Rising Food Prices Force Greeks to Abandon the Mediterranean Diet - Dnews


Rising Food Prices Force Greeks to Abandon the Mediterranean Diet - Dnews

For many Greek families, maintaining a balanced diet has become a daily struggle.

Greece is undergoing a quiet dietary crisis. As inflation tightens its grip and household incomes struggle to keep pace, the country that gave the world the Mediterranean diet is being forced to compromise on the very foods that once defined its culinary identity. Rising prices have reshaped daily life, but nowhere is the impact more evident than at the dinner table, where cost is increasingly outweighing nutrition.

For many Greek families, maintaining a balanced diet has become a daily struggle. The price of essential goods has surged to the point where fresh produce, fish and lean meats -- once cornerstones of Greek nutrition -- are now often replaced by cheaper, heavily processed products. The shift is gradual but unmistakable: shoppers compare prices more intensely, substitute ingredients, cut portion sizes and rethink traditional meals. What was once a culture built on seasonal vegetables, legumes, olive oil and affordable fish is now drifting toward lower-quality, calorie-dense foods that offer more volume but far less nutritional value.

The poorest households feel the strain most acutely. In Greece's lowest income bracket, one-fifth of the population spends more than a third of its total budget on food alone.

Many now describe supermarket visits as emotionally exhausting, unsure whether they can afford even basic items. This anxiety is rooted in stark numbers: food inflation has jumped by roughly 30 percent over the past five years, and staples like meat, milk and butter have seen increases of more than 30, 40 and 50 percent respectively since before the pandemic. For a growing portion of society, healthy food is no longer a given -- it is becoming a luxury.

Yet amid this pressure, nutrition experts argue that quality does not have to disappear from the Greek diet entirely. With careful planning, weekly meal preparation and reliance on humble ingredients like lentils, beans, chickpeas, whole grains and eggs, families can stretch budgets without abandoning nutritious eating altogether. Affordable sources of protein such as poultry and sardines -- long a feature of Greek coastal life -- are again gaining relevance, while home cooking has become a practical defense against the rising cost and declining quality of ready-made meals.

Still, the broader irony is hard to ignore. Greece, revered for a dietary tradition that has inspired health movements worldwide, finds itself in a position where many of its own citizens can no longer afford that lifestyle. The Mediterranean diet may remain a global gold standard, but for growing numbers of Greeks, it is slipping out of reach. As prices continue to climb, the country's dinner tables reveal a sobering truth: the battle against inflation is being fought meal by meal.

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