Where to Start with Vefa Alexiadou
Vefa Alexiadou (1933-2024) was the most recognized food personality in Greece, often called the “Julia Child of Greece.” Born in Volos, Thessaly, she became a household name through her long-running television cooking show and her thirteen cookbooks published in Greek, which collectively sold millions of copies across the country. Her work was rooted in rigorous documentation: she traveled to every region of Greece, recording traditional recipes from home cooks, monks, grandmothers, and fishermen, preserving a culinary heritage that was at risk of disappearing as Greece modernized. Her magnum opus, “Vefa’s Kitchen” (originally published in Greek in 2005), was the first comprehensive English-language edition of her work, followed by “Greece: The Cookbook” (2017), published by Phaidon. She was a member of the board of the Centre for the Preservation of Traditional Greek Gastronomy and received numerous awards for her contribution to Greek culinary culture. Alexiadou’s books are valued not just as recipe collections but as cultural documents that capture how Greek people actually eat, region by region, season by season.
Start here
Greece: The Cookbook
Vefa Alexiadou · 704 pages · 2017 · Moderate
Themes: greek cuisine, comprehensive reference, regional cooking, traditional recipes
Alexiadou’s definitive English-language work, published by Phaidon as the most comprehensive collection of Greek recipes ever assembled in a single volume. This 704-page book draws from decades of research across every region of Greece and Cyprus, presenting hundreds of authentic recipes alongside cultural context, regional notes, and 230 color photographs.
Why Start Here
“Greece: The Cookbook” is the best entry point into Alexiadou’s work because it represents the culmination of her life’s research in the most accessible format available in English. Her earlier book “Vefa’s Kitchen” is excellent but harder to find and less widely available. This Phaidon edition benefits from professional editing and design that make the content approachable without sacrificing depth.
The book covers an extraordinary range of Greek cooking. Everyday dishes like fasolada (white bean soup) and horiatiki (village salad) sit alongside elaborate festival preparations and regional specialties that most Greek cookbooks ignore entirely. Alexiadou documents the cooking traditions of the Greek islands, the mountainous north, the Peloponnese, Crete, and the cities, revealing how geography, climate, and history shaped what people eat in each place. If you want to understand Greek cuisine as a complete system rather than a handful of famous dishes, this is the book that delivers.
What to Expect
A hefty, encyclopedic volume that rewards browsing and selective cooking rather than cover-to-cover reading. The recipes are clearly written with measured ingredients and step-by-step instructions, though some assume familiarity with basic cooking techniques. Certain recipes call for specialty Greek ingredients that may require a visit to a Mediterranean grocery or online ordering, but most dishes can be made with widely available ingredients. The book is organized by category (soups, salads, vegetables, seafood, meat, pastries, desserts) with regional notes throughout. This is a reference you will keep on your shelf for years, dipping into it whenever you want to explore a new corner of Greek cooking.