Milos is having a moment, and the attention is, for once, deserved. It is one of the most striking islands in the Cyclades: a volcanic geography of white cliffs, ochre coves, hot shores, and old mining roads that has, in the past few summers, slipped from cult favorite into something closer to consensus. The eating, however, has not kept the same pace as the arrivals. The gastronomy here is, frankly, hard to navigate without a local. The genuine pleasures tend to live in the taverns, not the restaurants, and the gap between a table that is merely fine and one that is quietly excellent is narrower than the menus suggest.
The places worth seeking out, then, are the ones that keep some contact with reality: an old family recipe held in place, a fish landed that morning, a local cheese folded into a pie, a Greek wine chosen with real knowledge, or a table set where the island’s human history is still visible: The syrmata of Klima and Mandrakia, the steps and squares of Plaka, the port of Adamantas, the old road out toward Parasporos, the geothermal shore at Palaiochori. Tradition matters here when the cooking is good. Modern cooking matters too, when it has the ingredients, the discipline, and a real reason to be in Milos.
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