Sugar and Spice, Sharp but Nice

I've been repeatedly asked to imagine what flavour I would be, and I can never come up with a satisfactory answer. Probably because flavour means food, but there's so much more to food than flavour.

Oatmeal Cinnamon Chip Cookies

I'm not a foodie snob, just someone who loves enjoying her food. There's flavour, but there's also smell, there's texture, there's temperature. All those can make a world of difference. So I decided to cheat a bit and figure out what kind of foodstuff I could be… and the choice just sprang up without me having to think about it at all.

If I identify with a food item, in a 'come back as X' way, that would have to be my mother's spice and orange cookies. They don't look like those up there in the photo; she prefers to twist the dough into little braids and shape them into sticks, crescents or rings. They are vegetarian, as there is no butter, milk or egg in the recipe; baking them would always ramp up big time during fasting periods, and the smell of cinnamon, clove and orange greeted people from the landing, without even having to open the door into the flat.

They're fluffy and comforting when eaten hot, just out of the oven, or even warm, although I've always preferred them cold, at least a couple of days old, when they feel more solid and the flavours have blended. And unlike so many other cookies that seem to be designed to be dunked in milk, these are extra yummy when dipped in orange juice, leaving some of their spiciness in the drink.

I'm not sure if I identify with them because they tick all the 'favourite foods' boxes or if I like them so much because I'm so like them, but there you have it. I'm solid, dependable, low maintenance, a generally wholesome influence; sweet but with a little core of pungency, an acquired taste. I want to believe I bring a bit of comfort, even with some crumbly rough edges, to the lives of the people I touch, and leave something of myself in them.

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Tips for Saving Money

I'm not particularly good at managing money, mostly because it's been so tight for as long as I can remember, that there hasn't been much that I could actually choose how to spend. But when hard times came knocking (hello, unemployment!), I found there were still ways to stretch those pennies further.

Security Enhanced Piggy Bank

Switch to the 'basics' foodstuffs range of your chosen supermarket (in my case, Sainsbury's), rather than the 'premium'. Some are rather mediocre quality – the coffee is too acid for our taste, the toilet paper is so thin it's not cost effective – but most are just slightly smaller than the regulars (Scotch eggs, tinned tomatoes, biscuits, chips). Cuts of meat can go either way; some end up in basics only because they're poorly cut, others have so much fat and/or gristle that the actual meat on them comes off as more expensive than more 'deluxe' ranges.

Use those loyalty cards and vouchers. I hardly ever go into a shop where I have no card to swipe these days. Nectar points are flexibly redeemable; they can stretch the grocery budget or buy gifts and little luxuries that one wouldn't afford otherwise.

When you find an offer, buy in bulk. This is ideal for non-perishables, and only storage space is the limit.

Upgrade your home insulation. We've just jumped at the opportunity to have British Gas do both the loft and the wall cavities for free. It can make a great difference to the heating system's efficiency, not to mention the utility bills!

Shop around for a good phone/internet/TV package. We are with Sky, and get HD satellite TV, unlimited broadband and essentially free landline calls (including abroad) for much less than each one would cost separately.

Consider switching to a pay-as-you-go mobile phone and a prepaid credit card, so charges will depend entirely on usage.

Plan outings around establishments' happy hours, which can reduce the bill greatly. If I bother to take the family to the Harvester before 5.30pm, we'll pay 1/3 less than after.

Entertainment doesn't have to cost a fortune. Not with libraries, book swap clubs, DVDs coming out hot on the heels of theatre releases, digital downloads available at bargain prices, and the option of entertaining at home.

Use cash as much as possible. You can't rake up an overdraught when there's nothing more in your wallet to spend. Seeing exactly how much you have allows more efficient rationing.

Don't mope. Whether it is a temporary thing, to weather some hard times, or there seems to be no light at the end of the tunnel, bemoaning your fate and feeling deprived all the time gets depressing and can very easily lead to some overindulgence, just to drive the blues away. I've been there. It's more effective to consider it lifestyle-building. Just like building new lifelong habits is a more effective weight loss tactic than a crash diet.

After all, the way we spend each day ends up being the way we spend our lives.

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Deck the Halls

Not our own hall, though. Not if I can avoid it. Not this time.

You see, I plan to be in Athens for the holidays this year. Last time was in 2009, and I've missed the atmosphere so much.

We haven't booked tickets yet, so I don't know exactly when we will be away – any time between 17 December and 2 January. I want to be there as long as possible, and not only because I desperately need seven workdays to bring my paperwork up to date, failing which would create no end of trouble.

You see, we say 'holidays' there, instead of just 'Christmas', because Christmas is only the beginning of the festive season. During most of the 12 days, the party goes on non-stop. There are so many name days to be celebrated, and a good few of them involve such popular names, that an overdose of treats is very likely, if one really keeps in touch.

