T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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69.1 | | LATOUR::RICHARDSON | | Thu Jan 24 1985 10:46 | 63 |
| Baklava - this recipe from a friend at D. G., who says he got it from his sister
1 1/2 lb filo dough
1 1/2 lb melted butter
1 1/2 lb walnut meats
1 t ground cinnamon
3/4c water
2 1/4 c sugar
3/4 t lemon juice
3/4 c honey
1. Chop walnuts almost into a coarse powder. Mix with cinnamon.
2. Coat 11"x16" baking pan with butter.
3. Do 8 times: { Place a sheet of fillo dough in pan.
Brush butter over sheet of dough. }
4. Until out of nut mixture do:
{ Sprinkle 3 tablespoons of nut mixture on top.
Place a sheet of fillo dough in pan.
Brush butter over sheet of dough.
Place another sheet of dough in pan.
Brush butter over sheet of dough. }
5. Do 8 times: { Place a sheet of fillo dough in pan.
Brush butter over sheet of dough. }
6. You now should have ten sheets of buttered dough on top.
Cut with sharp knife into small diamonds.
Bake at 275 degrees F for 2 hours.
7. While baking, combine water, sugar, and juice.
Bring to a boil, then simmer for ten minutes.
Add honey.
Cool mixture in refrigerator.
8. When time is up, pour cold liquid over hot pastry.
Cool for at least four hours before serving.
NOTES FROM MY FRIEND'S SISTER:
The dough will run out first, not the nuts. I suggest that you use 4
tablespoons of nuts instead of three. Make sure that you have enough dough
left for the ten sheets on the top.
I have reduced the proportions of the "sauce" ingredients by 25% because
people seem to like a less soggy and less sweet pastry.
Fillo dough can be found in large supermarkets or specialty groceries.
It comes in 1 lb packages and is found inthe frozen foods case. It
might be labelled "Filo" or "strudel leaves". You can also get it at
some bakeries.
NOTE FROM ME: I've never made this, but my friend brings it to parties
a lot, and his pastry is always great, so the recipe should work. I don't
usually type in recipes I haven't made, lest you blame me if they don't
work out, but this one ought to be safe. I just don't eat this kind of
thing very much. Hope it comes out good!
/Charlotte
|
69.3 | | REGINA::LYNX | | Tue Feb 12 1985 20:12 | 9 |
| We recently made a wonderful baklava using the recipe from Bernard Clayton's
"The complete book of Pastry, Sweet and Savory" (paperback, Simon & Schuster,
$unknown - we got it from QPB book club; hardcover available at about $20).
I'd rather not type in the recipe (it's rather long) from page 239, but
I heartily endorse both the baklava and the entire book. The things we've
made from it worked well and were delicious.
If you make the baklava, use Nicka's spiced syrup.
|
69.4 | | CYGNUS::CURTIS | | Mon Mar 18 1985 19:03 | 14 |
| Will try to remember to photostat some recipes and mail them -- I lack the
patience to type them in.
You might not be aware that there are more desserts (even Greek desserts) that
use phyllo than just baklava. Galatoboureko, kopenhai, and kadaife come to
mind immediately.
Re .2: Either you enjoy drinking vinegar, or you got a sample from someone
who is trying to induce diabetes. (Or you don't really belong in this forum,
and also you happen to work for T-- um, er, well, never mind.)
I've had, over the years, wildly varying degrees of sweetness in baklava,
which depends chiefly, I would assume, on just how sweet the cook likes his/her
baklava. It seems much easier to make it very much too sweet than not sweet
enough, though...
|
69.5 | | CEO04::ACKERMAN | | Tue Apr 02 1985 10:51 | 14 |
| RE.2 would recommend you NOT follow this recipe for best results.
The author obviously had a bad experience.
The first recipe sounds REAL good. There are a couple of tricks to
making good BAKLAVA. One is not to take shortcuts. Specifically, put
your filo down one sheet at a time - the shortcut being to put 2-4
sheets down at once.
My mom always told me it doesn't matter if you use cold syrup or hot
syrup; the "trick" is to put either HOT SYRUP over COLD BAKLAVA or COLD
SYRUP over HOT BAKLAVA.
Kali Orexi - bon appetit
|
69.6 | re69.1 good eating | WORDS::AUGER | | Tue Mar 25 1986 08:54 | 5 |
| I recently tried the recipe in 69.1 and got excellent results.
I modified the sauce a little by reducing the sugar to 2 cups and
increasing the honey to 1 cup.
wayne
|
69.7 | a few more hints | EARTH::PATSELLIS | | Thu May 07 1987 01:46 | 10 |
| OK, I've got to add my secret!
