A bit like spanakopita, Turkish Borek is really tasty and fairly simple to assemble. We had it warm for supper, accompanied by a tomato cucumber, pepper salad. The next day, cold, it accompanied a more substantial salmon, Napa, and carrot slaw. Still delicious. Cold, it was firmer and a bit more strongly feta-flavored.
Phyllo (or filo) is such cool stuff. Thin, thin sheets that look like sheer fabric. Handle carefully, though tears aren't a big deal.
One layers it lavishly, moistening the layers with an egg/milk/yoghurt mixture. As I recall, when I made spanakopita, melted butter in large quantities was the moistener, resulting in a crackly pastry. Borek is breadier (and lees guilt-inducing.)
Lightly sauteed spinach and onion, along with feta cheese is the filling.
The filling is topped with more phyllo and the yogurt moistener, then finished off with a wash of egg yolks and a sprinkling of sesame seeds. One cuts the portions before baking. (Though they'll have to be recut to some extent.)
The whole thing can be assembled and refrigerated overnight before baking. Or frozen. This would be a nice party dish, cut in smaller pieces as appetizers.
Spinach and Feta Cheese Börek – Turkish Borek Recipe
By Aysegul Sanford (SEE HER BLOG HERE)
Yields: 12 slices
Prep Time: 30minutes
Cook Time: 35 minutes
Ingredients
Spinach and Feta filling
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 medium-size onion, chopped
16 oz. baby spinach leaves
1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
1/4 teaspoon black pepper
8 oz. crumbled feta cheese
Milk Yogurt Mixture
3 tablespoon olive oil or any vegetable oil such as avocado oil
½ cup whole milk
1 large egg
2 tablespoons plain whole-milk yogurt
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon black pepper
Layers
1 package of Phyllo Dough thawed overnight in the fridge
2 egg yolks
2 tablespoons sesame seeds
½ teaspoon Nigella seeds optional (I used black and white sesame seeds)
Instructions
1. Cook the filling: Heat 1 tablespoon of olive oil in a large pan at medium heat. Add the chopped onion and cook, stirring frequently, until translucent, 4-5 minutes. Add the spinach, salt, and pepper. Cook it, tossing it every few minutes using kitchen tongs, until the spinach loses most of its volume, around 5 minutes. Give it a stir and turn the heat off. Let it cool for 15 minutes.
2. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.
3. Make the yogurt milk mixture: Whisk olive oil, milk, egg, yogurt, salt, and black pepper in a bowl until combined.
4. To assemble: Line a baking sheet ( 12X17--though I used a slightly smaller pan) with parchment paper. In a single layer, place sheets of phyllo dough onto the parchment paper. Use as many sheets as you need to make sure that the pan’s whole surface is covered. It is okay if some filo is overhanging on the sides.
5. Place another layer of phyllo on top of the first, again making sure that the bottom of the pan is covered. Pour 3-4 tablespoons of the milk mixture on the top layer of dough and brush it over the filo sheets, making sure that it is evenly spread.
6. Stack another two layers of phyllo dough on top of the first two. Again, brush the milk mixture over the top phyllo sheet. Then, cover the top sheet with one more layer of phyllo dough—not two. Do not brush the top sheet with the milk mixture again.
7. Spread the now-cooled spinach and crumbled feta cheese evenly over the top layer of phyllo sheets.
8. Place another two layers of phyllo sheets over the filling, covering it completely. Brush another 3-4 teaspoons of the milk mixture over the topmost sheet. Then, place two final layers of phyllo dough on top of the washed layer, and brush the top with the milk mixture. You should have 9 layers of dough in total.
9. If there are sheets overhanging on the side, fold them in towards the pastry’s center and make sure that they are brushed with the milk mixture. At this point, the borek should look nicely moist and tightly packed.
10. Using a sharp knife, pre-slice borek into 12 equal pieces
11. Mix egg yolks in a bowl.
12. Brush each slice with egg yolk and sprinkle with sesame seeds and nigella seeds if using.
13. Bake in the oven for 30-35 minutes or until it turns golden brown.
14. Let it cool for a few minutes, slice, and serve while it is still warm.
5 comments:
Would you believe I have never used phyllo dough? Not sure why. I will bookmark this to try one day.
I could eat that, if I were still capable of cooking.
How very delicious! I remember my one experience into making a Spanokapia...for Christmas dinner. It was great! Don't know why I don't consider such lovely foods now.
Sounds delicious. May try a variation of this using crescent rolls that I used to make in Brooklyn back in the 70's.
I love these. My father used to bring them from the Armenian grocery store in Paris, then he taught my mother how to make them. But he called them Armenian Borek. Here is a recipe, very much like yours: https://armeniandish.com/2020/08/cheese-boereg-feta-phyllo-triangles/
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