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Börek

Yugoslavian Burek (Borek)

Description Edit

Yugoslavian börek, or burek is a baked or fried filled pastry

Ingredients Edit

Directions Edit

  1. Heat a large frying pan and add the oil.
  2. Sauté the onion until soft, and then add the beef, spices, and salt and pepper to taste.
  3. Cook until the meat is crumbly but not dry. Cool completely before you continue.
  4. Lay 1 sheet of phyllo dough on the counter. Brush with some of the butter.
  5. Place a heaping ⅓ cup of meat mixture across the sheet along the long side, 2 inches from edge.
  6. Fold the bottom over the meat mixture and roll into a snake shape. Cut the roll in half and coil each roll into a snail shape.
  7. Place on a nonstick baking sheet and butt the end up against the edge of the pan to prevent uncoiling. Brush with additional butter.
  8. Bake in a preheated oven at 375 °F for 15 to 20 minutes or until just golden.
  9. Keep the remaining sheets of phyllo dough covered with plastic, and work quickly to prevent in from drying out.

Notes Edit

Hint on handling phyllo dough: Be sure the dough is at room temperature before you open the box. Place the sheets of dough on a large cookie sheet and cover them with plastic wrap and then a heavy towel. In this way, they will not dry out while you are working with them. Work fast for best results and do not have the butter too hot when brushing the dough.

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1 comment

 
10.8.56.52Anonymous User
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  • This recipe was pretty nice. My modifications: I didn't have phyllo dough handy so I made up the meat mixture and decided to use some store-bought puff pastry. I made little pockets out of the puff pastry and stuffed them with about half the meat mixture.

    These were delicious and turned out to be a smashing success in my household. Then, since I was out of puff pastry, I was at one of my local supermarkets and I found a can of Pillsbury flaky biscuits that were near expiration date on super-discount and I bought those. Their flaky nature allowed me to peel them apart approximately in half, insert a spoonful of the meat mixture, and then re-seal the biscuit with the meat in side and follow the normal baking directions for the biscuits. The result wasn't quite as good as with the puff pastry but still pretty nice for feeding several people off of a handful of spiced ground beef and a deep-discount can of biscuits.

    Oh, also, I used nutmeg instead of allspice.

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