Clean Monday symbolizes purity or innocence, if you prefer, as it is the first day of Lent, the 40-day period of fasting leading up to Easter, which corresponds to the days Christ fasted in the desert.
The celebration of Clean Monday in the countryside is also known as "Koulouma."
Although, as we mentioned, Lent (or the Forty Days) and the major fast of Easter begin on Clean Monday, the menu of the day is anything but meager.
First and foremost is the "lagana," a type of unleavened bread made without starter or yeast. It has a characteristic flat shape to bake easily.
On the table of Clean Monday, there is of course the beloved (and very healthy) sesame Halva, taramasalata, olives, vegetables of all kinds, and pickles (pickled vegetables) of all sorts.
Seafood enthusiasts usually go for marine delicacies (squid, octopus, cuttlefish, etc.), as well as shellfish (mussels, oysters, etc.), while the more traditionalists prefer our national dish, which is a very tasty bean soup.
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