Börek

The börek is a lovely creation of the kitchens of Ottoman-controlled lands. Essentially, it refers to an entire family of pastries or snacks made with filo dough. Filo is Greek for leaf, so not surprisingly, filo dough is paper-thin sheets of unleavened flour. Stuffing varies from meat, vegetables, dried nuts and fruits, cheese and even nutella and confectionery products. The börek particularly caught the imagination of Ottoman Jewish communities who took it to places beyond the Ottoman vale, like Emilia-Romagna in Italy. The dish comes is all shapes and sizes, and is ubiquitous in the cuisines of Greece, Israel, Bulgaria, and the inheritor states of the former Yugoslavia.

The word börek comes from the Turkic root, bur-, which means to twist. However, others claim that it stems from the Turkish word, börbör, which means to wrap or cover. Food historians have claimed that the dish is even older than the Turkic migration into Anatolia, that the börek was most probably brought over by the Oghuz Turks from Central Asia between the 8th and 11th centuries.

The börek has spread since then to not just the once Ottoman lands but even beyond and have become central parts of local traditions and customs. For example, in Tunisia, böreks are called brik and are an important part of breaking the fast during the holy month of Ramadan – it is usually the second course, after the chorba, or soup. There is apparently also a tradition in that country that the mother of a bride-to-be makes a börek for the potential groom. If he can eat the brik without spilling any of the egg yolk, he may marry the bride. No pressure, guys! Now you see why your mothers told you not to be messy eaters :-) Similarly, Mumbaikars may be surprised to hear that their beloved khari bears an uncanny resemblance to the Saray böreği, or palace börek – both are layers of filo with fresh butter rolled between each sheet.

The most difficult or time-consuming part of making börek is making the dough. Thankfully, pastry sheets may be readily purchased in many supermarkets and special shapes or sizes may be available in ethnic stores. Yet making filo at home is probably healthier, certainly cheaper, and it tastes better than the frozen product. It may be that the better taste is a psychological reaction to the fondness for the labour that goes into making filo sheets, but as long as you create with a yummier end result, who cares, right? People will tell you that making filo is hard work. That is not exactly true – making the dough is easy, but making it into paper-thin sheets is where the hard work comes in! However, there may be ways around that, as you will see.

Ingredients:

For the filo:

For beef filling:

For spinach filling:

For feta filling:

For leek filling:

For brinjal filling:

For potato filling:

     

Preparation time:

Filo: 200 minutes (including 120 minutes idling)

Stuffing: 10 minutes

Cooking time:

Stuffing: 10 minutes

Börek: 25 minutes

Serves: 6-8

Process:

Filo:

You can make filo sheets in advance and store in the freezer. Just take them out when you need them, allow to thaw, and voilà!

Beef stuffing:

Spinach stuffing:

Feta stuffing:

Leek stuffing:

Brinjal stuffing:

Potato stuffing:

Other stuffing:

The börek:

Afiyet olsun!