Moussaka globally famous, they are the not the nations who introduced this dish. According to the Greeks, this dish was introduced by the Arabs when they brought the aubergine.
@rosannemassman45608 ай бұрын
Wishing the correct amount of ingredients & directions were included in this post.
@recoswell Жыл бұрын
any place where the olive oil is kept in a gallon pitcher I MUST EAT AT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@r.s.25257 ай бұрын
Lebanese dish, mousakkaa in Lebanese means cold. A dish served cold an never heated after it cools down. Greeks. added a western twist on it. Mediterranean cuisine doeant have bechamel on it and cheese on top, the real Mediterranean cuisine.
@sopihadown8511 Жыл бұрын
Can you supply the recipe please.
@taniadim.p.5305 Жыл бұрын
This version of mussaka is very delicious. For those who belive moussaka is not Greek, you are right. Turks/ Otomans come to Thracia and balkans after 1400 year, when there was no potatoes,tomatos, corn e.t. The potato's comes after 1596-1600 probably later from Inkas in south America, eggplant come from China in 8-12 AD to Balkans, introduced by Arabs. But the Greeks made this delicious recepies grom all that ingredients. I personally don't use eggplant in mussaka.
@VusalMusayev-s9w Жыл бұрын
When Turks came to Asia minor Greeks were slaves of Romans.
@kalliaspapaioannou7045Ай бұрын
Actually, the recipe of the original moussaka exists in Byzantine archives in Smyrna (todays Ismir), from 9th century A.D., but instead of tomatos they used garum sauce, had no potatoes and also instead of bechamel they used cheese on the top. The name probably Arabic, maybe because the minced meat was their innovation. Since the early 20th century the recipe used till today, is the one that chef N. Tselementes created.
@heidismith8970 Жыл бұрын
Where is the recipe for the sauce?
@afandou1966 Жыл бұрын
3:22 Yeah, ok, and the potatoes were deep fried in unknown vegetable oil. Oh, and use zucchini over the meat. That is from the botton of the pan, potatoes, egplant, meat zucchini, bechamel sauce.
@lthandle2 жыл бұрын
The sound editing is very annoying. Constantly cutting out and resuming high energy, multi layered instrumental songs. So bad I have to mute the video half way to see how its made!
@lamaaltawil437 Жыл бұрын
moussaka is originally arabic and comes from the levant even the word moussaka is arabic
@liqiz1755 Жыл бұрын
Yeah moussaka it’s Arabic origin, nice to hear.
@kalliaspapaioannou7045Ай бұрын
Actually, the recipe of the original moussaka exists in Byzantine archives in Smyrna (todays Ismir), from 9th century A.D., but instead of tomatos they used garum sauce, had no potatoes and also instead of bechamel they used cheese on the top. The name probably Arabic, maybe because the minced meat was their innovation. Since the early 20th century the recipe used till today, is the one that chef N. Tselementes created.
@samuelbird5255 Жыл бұрын
We need robot moussaka.
@panama-canada8 ай бұрын
Looks like a shepherd pie to me
@LV-426... Жыл бұрын
Looks like a more sophisticated Lasagna. I'd definitely like to try it.
@HAIRHOLIC_12 ай бұрын
It looks like a shepherds pie but with bechamelle instead
@frankward8336 Жыл бұрын
I think a 100-year old recipe qualifies as 'traditional' But NEVER put potatoes in a mousakka.
@denizliberal7 ай бұрын
It is Turkish -- like swedish meatballs and German Doner --- TURKISH.
@lovehope482211 ай бұрын
It is a Greek dish by now.
@thecooldude43712 жыл бұрын
Hello
@Tztimelord7 ай бұрын
Fun fact greeks of course learnt musakka from Turks but in this case of food theft, something interesting had happened. Nikólaos Tselementés, a greek chef who was heavily inspired by french cuisine puts bechamel sauce on top in 1920. Voila... you have greek national dish which of course has ottoman cuisine roots with french influence. Fyi real musakka is just eggplants with tomato sauce. And it is very delicious.
@kristaps52967 ай бұрын
Fun fact, 🦃 stole this food from the Arabs.
