This is a re-posting from July of 2011, when we were in Greece.  It inspired quite a few comments.  Be patient, readers!  Soon I'll post an up-to-date photo essay about the joys of summer 2014 in Manhattan.
We’re
 presently at Costa Navarino in Messina, Greece, a super-luxurious 
resort complex which is devoted to ecological reform as well as 
supporting and promoting the culture and agriculture of the region.
As part 
of introducing the resort guests to native traditions, they gathered 
four local women yesterday to demonstrate making the traditional  “embroidered breads” which are usually prepared to celebrate a wedding.  The
 breads are set before the bride and groom at the wedding table, and the
 bride distributes pieces to the guests (like wedding cake in western 
weddings.)
These
 four ladies do their bread-making at Costa Navarino every Friday. I was
 there yesterday, sitting at one of the caned wooden chairs outside the 
perfect replica of a traditional cafenion, while around us couples sipped coffee frappés and played tavli (backgammon). 
You know I
 love folk art in any form, and photograph it wherever I travel. I 
quickly realized that the decorated breads made by these local ladies 
were indeed folk art.
First they sifted.
Then they kneaded.
Taking an occasional break to sip thick Greek coffee from demitasse cups.
The
 leading artist was Kyria Maria, who had prepared a pencil sketch of her
 design before she came. (She told me they make different designs every 
Friday.)
She had a true folk artist’s compulsive need for detail.  Her assistant stood by rolling tiny balls and thin snakes of dough at her behest.  When
 the first bread, made by two other women, was complete, Kyria Maria was
 still creating flowers, butterflies, a sun and birds out of dough to 
cover every inch of her round loaf.  (The first and primary part of her design represented  bunches of grapes on a vine surrounding the Acropolis.)
I was surprised at how many Greek guests came up and asked the women what they were making.  They had never heard of “embroidered breads” for a wedding.
Here
 are the almost-finished creations, which would be baked to a golden 
brown and served at the resort’s restaurants for breakfast the next day.
I knew 
about the “embroidered” wedding breads because last year, when daughter 
Eleni was married to Emilio in Corfu, Greece, her cousins and her aunt 
Nikki had prepared  the “embroidered wedding bread” traditional to their
 part of Greece, but according to their custom, the bride would throw 
the bread over her shoulders to the single ladies in the group,  like 
the bride’s bouquet in western culture, before it could be distributed 
to the crowd.
Eleni’s
 friend Catherine caught it and, just as for the single ladies who wrote
 their names on the soles of Eleni’s shoes, hoping that she would dance 
them away, the magic of the wedding bread will undoubtedly spread all 
the way from Corfu to Worcester, MA and conjure up a happily-ever-after 
future.   (Update from 2014--we attended Catherine's beautiful wedding in Connecticut last summer, so the bread did its work!)
 









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