The Greek salad is one of the most recognizable dishes in the world — and one of the most misunderstood. What most people know as a Greek salad is a bed of lettuce with a few cucumber slices, some crumbled feta, and a couple of olives. The real thing — the authentic Horiatiki, or "village salad" — contains no lettuce at all, serves feta as a whole slab, and is dressed with nothing more than excellent olive oil, red wine vinegar, and dried oregano.
It takes 10 minutes, requires no cooking whatsoever, and is one of the most deeply satisfying things you will eat this summer. Let's make it right.
What Makes an Authentic Greek Salad
When you order a salad in Greece, this is what arrives: a deep bowl filled with large chunks of ripe tomato, thick slices of cucumber, green pepper rings, thinly sliced red onion, and Kalamata olives — all topped with a whole slab of feta, drizzled with olive oil, and dusted with dried oregano. No lettuce. No romaine. No mixed greens. The idea of a green leafy base is completely foreign to the authentic Greek preparation.
The vegetables are cut chunky and rustic, not finely diced. The feta is presented as a thick, intact slab — guests break into it themselves at the table, creating crumbles of different sizes that mix into the salad organically. This is important: serving feta pre-crumbled means it loses its texture and disappears into the salad. The slab creates a focal point, looks dramatically better, and tastes creamier.
The Greek Salad Dressing
The authentic Greek salad dressing is not complicated. Extra-virgin olive oil, red wine vinegar, dried oregano, and a pinch of salt. That's it. The quality of your olive oil matters enormously here — this is one of those dishes where a grassy, peppery, high-quality extra-virgin olive oil transforms the entire dish. A bland or old olive oil will produce a bland salad. Use the good stuff.
Dried oregano specifically — not fresh — is what gives this salad its characteristic flavor. Greek oregano (Origanum vulgare subsp. hirtum) is more intensely aromatic than Italian oregano and is worth seeking out in Greek or Mediterranean grocery stores if you can find it. A small pinch rubbed between your fingers just before adding releases the essential oils and intensifies the flavor.
Why the Vegetables Must Be Fresh
There is no hiding behind technique in this recipe. The vegetables are raw and the dressing is simple — which means the quality of your produce is everything. Use ripe, in-season tomatoes that have actual flavor. Use a firm, fresh cucumber. The best time to make this salad is when tomatoes are at peak season (summer). An off-season tomato will make this salad taste flat regardless of how good your olive oil and feta are.
The Best Feta
Authentic Greek feta — labeled PDO (Protected Designation of Origin) — is made in Greece from sheep's milk or a sheep-goat blend. It has a firm, crumbly texture, a creamy richness, and a tanginess that domestic cow's milk feta cannot replicate. Look for it in the specialty cheese section at your supermarket, sold as a block stored in brine. Avoid pre-crumbled feta in bags — it's drier, less flavorful, and lacks the creamy texture that makes a Greek salad spectacular.
The Secret at the Bottom of the Bowl
After sitting for even 10 minutes, ripe tomatoes and the salt in the dressing create a pool of fragrant, tangy, olive-oil-stained tomato juice at the bottom of the bowl. In Greece, this is not waste — it's the best part. Tear crusty bread and dip it into this liquid. It tastes like summer in the Mediterranean, and it's impossible to describe adequately to someone who hasn't experienced it. Don't skip the bread.