@kalliaspapaioannou7045Ай бұрын
Actually, the recipe of the original moussaka exists in Byzantine archives in Smyrna (todays Ismir), from 9th century A.D., but instead of tomatos they used garum sauce, had no potatoes and also instead of bechamel they used cheese on the top. The name probably Arabic, maybe because the minced meat was their innovation. Since the early 20th century the recipe used till today, is the one that chef N. Tselementes created.
@stelios5314Ай бұрын
@@Tztimelord Lol Tselementes actually added both bechamel and potatoes. He also changed a bit the recipee of the minced meat. So after all, half of the ingredients of Greek mousaka do not exist in the Turkish one. Whoch means that we made much more changes than the ones you did when taking the food from the Arabs. So whats your complaint exactly??
@nawalr8362 Жыл бұрын
Tha most important part in this recipe is the sauce but he did not show us how to make it or how much ingredient to use therefore I will not use it
@donq29572 жыл бұрын
Best food Greeks eat and it is probably a Persian recipe. We invented Baba Ghanuj.
@comet315 Жыл бұрын
Real traditional.moussakas has only 3 parts - aubergine, mince and bechamel. No potatoes, courgettes, carrots etc which are used by most restaurants as cheap fillers/substitutes.
@adriancalin8688 Жыл бұрын
Lasati balta bunica facea musaka formidabila la Bucarest
@neggy29262 жыл бұрын
Basically cottage pie with eggplant
@thekingdomguards74812 жыл бұрын
It’s basically Arabic dish . Love to Greece 🇬🇷
@CherryFlower242 жыл бұрын
well no, it's greek
@wa7de2 жыл бұрын
@@CherryFlower24 no its not. you can easily see on wikipedia. and most of your food is ottoman or arabic because of the colonization
@CherryFlower242 жыл бұрын
@@wa7de And we all come from Africa, yet we don't call a chinese an african lmao
@hyacinthe72 жыл бұрын
The name of the dish may be Arabic in terms of etymology, but the way we make it is 100% Greek. If you go to Jordan or any other Levantine country and ask for mousaka, they will not give you what we make in Greece. Similar ingredients, but different dish. And this is common for many other specialities as well -- Greece, the Balkans, the Levant, all were once under Ottoman rule, there were no borders, and so the cultural exchange, which includes food, was endless.
@gio77992 жыл бұрын
Since when has bechamel sauce an Arabic origin? You can find mince meat all over Mediterranean countries and fried aubergine too, so for me, it's a Greek recipe.
@MrBluexmas2 жыл бұрын
ORIENTAL?
@Mr.56Goldtop8 ай бұрын
This only shows the ingredients, Without a published recipe it's worthless. The best moussaka I ever had was at a little restaurant on Santorini, then 2nd on Mykonos. I also had it on Rhoads.
@davidmaguire6043 ай бұрын
I could go cook it right now after watching that video. Your obviously a useless cook🤪❤
@Alper-hi9mh3 ай бұрын
Turkish Devsirmes making Generic Turkish food 👍
@منجدوجدومنزرعبلح-ح8ك Жыл бұрын
If mousaka is greek or Turkish what does it mean in both languages? 🤣🤣
@mojorojo4474 Жыл бұрын
In hindi it means uncle’s
@andrejohnson673110 ай бұрын
This recipe is less than 100 years old… 😂
@BeatrizVilcachavez-mx9sk9 ай бұрын
Com
@shyamsundarrajan2469 Жыл бұрын
That's not bechamel sauce at all
@leonardvoltes6180 Жыл бұрын
😅😅
@sissypissyrapper232 жыл бұрын
Super interesting, but that robotic narrator is frankly awful
@GreenfileNoWaste2 жыл бұрын
agree 100%, the narrator is awful.
@kaycey73618 ай бұрын
Every good food came from asia. Europe cant make good food without asian influences
@rosey55545 ай бұрын
I wish these people could pronounce Greek words lol
@findyourself3946 Жыл бұрын
It loolks Italiano Lasagne🤔
@منجدوجدومنزرعبلح-ح8ك Жыл бұрын
Mousaka is an Egyptian dish not greek even the name is egyptian
@tassosdavakis60782 жыл бұрын
Φίλε μάγειρα , ο παραδοσιακός μουσακάς γίνεται ΜΟΝΟ με μελιτζάνες ,χωρίς πατάτες !!
