Kitchen Confidential with Chef Nikos at Theos Restaurant

[downloads category="current-issue" columns="1" excerpt="no"] [downloads ids="127457" columns="1" excerpt="no"] [downloads ids="120272" columns="1" excerpt="no"]

ngredients-theos-restaurant

Best-Restaurants-2014Nikos Theodosakis and Nikos Kazantakis share a common heritage. Both come from the Greek Island of Crete and they’re both passionate about things Hellenic. Kazantakis wrapped his love into his enduring character Zorba the Greek; Theodosakis serves it seven days a week at Theo’s on Main Street in Penticton.

Theo’s is one of those places where you go to escape winter. It’s cheerful, lit with a lot of natural light, and painted Mediterranean white and blue—like an island taverna ought to be. For travellers who’ve been to Greece, Theo’s takes you back to the land of Ulysses and Helen.

Nikos-Theodosakis-theos-restaurantOutside, a sign gives the address of Theo’s website: www.eatsquid.com. For diners nervous about trying “foreign” fare, there are two reasons not to be put off. First, squid (a.k.a. calamari) are delicious; second, Greek food is really just home cooking with a slightly herbaceous twist.

Nikos learned the art of Greek cuisine from his mother, Mary, and dad, Theo. They learned it from their parents, who learned it from theirs, and so on. That’s one of the wonderful things about Cretan peasant food—it has a lineage going back millennia and you’re dining on history.

Theo and Mary opened the restaurant in 1976. It was a big gamble for them and a radical idea for the Okanagan. At the time, Valley restaurants were strictly meat and potato steakhouses while the wine industry was still in an unimagined future.

Slowly the restaurant took off. Nikos still remembers, when they first opened, his dad snoozing on a bench and waiting for customers. Now the restaurant is packed and on holidays and weekends it’s a good idea to make reservations.

Cretan-style cuisine is based on locally available meats, seafood and poultry as well as what could be foraged from the mountainsides. Mary is the family foraging expert. Her mother taught her and she is passing the knowledge on to Nikos’ family.

“In the spring” she says,” I head up to Naramata to pick purslane. It’s typical of the ingredients found in Crete and is one of the healthiest plants in the world. But in Canada, it’s considered a weed!”

Plants like purslane contain some of the highest anti-oxidants to be found anywhere and they taste good. Theo’s offers purslane in salads along with amaranth greens and black mustard and they’re a good way non-Greek foodies can stretch their palates into ethnic foods.

Mary-Theodosakis-and-Nikos-Theodosakis-Theos-restaurant-Bruce-KempAs Nikos begins to show me how to make dako, he says, “First it’s important that you understand my grandfather was a shepherd and this is what he took with him to eat for lunch.

“In the villages in Crete, not everyone could afford an oven, so they made community ovens. This was great except there was a lot of demand for them so when it was your turn to bake bread, you made a double batch. Then the extra was stored up in the rafters of the house and brought down when it was needed. By that time it was a rock hard rusk, so the locals softened it with water, flavoured it with wine, then slathering on garlic and grated tomatoes before pouring oil, feta cheese and wild herbs on top.”

As Nikos explains, he busies himself preparing the rusks for his dako and when they’re ready, it’s easy to see that this would make a terrific appetizer before diving into calamari, lamb or moussaka.

“The original bruschetta,” he says. And I can see it’s true.

As published in: 

[downloads ids=”127457, 120272″ column=”2″]

Read more of the original stories celebrated in our 30th-anniversary issue.

Summer in the Valley

Summer in the Valley

We asked you to show us your favourite Okanagan summer activities and we’re knocked out with the results. Obviously our readers are active, outdoorsy and often startlingly adventurous. Take a look – and check out page 25 for contest winners plus a chance to play a round of golf on us.

read more

A Way With Words

Role models, mentors and resources for Okanagan wordsmiths

The Okanagan is home to both established and aspiring authors producing fiction, non-fiction, poetry, humour and children’s titles.

read more

Sit Long, Talk Much, Laugh Often

…nearby there is a bohemian restaurant which is filling up on an unassuming weekday evening, with some of the Okanagan’s best and brightest minds. The group hosting tonight’s reoccurring event is the Okanagan Institute, …creative professionals who…talk about really cool stuff.

read more
Java Story No Jive

Java Story No Jive

Seventy-five per cent of the beans used by Shuswap Coffee Company are grown by women in the poorest regions of the coffee growing world. But as impoverished as these growers are, they are giving back to women right here in the Valley.

read more
Caravan Farm Theatre: Leading Lady

Caravan Farm Theatre: Leading Lady

To young actor Courtenay Dobbie, Caravan Farm Theatre seemed a mirage: Clydesdale cast-mates and stages sprung from fields for sold-out crowds. But eight years after her first show, she’s holding the reins. For two months during the summer of 2003, Courtenay Dobbie woke in her nylon yellow tent, her eyes swimming in the blue sky above the screen. Her ears replayed the echo of applause coasting through trees—the 24-year-old was playing the lead in Caravan Farm Theatre’s

read more

0 Comments

No Results Found

The page you requested could not be found. Try refining your search, or use the navigation above to locate the post.