In her new series, Nagi Maehashi chases some of the world’s great dishes, and adapts them for the home kitchen. First up: Greek-style chicken gyros with a surprising ingredient.
Welcome to my new column for Good Food, Secret recipe. Every month, I’ll be sharing a recipe for one of the world’s great dishes that you’ve always wanted to make at home. The signature lasagne from a famous Italian trattoria. The crispiest Korean fried chicken using a technique the Korean community normally keeps to itself. The plumpest, juiciest gyoza. Australia’s favourite sausage roll. I’m talking the best of the best!
My team and I are hitting the streets to find a version of this dish we think totally nails it. Once found, I am pleading with the owners to share the recipe. Then I am putting it through many rounds of testing in my home kitchen (making sure it is Dozer-approved!) to perfect a version for you.
First up – the great Greek gyros. Truly one of mankind’s greatest food inventions, succulent marinated meat is cooked on gigantic vertical rotisseries, thinly shaved then generously stuffed inside warm pita bread and drizzled with sauce. A handful of shredded lettuce wouldn’t be a sacrilege but the true Greek way demands hot chips instead for carb-on-carb perfection. I could live my entire life eating only gyros and never tire of them.
This is the sort of food I love: abundant, messy, delicious, economical to make, and perfect for sharing with family and friends.
The hunt for the best gyros
I made it my mission to find a pita-swaddled wrap that represents everything a great gyros should be.
Though Sydney is blessed with great versions, Melbourne’s vibrant Greek neighbourhoods were calling my name. So I hopped on a south-bound plane in search of a recipe worthy of sharing with the world. And, having pounded the pavements, I fell in love with Kalimera Souvlaki Art in Oakleigh, in Melbourne’s south-eastern suburbs.
This family business, owned by Thomas Deliopoulos, who migrated to Australia from Athens with his wife and young son, is pumping all day. Locals and regulars are greeted with a smile and the irresistible smell wafting from the spit-roasted gyros. The thinly shaved meat – succulent and perfectly spiced, with just enough crispy bits – is stuffed generously inside warm pillowy pita bread with a fistful of crispy hot chips (thick cut, always!), slices of fresh tomato and lashings of a secret gyros sauce.
While pork souvlaki is the signature, it was the chicken that I swooned over. It is a cut above the usual, and one (big) bite was all it took to win me over. And it turns out I am not alone in my love of Kalimera, with esteemed chef Ben Shewry from Attica being a huge fan, as well as Sam Sifton, the well-respected food critic and editor of New York Times Cooking.
I dialled my charm up to full wattage to sweet-talk Thomas into sharing his secret chicken gyros recipe with me – and I was thrilled when he agreed.
His secret ingredient? A touch of curry powder. Yes, really! Barely identifiable once mixed with everything else and cooked, it adds extra layers of flavour and warmth that makes Kalimera’s gyros stand out from the rest.
Tested for your kitchen
I took the Kalimera recipe for many test runs in my kitchen and in my final recipe, I ended up tweaking the spice quantities to adapt it to regular quality spices that everyday folk like you and me get from the grocery store or supermarket. (I’m pretty sure Thomas gets something higher quality and more pungent.)
I was concerned I’d miss the extra flavour that comes from spit-roasting and without the fistfuls of fat used to layer between the slabs of chicken for the vertical rotisserie. But actually, pan-frying boneless thighs on a boring old stove yielded an excellent result.
I think it’s to die for. My friends swooned over it. My team couldn’t get enough of it. It really is something else. I hope you love it as much as I do. Thank you for sharing your secret recipe Thomas!
Adapted from the recipe provided by Kalimera Souvlaki Art, designed to achieve the same flavoursome gyros made in home kitchens using accessible everyday ingredients.
Chicken gyros marinade
Hot chips
To serve
METHOD
Warming the chips and bread
Assembling the gyros
NOTES
Kalimera gyros sauce
Thomas Deliopoulos was coy about sharing Kalimera’s sauce recipe. But he did tell me what went into it, so this recipe is built on my memories of the flavour. I think I got pretty close! This makes a little more than you’ll need. Use the leftovers on sandwiches, as a dip for vegetable sticks and crackers, or as a salad dressing.
INGREDIENTS
METHOD
Mix the ingredients in a medium bowl and set aside for at least 20 minutes. The sauce will keep for a week in the fridge.
I enlisted my brother, Goh Maehashi, to help me scout the best gyros to kick off the Secret recipe series. These two places were close contenders.
SYDNEY
MELBOURNE