Plate With A View: Skala Santorini, Greece
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A small gate from Oia's narrow main street leads down to an unprepossessing, crowded terrace under awnings of rush and canvas and centred around an old brick oven. This is Skala, an unpretentious taverna on the site of the village's old bakery. Since its opening in 1984, Skala has been run by the owners Stavros Sigalas and Christos Markozanis, aided by Sophie, their amiable, highly competent and multilingual waitress.
The tables and chairs are simple, with red cloths adding a splash of unexpected colour on an island that is almost uniformly blue and white. If you can take the intense heat get a table on the seaward side of the restaurant and watch the cruise liners come and go across Santorini's famous caldera.
Inevitably there are Greek specialities in amongst the mains – including rabbit stifado and kleftiko lamb – but a great meal can also be made up entirely of mezze – tzatziki, deep-fried chickpea balls, pastries filled with cheese, spring onions and pine kernels, fava beans and stuffed mushrooms. Desserts include baklava, panacotta and Skala's own ice cream.
The clientele is entirely tourist (American accents dominate) but also includes a lot of tour reps based on Santorini – always a good sign.
THE VIEW
There is probably no better restaurant view in the world than Santorini's vast caldera – a huge hole in the Cycladean seabed that flooded when this volcanic island exploded in 1450BC and appears a deep shade of indigo in the shimmering sea. Skala is perched on the edge of a cliff that drops down 800 sheer feet to the Med. The effect is like being in a restaurant that floats above the clouds. Down below, the island of Nea Kameni is where the new volcano is building up from the seabed. There are also fine views of Oia's white painted churches and houses which cascade down the cliff face like a pile of spilled mah-jong tiles.
Meanwhile, Santorini's donkeys put on a very good floor show of their own. These invaluable beasts of burden trek up from the harbour all day long and the narrow steps alongside Skala's low perimeter wall is where they are "recycled" back down to the quayside. Guests who tire of gazing at the dramatic caldera can watch the donkeys, released from their loads, clatter past at speed, pursued by anxious drivers.
THE BILL
£25 (£18) per person for three courses, excluding wine. Wines start at £3.50 (£2.50) per half-litre jug (house white or red). Open seven days a week during the tourist season from 12 noon to midnight.
Skala Restaurant, Oia, Santorini, Cyclades, Greece (00 30 22 860 71362)
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