Greek Salad (Horiatiki)
- Servings
- 2
- Prep time
- 10 min
- Cook time
- 0 min
Ingredients
Salad
- 2 large ripe tomatoes (or 1 cup cherry tomatoes, halved)
- 1 cucumber
- 1/2 red onion
- 1/2 green bell pepper
- 1/2 cup Kalamata olives
- 100 g feta cheese (one thick block, not crumbled)
- A few leaves of romaine or iceberg lettuce (optional — not traditional but adds crunch)
Dressing
- 3 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
- 1 tbsp red wine vinegar
- 1/2 tsp dried oregano
- 1/4 tsp salt (go easy — feta and olives are salty)
- 1/4 tsp black pepper
Optional additions:
- 1 small mild chili, sliced (for heat)
- 1/2 cup chickpeas (canned, drained — or dried: soak overnight then simmer 60–90 min until tender)
- Capers (a small handful)
- Fresh oregano instead of dried
- Served with crusty bread to mop up the juices
Instructions
1. Prep the vegetables
- Cut the tomatoes into thick wedges (or halve the cherry tomatoes).
- Peel the cucumber (or leave partially peeled for looks), cut in half lengthwise, then slice into thick half-moons.
- Slice the red onion into thin rings.
- Cut the bell pepper into rings or strips.
2. Assemble
- Place all the vegetables in a large shallow bowl or plate.
- Scatter the olives on top.
- Place the whole block of feta right in the center — this is the traditional way, not crumbled.
- Sprinkle with dried oregano.
3. Dress
- Drizzle the olive oil generously over everything.
- Drizzle the red wine vinegar.
- Sprinkle with salt and pepper.
- That’s it. No tossing — serve as is, everyone helps themselves.
4. Serve
- Serve immediately at room temperature with crusty bread on the side.
- The juices from the tomato, cucumber, and olive oil pool at the bottom — that’s the best part. Dip your bread in it.
Tips
- Real Greek salad has no lettuce. If you see lettuce, it’s a westernized version. Horiatiki means “village-style.”
- Use the best olive oil you have — it’s one of the main flavors, not just a background fat.
- Feta quality matters. Look for block feta packed in brine, not the pre-crumbled dry kind. Bulgarian or Greek feta are the best.
- Don’t cut the vegetables too small. Chunky and rustic is the way — big pieces of tomato, thick cucumber slices.
- The salad gets better after sitting for 10–15 minutes as the juices release and mix with the oil.
- In Greece, this is often a full meal on its own with bread, not a side dish.
Result
Big, juicy chunks of ripe tomato, cool cucumber, sharp red onion, briny olives, and creamy feta swimming in olive oil and oregano. The most satisfying no-cook meal you can make in 10 minutes.