LIFE & CULTURE

XpatAthens
Wines That Greece Can Bank On
The wine in question was an Assyrtiko from Santorini. When its identity was revealed, I nearly dropped my glass. Not long afterward I bumped into Mark Squires, who covers the wines of Greece for Robert Parker’s consumer newsletter, the Wine Advocate, and I told him about my experience. “It’s a sleeper,” he said. “No doubt about it. Greece is your classic emerging region. When you look at what is happening in Greece, this is a country that is simply a great wine-producing region—they just don’t have much to prove it with yet.”
By: Will Lyons
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First Greek Beer And Brewing Museum Opens In Athens
To read more, please visit: Greek Reporter
Location: Athenian Brewery ~ 102 Kifissou, Aigaleo 12241
Visitor Hours: Every Saturday during the month of June from 13:00 - 20:00. Regular operation will begin in September 2015.
The Greek Behind Bulgari
Greek Car Market Reacts Positively To Car Taxation Plans
Market officials said a plan to link car taxation to the car's pre-tax retail price, instead to its power under the current system, is a fair measure, while they positively reacted to plans to change current living standard criteria for the use of cars -considered in some cases to be excessive- and to plans to offer exemptions to circulation fees for cars using the latest environmental friendly technology and fuel.
The Finance ministry plan envisages linking registration fees with pre-tax retail price of a car, which means higher registration fees for expensive cars and lower fees for cheaper cars.
For more, please visit: ANA-MPA
Patras University Student Develops Eye-Typing Technology App
To read more, please visit: Greek Reporter
Homemakers With The Golden Touch: Making Something Out Of Nothing
To read more, please visit: i Cook Greek
SkyGreece Spreads Wings To Connect Greeks Far And Wide With Motherland
To read more, please visit: Greek Travel Pages
The Clumsies - A Bar Hidden Away
To read more, please visit: Life Beyond Borders
Clumsies Website: http://www.theclumsies.gr/
Clumsies On Facebook
Photo Credit: The Clumsies
Byzantine Kastoria In Greece
Today, such punishment is a rare pleasure. Kastoria boasts a Byzantine heritage that seems second to Constantinople. But, unlike Istanbul, this little town in summertime enjoys a captivating serenity. In wintertime, I should add, it is entirely different, so they say. For this is the fur capital of Greece, a status it owes to its ancient heritage of trapping beaver (beaver in Greek being kastori, with the plural being kastoria) in Lake Orestiadha. An inexplicable number of shops fit out Greece’s best-dressed women in bulky coats as well as tight leather, risking political incorrectness in most other European countries.
Lake Orestiadha is graced by pelicans. These bewitchingly beautiful birds circle around the lakeside like jumbo jets before effortlessly descending, twisting then gliding to plop onto the water close to shore alongside the ungainly but distinctive watercraft here. The restless pelicans catch your eye as you enter the town, which has colonised the isthmus of a steep and bulbous promontory reaching out into the northern part of the lake. Refurbished Roman fortifications belonging to ancient Celetrum were probably first renovated in the 6th century AD when this had become Justinianopolis. These were strengthened again with 13th century bastions by the Epirot Despots. The unevenly restored walls extend across the narrow neck, in front of which is the daily market of local farmers, men and women from the slopes of the Grammos mountains, wizened by long summers. Rising steeply behind the walls is the modern town with its roots in Byzantium and the Ottoman age. Along the west-facing shoreline is a string of bright cafés; this is the heart of the present city. By contrast, the east-facing shoreline, tracked by a promenade, is shaded by planes and has an elegiac air. Here the discrete sense of serenity is profound as the trees drift past the excellent Kastoria Hotel into the thicker woodland that shrouds the narrow sylvan track that winds around the promontory a distance of some six miles.