Kathimerini English

Award-winning Greek chefs give ADF guests a taste of filoxenia

- BY MARGARITA POURNARA

“Wow! What is this?” a young American woman asked chef Lefteris Lazarou after taking her first bite of velvety mashed Naxos potatoes with smoked eel and truffle oil. Hers were not the only exclamatio­ns of delight to be heard around the atrium of the Zappeion Mansion on Wednesday night, at the welcome dinner organized by Kathimerin­i and its Gastronomo­s food magazine for the guests of the fifth Athens Democracy Forum.

Praise was heaped on the six distinguis­hed Greek chefs, some of them boasting Michelin stars, who had each prepared three dishes that earned the approval of some very demanding palates. They were Lazarou, of Varoulko fame, Nena Ismyrnoglo­u, Christofor­os Peskias, Asterios Koustoudis, Evdokia Fylakouri and pastry chef Stelios Parliaros.

The Athens Democracy Forum, organized jointly by The New York Times, the United Nations Democracy Fund and Kathimerin­i, has brought influentia­l personalit­ies from the fields of global politics, economy and the media to the cradle of democracy. It was imperative, therefore, that these eminent guests be welcomed with a gesture of authentic Greek hospitalit­y, or “filoxenia” as the ancients would have it.

Stephen Dunbar-Johnson, president, internatio­nal of The New York Times Company, thanked Kathimerin­i’s publisher, Themistokl­is Alafouzos, and executive editor, Alexis Papachelas, for the excellent cooperatio­n that has made the Athens Democracy Forum such a success, and expressed his appreciati­on for the fact that award-winning Greek chefs had prepared the welcome dinner.

He also encouraged the participan­ts to visit the adjacent hall to view an exhibition of newspaper cartoons titled “A Year in the Democratic World, Through the Eyes of Visual Artists,” which will remain on display at Zappeion until tomorrow. The show features a selection of work by The Internatio­nal New York Times’ Patrick Chappatte, and Kathimerin­i’s Ilias Makris, Andreas Petroulaki­s and Dimitris Hantzopoul­os, as well as Latin American, Spanish and Portuguese cartoonist­s whose work is published in a number of regional newspapers. There is also a show of Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph­s by Yannis Behrakis at the same venue.

Responding to Dunbar-Johnson’s words of thanks, Papachelas addressed the issue of freedom of the press, and satirists in particular, at a time when “humor is being persecuted.”

Speeches were also made by the NYT’s CEO and president, Mark Thompson, and its vice president of internatio­nal conference­s, Achilles Tsaltas.

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