There was a soup in 1920s Astoria that could feed a family of six for three days straight. It didn’t have meat. It didn’t have fancy spices. It was just white beans, water, and the hope of a better life. If you walked past the tenement windows of Queens on a cold November night a century ago, this is the smell that would have greeted you from every single kitchen.
In this video, we’re stepping off the boat and into the past to discover 25 authentic foods Greek immigrants ACTUALLY ate in 1920s Astoria, NY. This isn’t the Greece you see in travel magazines with lamb on a spit or honey-soaked pastries. This was survival food—the meals made by people who arrived with recipes in their heads and almost nothing in their pockets.
On the Immigrant Table:
The Backbone: Why Fasolada (White Bean Soup) was the undisputed king of the tenement kitchen.
The Art of Survival: How Greek grandmothers turned wild dandelions and “weeds” into a feast that kept a generation healthy.
Making Something from Nothing: The “meatless” stews and thick crusts of bread that fueled the men working the docks and cleaning the city.
The Taste of Home: The simple joy of a single olive or a piece of feta that tasted like the village they left behind.
These 25 dishes tell the story of a community that refused to give up. They aren’t just recipes; they are the flavor of grit, sacrifice, and the American Dream.
Share Your Story
Did your grandparents or great-grandparents settle in Astoria or another immigrant hub? What was the “poverty meal” they passed down that you still crave today? Let’s honor their journey in the comments.
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The Greek-American story is just one amazing piece of the puzzle! 🇬🇷🇺🇸 If you have immigrant roots or just love how these cultures shaped our favorite meals, you’ll find even more of those connections in my full series here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLVWj26-aXyTOAMP5-sCQmtUqXLj_L432w"
Boiled diced potatoes with lemon and oil is basic potato salad
Trust in GOD and LOVE
BRAVE AND STRONG IN FAITH IN GOD AND FAMILY-LOVE
I live in Astoria and Greeks still eat these foods here, especially during Lent. My family is originally from southern Albania and we eat these foods also, with special emphasis during Lent. They are delicious, healthy, and they remind me of my mother’s cooking and holidays with my family.
#1 Fasolada, white beans, water, tomato, olive oil, thick & creamy
#2 Lentil Soup with Vinegar, Bread
#3 Horta Vrasta, dandelion greens, chicory, wild mustard, Boiled Greens, olive oil, lemon, salt
#4 Olives with Bread & raw onions
#5 Gigantes Beans, White beans, soak overnight, baked with tomato & olive oil, with bread
#6 Revithia Soup, chickpea soup
#7 Barley Rusks with olive oil
#8 Cabbage Rice Pot
#9 Fried Zucchini slices! an appetizer at Work, Bonanza! 1980's! YUM! dipped in cream dip
#10 Boiled Octopus! salted water boiling water, sliced drizzle in vinegar & oil, dockside!
#11 Sardines, grilled, pan seared! with bread a slice of lemon, Brain Food, makes you smart
#12 Rice with olive oil, burnt onion oil!
#13 Trahana porridge, fermented milk, cracked wheat, missed Greece!
#14 Split pea puree, "fava", yellow split peas, olive oil, onion, Big Batches
#15 Tomato & Bread Stew, olive oil with greens
#16 Egg & Lemon Rice, Avgolemono! Something special!
#17 Pumpkin, baked with olive oil, sprinkled salt warm with bread or cold, family of 6
#18 Stuffed Peppers with Rice, tomatoes, onions, seasonings
My mama hust to make rice milk for breakfast or Dinner
Nana cooked mampa boiled cabbage with olive oil
Nanna cooked laxana boiled with olive oil
We still eat pulses they are delicious if you know how to cook them and healthier than meat ❤
Not cabbage but spinach
Eggplants, too
Phyllo for pita,spanakopita, kolokythopita, kourkoumpinia
🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
That's a huge lie. These are Macedonian, Lebanese, and Turkish dishes. Greece is just a thief.
This is Immigrants' food to you but it is mainly the food that kept Greeks alive throughout war in the mother land in the first place.
So true to this day generations of Greek enjoy these and still do to this day it’s a way to preserve our history of all the great influential people of all ages I still cook and teach my children today ❤😊
I cook all these dishes, lentil soup every Wednesday without fail
Watching this brought tears to my eyes. I can still smell my Yiayia’s kitchen whenever I see a pot of Fasolada simmering. We didn't have much back then, but those simple meals were filled with so much love. Thank you for this beautiful trip down memory lane ❤
You call that survival food, I call it yaya’s recipes and most of them are part of my everyday cooking.
I would like to add #26: the juice of the Horta Vrasta, iced and complemented with some fresh lemon juice is one of my favorite “bitter” drinks. And when in need fancy, I just add a pinch of baking soda for the fizz!
Όχι foselada. Fasolada.
Famous worldwide GREEK cuisine.
🇬🇷🇬🇷🇬🇷🇬🇷🇬🇷🇬🇷✝️✝️✝️✝️✝️
We are pickled peppers and tomatoes you Malaka
zucchini are drizzled with yogurt and garlic
What the Living kid snuck from the plate wasn't zuchinni, it was chocolate cookies.
You forgot lentils,
( fakes, φακές in Greek),is very popular in Greece!!
we still eat all of them 😛 just with little bit more ingidiens… 😛 still the same
It's what the Greeks would eat for lent, because not meat allowed for almost half the year
Still they eat easy cheap food they do not like to try other nationality food in cyprus
I am making the lentil soup for tomorrow right now!
The correct recipe for boiled potatoes is with vinegar,olive oil and slices of onion.