Instead of using walnuts use almonds,walnuts have a bitter after
taste. You should put butter in the pan before you start the layering.
and don't forget the most important(I learned this from my father)
it is mandatory to drink at least one glass of ouzo(on ice, of
course)!!
ERIE
|
69.8 | Baklava with pecans! | ROXXY::AKI | | Wed Nov 11 1987 15:52 | 13 |
|
Re .7 - Almonds sound good, but if you really feel like splurging,
try PECANS! (I do this just once a year for my brother...)
I'll vouch for the COLD syrup over HOT baklava method (for me it's
the easiest - just pour the stuff over the baklava as soon as you
take it out of the oven). Also, for those of you who don't have
a real sweet tooth, try adding the juice of one lemon (more or less)
to the syrup. It adds a nice flavor and cuts down on the sweetness.
(I add the lemon for other people. Personally, I like my baklava
with extra sugar... :^)
Kemlo
|
69.9 | A little of each | OVDVAX::WIEGMANN | | Thu Nov 12 1987 10:03 | 11 |
| I had forgotten this note was here!
I made baklava twice this weekend - the first time I bought mixed
nuts that had too many peanuts and were too salty-yuk! So the next
time, I got a mix of cashews, almonds, pecans, and hazelnuts and
rinsed them off first. Also used unsalted butter. My recipe calls
for a tablespoon of lemon juice in the syrup, then a tablespoon
of orange water after the syrup is cooked - without peanuts and salt and
with the orange water, the flavor was real delicate. Has anyone
used a Hot Topper or some type of sprayer for the butter when working
with phyllo??
|
69.10 | The real secret is my 3 inch paint brush... | OVDVAX::WIEGMANN | | Thu Nov 12 1987 10:12 | 9 |
| Oops - forgot to mention that my recipe calls for beating one egg
white till stiff, then adding 1/3 cup superfine sugar, cinnamon
and fold in 2 cups chopped nuts - seems to give more "body" to the
filling, but I haven't tried it with just nuts, so I probably shouldn't
say! Another vote for hot baklava and cool syrup.
Also recently have gotten into the triangles with fillings - broccoli
and red pepper, sausage and cheese, ham and mustard - easy to make
ahead for parties and impressive.
|
69.11 | | PAPPAS::JIM | Jim Pappas | Sat Nov 21 1987 11:38 | 5 |
| I made some baklava last night. I'm told that the important reason
for putting the lemon juice into the syrup is to prevent the sugar
from crystalizing.
/Jim Pappas
|
69.26 | Baklava: Pineapple Cheese Baklava | ERASER::GEER | | Sat Dec 05 1987 11:31 | 7 |
| I'm looking for a dessert recipe made with phyllo dough. The filling
contained crushed pineapple and ricotta cheese. The taste was similar
to cheese danish, only better!
Does anyone have such a recipe? Thanks.
Beth
|
69.27 | And NO calories! 8^) | DICKNS::CIAMPAGLIA | | Tue Dec 22 1987 10:11 | 34 |
|
I've made this, and it's wonderful!
PINEAPPLE CHEESE BAKLAVA
1 (1 lb. 4 oz.) can crushed pineapple
1 (8 oz.) package cream cheese, softened
1 cup Ricotta cheese
1 cup sugar
2 egg yolks
1 tsp. grated lemon peel
1 tsp. vanilla
1/2 lb. frozen filo pastry leaves, thawed
1/2 cup butter, melted
1 tsp. lemon juice
Turn pineapple into wire strainer and drain, saving juice.
In mixer bowl, combine cream cheese, Ricotta, 1/2 cup sugar,
egg yolks, lemon peel and vanilla.
Blend together on medium speed. Stir in drained pineapple. Place
filo leaves between damp towels to keep moist. Place a sheet of
pastry in well-greased pan (13x9x2).
Brush with melted butter. Repeat with 3 more leaves. Spoon on
the pineapple-cheese mixture, and spread level.
Top with remaining filo, brushing each sheet with butter as it
is layered. Mark pastry into diamonds with point of a sharp knife.
Bake in a 350 degree oven about 50 minutes or until golden brown.
Combine 1/2 cup reserved pineapple syrup, remaining 1/2 cup sugar,
and lemon juice and cook to a thick syrup. When Baklava is baked,
spoon the hot syrup evenly over the top. Cool, then cut into diamonds
at markings.
Makes 1 large Baklava, about 40 diamonds.
|
69.22 | MAPLELINE ???? | BIONIC::ROYER | | Wed Feb 24 1988 13:46 | 8 |
| I'm not sure if this is the right place for this question but...
Does anyone know where I can get Mapleline in the southern NH area?
I need it for my baklava recipe. A friend gave me a bottle about
two years ago and it is just about gone.
