On to Santorini - and wow is Santorini beautiful . . . words can hardly do it justice. Hopefully, these pictures help some:



Foodwise, Santorini certainly beat Mykonos. Our first dinner was at the highly acclaimed
Selene which is now in a new location, and it was very good, but I'd stop short of calling it great. The meal started off on a real high note with a very nice amuse (can't recall details, and the picture doesn't help), then this excellent "salad" (pictured immediately below) which featured tomatoes, capers, olives, chloro cheese powder, olive oil and a tomato sorbet - every component was great and the combination of flavors even better.

Good but not as successful as the "salad" was a cold tomato soup with niotiko cheese ice cream - very nice flavors, but a little one dimensional, particularly when compared to the other starter. Mains fared very well thanks to beautifully cooked fish. Aegean cod with sweet potatoes and wild greens:

Sea bass (and IIRC tomato fritters, very common in Santorini, and fava sauce):

Dessert was an average version of baklava with cinnamon ice cream. Like the one soup, dessert was a bit of a letdown given the very high quality of everything else. I'd still recommend a visit to Selene.
As good as Selene was, my favorite meal in Santorini was at Katina's in Amoudi Bay. Amoudi Bay sits below the very picturesque town of Oia. You can get to Amoudi Bay via the huge winding staircase (visible in picture below), boat or car. Here's a view of Amoudi Bay and its restaurants, with Oia above:

Our meal at Katina's started off with a tomato salad, featuring some of the best tomatoes I have ever tried, capers, olives, olive oil and oregano.

Then saganaki, made with kefalotyri cheese . . . I found this to be more flavorful than saganaki made with halloumi cheese - I learned that halloumi is the cheese traditionally used to make saganaki in Cyprus, but not elsewhere in Greece. One thing I prefer about saganaki in Chicago is the tableside dousing and flaming presentation, but the cheese used here was much better.

While the tomato salad and saganaki were both excellent, a visit to Katina's is all about freshly caught seafood. They show you their fresh fish of the day and you get to inspect and smell. We chose this beautiful scorpion fish:

It was grilled over charcoal, served simply with some lemon and olive oil, and it was delicious.


We also noticed quite a bit of octopus being grilled (although we did not order this):

Our meal ended with a fantastic baklava-type pastry served with what I believe was a yogurt ice cream.

In my opinion, a visit to Santorini would not be complete without a stroll around Oia, a visit to Amoudi Bay and a meal at Katina's. The setting is spectacular. I had also heard that Sunset at Amoudi Bay is quite good, but we only tried Katina's . . . and given how great our meal was, I have no regrets. A great time to visit would be shortly before sunset, but reservations are essential and make sure you reserve a table right up front on the water (except mid-day when it's hot and you want shelter)
We visited a couple of wineries in Santorini too - quite the wine producing region. Most interesting to me is the way they shape the vines in Santorini to protect them from the wind:

Greek raisins?:

While driving from winery to winery and touring the island, we stumbled upon a bakery with many fine looking desserts. This baklava was both pretty and tasty (though not as good as the dessert at Katina's):

If I have one complaint about most of the baklava I tasted in Greece is that most versions contained too much cinnamon. Our last meal meal was at Ouzeri Restaurant in Fira, and despite coming highly recommended, it was very disappointing. We really enjoyed the sesame crusted manouri cheese with sour cherries. However, what we expected to be the loukaniko sausage was just a very bland sausage (and served with mustard) and the souvlaki was as dry as sandpaper. Indifferent service didn't make the experience any better.
It seems like all hotels in Greece serve a complimentary breakfast and the breakfast at our hotel was quite nice. Hence, we'd usually grab nothing more than a small bite for lunch, even though dinner time was usually around 10pm or so. All in all, a wonderful visit to Mykonos and Santorini. I'll detail our visit to Athens and Delphi in the Athens thread.
Last edited by
BR on August 4th, 2013, 8:43 am, edited 1 time in total.