@ΔημοσθένηςΘανασιάς2 жыл бұрын
Ανάλογα της περιοχές Στην Ήπειρο είναι και με τα δύο
@metaxist Жыл бұрын
η πόντια γιαγιά μου τηγανίζει τις πατάτες και τις μελιτζάνες και δεν βάζει τόσο χυμό ντομάτας στον κιμά , πολύ βαρύ φαγητό δεύτερο πιάτο δεν τρώς
@erdemozcan54356 ай бұрын
In Türkiye, we make this dish only with eggplant and a sauce similar to bolognese sauce, and we do not add béchamel sauce or cheese.
@Usarda Жыл бұрын
It's 'Musakka' and it's a Turkish food
@stelios5314 Жыл бұрын
Its called "moussaka" because that's the translation from Greek. The video shows Greek Moussaka, which is a different version from the Turkish one. Of course, it was based of the original Turkish/Arab recipe, but it has potatoes and bechamel that Turkish Musakka dont have. Musakka is an older, but different version of moussaka
@nihil_hd1598 Жыл бұрын
Its an arabic food
@Usarda Жыл бұрын
@@stelios5314 Greek ppl takes all our foods and changes its name and they are claims like it's their own food. So I declined that.
@stelios5314 Жыл бұрын
@@Usarda I just said that half of the recipe of moussaka is changed, (by the Greek chef Tselementes). What truly remains the same is the eggplants and the name. (I should add that the recipe for the meat has also changed a bit) Greeks also have a famous dish called Pastitsio. It has spagetti inside, but I havent seen any Italian complaining about that. Considering mousaka, its a significantly different version than the Arabic one. You cant claim the recipe, but just the idea (once its based on Arabic musakka. And generally, Greeks were under Ottoman rule for 4 centuries. Dont expect that their cuisine wont have been influenced by Ottoman dishes. Its common sense. Also it can be claimed that musakka is actually an Arabic food. So why dont you say that Turks "stole" it from the Arabs? At least Greeks radically changed the recipe retaining eggplants as the main element.
@Usarda Жыл бұрын
@@stelios5314 but greeks do that about everything and they arr adding "ki" just the end of its name. Baklava-ki dolma-ki. And they are trying to claim them. They are trying to claim döner, yoğurt and lots of things too
@haythamabdel-qader69342 жыл бұрын
its not greek
@shanepasha6501 Жыл бұрын
The Bechamel part is Greek. The whole set up of the dish has evolved through the ages. In the early 20th century, Chef Nikalaos Tslementes, a Greek Chef that was trained in France, came up with the idea of adding the Bechamel sauce on top. And that is what made this dish so delicious (not to take anything away from previous recipes.) Bon Appetit!
@aokiaoki4238 Жыл бұрын
It's all Greek, Turkish muousaka is 🗑
@nn-cy2il Жыл бұрын
It is Turkish dishes
@berfunkle4588 Жыл бұрын
The Turks occupied Greece for 300 years. They could have stolen the recipe from the Greeks long ago and not tell anyone.
@nn-cy2il Жыл бұрын
@@berfunkle4588 I wouldn't say that the Greeks cook badly because that would be a lie. All I want is to be fair. If they are Greeks, I agree to say them. But if you say dolmades instead of dolma, I can't accept it.
@gilpaubelid3780 Жыл бұрын
@@nn-cy2ilIt's a Greek dish based on an Arabic one. The arabic one was just aubergines and some kind of meat and it was served cold (that's where the name came from). In other words it was a completely different dish than the greek one. Dolmades is just the plural form of Dolmas (singular).
@VusalMusayev-s9w Жыл бұрын
The word is Arabic. When Turks came to Anatolia you were shiet eater slave of romans
@SSCHS7 Жыл бұрын
Bulgarian version is better
@stefanrichter4825 Жыл бұрын
That is?
@MyCatLovesRAKI Жыл бұрын
greece copying turkeys every dish
@nihil_hd1598 Жыл бұрын
And u cipy it from arabs and persians
@blotski Жыл бұрын
Wеll, when Turkey tried to conquer everywhere establishing the Ottoman Empire it's not surprising you left some recipes behind. They didn't copy them. You brought them and left them behind.