Thanks,
Mary Ann
|
69.20 | BAKLAVA | BIONIC::ROYER | | Wed Feb 24 1988 14:48 | 48 |
| I started to look through the recipes to see if there was already a
BAKLAVA recipe and got discouraged around 300 something. So I will
enter mine.
BAKLAVA
Boil for 5 minutes then set aside:
3 cups sugar
1 1/2 cups water
1/2 teas. Mapleline
1/2 orange (just cut in half and throw it in)
1/2 lemon ( same thing as above)
1 cinnamon stick
1/3 cup honey
_______________________________________________
Chop 1 # walnut and add 1/2 cup sugar
_______________________________________________
Melt 3 or 4 sticks real butter
_______________________________________________
In a large sheet pan:
Brush bottom with butter
Add 1 sheet Fillo
Butter,fillo,butter,fillo for 5 sheets
Then fillo, butter, 1/4 cup sprinkled nuts until the last 5
sheets of Fillo
Then fillo,butter,fillo,butter until all sheets are used.
________________________________________________
CUT lengthwise into 7 strips
BAKE @ 350 degrees for 20 minutes
________________________________________________
Remove from oven and pour cooked syrup (remove the orange, lemon,
and cinnamon strick, first) over the hot Fillo.
Try to let it cool before you nibble, and cut at diagonals.
HINTS:
1. Fillo dries out quickly when exposed to air, so cover the
unused portion with a damp towel.
2. As you better each peice of Fillo, seal the edges with butter
or they will curl up too much during baking.
ENJOY
Mary Ann
|
69.23 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Wed Feb 24 1988 15:37 | 4 |
| What is Mapleline? I have a jillion books at home with baklava
recipes in them, and made with readily available ingredients, so I
can post some if you think Mapleline is a necessity.
|
69.24 | Who am I to Question the Expert? | BIONIC::ROYER | | Wed Feb 24 1988 15:42 | 7 |
| I'm not sure exactly what Mapleline is but I think it is a highly
concentrated maple extract. It is made by Cressant company. The
lady who taught me to make Baklava was very insistant that you use
only Mapleline. Since I am not a great cook, I didn't question her
and have used the bottle faithfully.
Mary Ann
|
69.21 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Wed Feb 24 1988 23:24 | 48 |
| Here's a recipe from Middle Eastern Cookling by Rose Dosti.
Make Medium Syrup:
3 c sugar
2 T lemon juice
1 1/2 c water
Combine all ingredients in a large, heavy saucepan. Bring to a
boil, stirring frequently. Once the mixture boils and the sugar
is dissolved, do not stir or syrup may cloud or crystallize.
Cook, uncovered, over medium-low heat until a candy thermometer
registers 212 to 218 F. Remove from heat. Cool. Can be used
immediately or refrigerated in a plastic container with a lid (for
up to one month). Makes about 2 c. Variations: (1) stir in 2 T
honey after removing from heat, OR (2) stir 1/2 t rose water into
cooked syrup, OR (3) stir 1/2 t orange flower water into cooked
syrup. (Orange flower and rose water tend to be sold in
liquor departments. They're a "spice" in the Middle East and
North Africa, but I think are only used here in drinks.)
Baklava:
Medium Syrup
4 c finely chopped walnuts
1 T cinnamon (yes, one Tablespoon)
1/2 t allspice
1/2 t nutmeg
1/2 t ground cloves
1/4 c sugar
40 filo sheets
1 1/2 cups unsalted butter, clarified, or margarine, melted
Prepare Medium syrup and set aside to cool. Preheat oven to
350F. Lightly butter a 13x9 baking pan. In a medium bowl,
combine walnuts, spices, and sugar, and set aside. Stack filo
sheets on a flat surface. Trim to fit pan. Cover with plastic
wrap to prevent drying out. Layer 12 sheets in baking pan,
brushing each sheet with the butter or margarine. Spread 1 c nut
mixture over the this. Top with 8 more sheets, brushing each with
butter or marg. Another 1 c nut mixture. 8 more sheets, buttered.
Then the remaining nut mixture. Top with the 12 remaining sheets,
buttered. Cutting all the way thru the pastry, cut into 1 inch
diamond shapes without removing from pan. Bake 30 minutes.
Reduce heat to 200F and then bake 30 minutes longer. Pour the
cooled syrup over the warm pastry. Let stand several hours before
serving. Optionally spoon finely chopped pistachio nuts over baklava
and tap them lightly into the pastry.
|
69.25 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Thu Mar 24 1988 17:35 | 10 |
| While checking out the assertion that non-imitation Almond extract
no longer exists, I noticed that Safeway out here stocks Mapleline.