The week between Christmas and the New Year also hosts more parties than any other time in the year: one long revel to celebrate the birth of the Son and chase the old year away. Add to it the fact that presents are exchanged on New Year's Day, rather than Christmas, and you can understand we could never be satisfied with a day or two of celebrating. Oh no. That's just a warm-up.

So I'm going to do everything in my power to be down early, to enjoy the build-up of activity. To decorate the tree in my mother's living room, which I haven't done since 2006, together with my little one. To welcome carol singers on Christmas Eve and New Year's Eve. To go to church at dawn and hear liturgy in Greek again. To have the pork and leek casserole that is traditional Christmas Day fare in my part of the country, and my mother's incomparable melomakarona. To visit with uncles and aunts and cousins and old friends, who haven't seen my son since he was just crawling. To see old friends, walk along crowded decorated streets, and welcome the New Year with fireworks at midnight and clinking glasses of bubbly with the family that made me and the one that I made, all together.

Despite the bleak economic climate in Greece right now, all I can think of is spending time with the people I care for. Nothing else matters. We've faced the spectre of poverty here as well, and we're just beginning to raise our heads above water, but I'd do anything to never have to spend another holiday season separated again.

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The Best, for Less

Sandwich bars don't have a reputation for being posh eateries. Swing by an Everest, though (they're all over Greece), and you won't care about posh again. Too delicious for nitpicking.

Chachi’s Sandwich Bar

Everest redefined the tradition of the 'quickie bite', taking it from cheese and spinach pies and sausage rolls (greasy and occasionally dodgy) to full meals, with a lot of room to go healthy and with more than decent prices. Where else can you get a filling meal, a dessert and a drink, and still keep the bill in the single digits?

There are traditional-style pies and ready-made cold sandwiches, to be sure, but the great strength of Everest is the completely customisable toasted sandwiches. Basic white bread rolls, but the choice of fillings is entirely up to the customer's whim, and I all staff have had to deal with some pretty daft combinations. I'm not sure if I've ever had the exact same sandwich twice myself, and believe me, I've had hundreds. (Nothing better after a night of clubbing, to keep the post-drinking munchies at bay.)

In more recent years, they have introduced customisable salads as well – pick a (sealed) bowl of greens – spinach and rocket, or a medley – and add your choice of extras and dressing. I used to have a lot of such salads for dinner when I worked evenings. Spinach and rocket, with roast chicken fillet chunks and honey-mustard dressing, or with red beans, sweetcorn, diced peppers and a vinaigrette. If I was extra hungry or it had been a particularly nasty day, I could add a slice of carrot or marble cake. And their 'chococaramel con panna' (hot chocolate with caramel syrup and whipped cream) was comfort in a paper cup in any but the hottest weather.

My husband, who was not yet my husband at the time and enjoyed ping-ponging emails with me during the hours of low activity in the evenings, never stopped being bemused at how little I had to pay for my dinners, compared to how many things I piled into either my salad or my sandwich. All until he came to visit and had the experience himself. It is really the only way.

I miss Everest. I haven't been to one since August 2010, and I plan to indulge fully when I find myself in Athens again.

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Best Foot Forward

I'm not high maintenance. It only takes some skillful arrangement to meet a few basic necessities, and I'm firing on all cylinders.

Lift Off- Best Viewed Large

Being at my best, in my book, is a combination of feeling good and doing well, both of which are theoretically easy to achieve. (Practice is another story entirely.)

The most basic feel-good factor is getting enough sleep, which can be inordinately difficult. I sleep generally well, but not long enough; on days when I've been allowed to sleep in, the improvement on both my mood and performance is immediately noticeable.

After sleep, food. I can't function if I'm either hungry or weighed down. In the morning, I need to eat something substantial within half an hour of getting up, or all the coffee in the world can't keep me going. On the other extreme, I'm literally good for nothing if I'm digesting a big meal. A bite of savoury, a bite of sweet, a drink to wash it all down, and my motor is purring. That's why I love Meal Deals.

A shower and clean clothes also go a long way on the feel-good scale. If I've had a few minutes to dry-brush before showering, the effect intensifies exponentially. Same when the clothes are comfortable – a crucial factor particularly when it comes to shoes – and suited to the season. Being too hot or too cold makes for certain misery.

I'm much better in the afternoon and evening than in the morning hours. It's my internal clock that works this way. Granted, a lot of my morning grouchiness is due to sleep deprivation, but by no means all of it. My ideal weather is cool and moderately sunny – no wonder autumn is my favourite season.

To complete my happiness, some alone time with the chance to read every day is just the thing. I used to put my daily train commute to such use; I was a much better person to work with if I'd had my daily read first.

So, in recap: rested, full, clean, comfortable, up to my intellectual speed – that's when I'm at my best, a rare and wonderful sight. Isn't learning to function optimally in less than optimal conditions what life is all about?

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