gleam wrote:That being said, the greek village gyro is generally solid -- the crew knows how to make it properly. Some of the other things, such as the often-excellent buffalo wings, i won't order unless Nicky is there.
I'm a little vague on what makes a "Greek village" gyros different than regular gyros...though I had one this afternoon at Nicky's. I asked the Great Man Himself about the difference, and he said "Different spices" (he seemed grumpier than usual -- perhaps a few ouzos too many on Friday night -- and as I did not, as did Erik M., announce my intention to photograph his work, he paid me no mind).
I've concluded that, in addition to the "different spices" (maybe a little more oregano, and something hot, like cayenne maybe?), the Greek village gyros are also fried on the grill to get the juices going. If gleam, Ann Fisher or others aficionados of this dish have any insights into the actual difference between this dish and the standard gyros, I'd be obliged.
Hammond
Edited to fix unforgivable carelessness of ending the first name of Erik M with a "c" rather than a "k." In penance, I'm denying myself Thai food for 24 hours.
Last edited by
David Hammond on April 3rd, 2005, 10:06 am, edited 1 time in total.
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