According to the Mapleline package, it is imitation maple flavoring.
It and the imitation maple flavoring package next to it both seemed
to be alcohol, vanilla, and various other things. The various other
things were not the same, however. If you're still desperate for
Mapleline, let me know and I'll pick a bottle up next time I go
shopping and send it to you. It will probably be one or two weeks,
as I view grocery shopping as a fate worse than death.
|
69.14 | Go for it - | CSOA1::WIEGMANN | | Sun Oct 02 1988 01:28 | 36 |
| Re: .13 - Triangles
You can probably tell from my name that I didn't have a Greek grandma
to learn from, but this is what I do -
Thaw the pastry and prepare to keep moist as you work, have butter
melted.
Take one sheet, lay on counter, brush with butter, add another one
and butter. I lay mine width-wise instead of length-wise. Cut
into six strips. I'm not too precise about this - just cut the
sheet in half, then each half in thirds. Put a teaspoon or so of
filling about an inch from the end nearest you and then fold like
a flag.
Since they don't rise when cooking, you can fit a lot on one baking
sheet. Brush tops with a little more butter before baking.
As for filling, it seems just about anything will work as long as
it isn't too greasy or wet. Lately, I've used canned lemon pie
filling and then after baking sprinkled the tops with powered sugar.
If I want them for appetizers instead of dessert, I saute chopped
red pepper, onion and broccoli in a tiny bit of olive oil, let cool
before using.
Or, get a package of sliced imported ham (the package is approx. 5 x
7 inches and has little obvious fat) and dice it, stir into a couple
spoonfuls of Dijon mustard.
Be careful to not use too much filling as it will ooze out during
baking.
Have fun experimenting, and post what you come up with!
Terry
|
69.16 | Baklava with Pistachios: The Ultimate | OCTAVE::ISLER | | Wed May 17 1989 14:11 | 21 |
| For those of you who might read the previous notes, I would like
to clear up something. To say that Baklava and the other food mentioned
here (spinach pie, galataboregue - GALATA is a town in Turkey, NOT
in Greece) is like to say, the near and middle eastern cultures
do not exist.
These foods certainly did not originate in Greece. Most of the middle
eastern countries have Baklava, Spinach pie, etc.. During the ruling
of Ottoman Empire (Turkey), all of the countries in this region
were affected by each other's cusines.
**
Also, as a person who grew up on Baklava's (and I am not Greek),
I can say that the best nut for Baklava is by far Pistachios. They
are excellent in KADAYIF (know here as kataifi).
The authentic baklava syrup doesn't include anything, but water,
lemon juice and sugar. Using honey is up to you. My sister mixes
corn (or a similar vegatable) oil with butter, and the result is
crispy and not so heavy.
|
69.17 | | TLE::EIKENBERRY | A goal is a dream with a deadline | Mon Dec 10 1990 09:32 | 13 |
| I made Baklava, following the recipe in .1, this weekend. I'm not sure what
differed between my methods and the author's but I only ended up using about
half of the nuts, and half of the butter. But it came out VERY GOOD!!
Has anyone else who made this particular recipe ended up with lots of
leftover nuts and butter? Also, I used 2 pounds of phyllo dough, instead
of 1 1/2 1b.
I had never worked with phyllo before. I'd have to say that there's nothing
hard about making Baklava - you just need patience, and the will to not
stop layering half-way through the first package of phyllo!!
--Sharon
|
69.18 | too many nuts? Never! | DELNI::SCORMIER | | Mon Dec 10 1990 13:28 | 12 |
| Sharon,
I have made this recipe lots of times, and I, too, end up with extra
nuts. So I either cut down on the nuts, or make higher Baklava!
Either way, isn't it a great recipe? Once you get the hang of it, it
goes rather quickly. I used to agonize over dried out layers of
phyllo, but now I slap it on anyway, brush with butter, and it comes
right back. I also use a LARGE pastry brush (looks like a house
painting brush) to make it go more quickly.
Sarah
|
69.19 | | TLE::EIKENBERRY | A goal is a dream with a deadline | Mon Dec 10 1990 13:57 | 5 |
| I also had melted butter left over. I presume it's ok to store what I
didn't use in the fridge...is there a time limit to how long it will "keep"
once it's been melted and coagulated?
--Sharon
|
69.28 | | DEMING::MARCHAND | | Tue Feb 01 1994 11:55 | 9 |
| Just want to say thanks for the BAKLAVA ideas. My first batch
was weird let's say.
The second batch much better. I need more nuts so I'm going to
try a third batch this week. I know that will be just right! I also
need a wider pastry brush, just like someone in the string said. A
nice wide brush will be a big help!
Rose
|