Greek Food — What to Eat and What It Costs
What to actually order, what it costs, and where to find it away from the tourist menus.
Greek food is simple, fresh, and genuinely cheap by Western European standards: a gyro wrap runs €3–4, a full taverna meal €12–20 per person, and a nice dinner with wine €25–40. Don't leave without trying moussaka, a real Greek salad (horiatiki — no lettuce, that's the tell of a tourist-trap version), souvlaki, spanakopita, and fresh seafood by the coast. Skip any taverna with laminated photo menus and a tout outside pulling in tourists.
Greek food gets slightly underrated internationally, probably because so many people's only exposure to it is a gyro from a mall food court. The real thing — grilled fresh that morning, dressed in olive oil that actually tastes like something, served on a plate that costs less than a fast-food combo back home — is one of the best reasons to come. Here's what to order and roughly what it should cost.













































