Top Ranking for Aegina Pistachios

While not a “hidden gem”, as the tired cliché goes, Aegina is a year-round magnet for urban dwellers in the greater Athens-Piraeus area

They’re something of an “open secret” in Greece, and have long been the product most closely associated with the island of Aegina, but the famous pistachios from the Athens-adjacent isle had their international kudos boosted last week by an online travel site.

TasteAtlas judged Aegina’s pistachios to be the best of a list of “top 10” nut varieties, slightly ahead of the bright green Antep pistachio of southeastern Turkey.

While not a “hidden gem”, as the tired cliché goes, Aegina is a year-round magnet for urban dwellers in the greater Athens-Piraeus area, where roughly half of Greece’s population lives. It is also a standard destination for one-day cruises embarking from the main port of Piraeus for the islands in the Saronic Gulf.

The port of Aegina, in fact, fields a large outdoor vendors’ markets stocked with its homegrown pistachios.

Widely known since early antiquity, beach-girt Aegina is home to the remnants of the temple and sanctuary of Aphaia, a mythical goddess worshipped almost exclusively on the island.

Another two Greek entries made it onto the site’s “best nuts” list: the pistachios of the Megara area and the shelled pistachios of Fthiotida, the prefecture in south-central Greece.

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