SIGARA BÖREĞI OR CIGARETTE BÖREK
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I didn't get the chance to try cigarette börek or sigara böreği in Istanbul. This pastry, shaped like a Turkish cigar, is made with a phyllo-like flaky dough called yufka and filled with ingredients like feta, parsley and sometimes potato or meat.
I saw other kinds of börek though – made in the larger pie-like shape and snail shell, but not the cigars.
Yufka pastry apparently comes in various thicknesses. The thicker ones are eaten like flatbread and used for wrapping meats and to scoop up dips (like the one in the picture below). The thinner ones are used for pastries like the börek. A lot of recipes say to use phyllo pastry if yufka is not available. Phyllo is thinner though, so about three leaves need to be layered together.
A thicker version of yufka is the flatbread seen in the background. Chicken doner with rice and (inset) pickled chillies. |
I
decided to make my own pastry, based on the type you might use for a
strudel. The dough is elastic so it can be stretched until quite
thin. I've used this
recipe for a strudel before, but this time, I left out the
egg yolk.
The
filling is a mixture of mashed potato, shredded cheddar, a Turkish
hard cheese and snipped spring onions (green onions). I don't know
what the Turkish cheese is called; it has the crumbly
texture of parmigiano-reggiano and tastes like a sharp blue
cheese – very sharp, in fact, which I only realised after the
börek were cooked.
I bought the cheese at a grocery shop in the
northwest quarter of Istanbul where hardly any English is spoken, but it's where the locals shop. One of the delightful shopkeepers saw me looking at this variety and cut off a piece
for me to taste. I liked it and chose a chunk that was already
portioned. He weighed it and it cost 11 Turkish lira (about RM17.50), which is a really good price for organic, unprocessed cheese.
Turkish spice mix |
The filling is seasoned with a spice
mix that I got in Kadıköy, a town on the Asian side of
Istanbul. This is one of the residential areas of the city but again,
not much English is spoken. There are some shops catering to tourists
but the prices are not inflated because it's also where the locals
shop.
According to the tube, the mix has
eight type of spices. The names are all in Turkish, though, so I had
to do some Googling to find out the English names. Except
for one spice (poy), I found out (if I've correctly identified them)
that the others are mint (nane), fenugreek (çemek), white
pepper (toz biber), Greek oregano or wild thyme (kekik), sumak (no
English name), coriander (kişniş) and red pepper flakes (pul
biber).
Make the sigara böreği in
advance and store in the fridge or freezer.
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Cigarette Börek (Sigara Böreği)
Makes 6
95g bread flour
Pinch of salt
50ml water, plus extra if needed
1 tbsp vegetable oil, plus extra for brushing and frying
½ tsp apple cider vinegar
Filling*, about 1¼ cups
Combine flour and salt in a bowl. Combine the liquids and add to the bowl. Bring everything together to form a soft dough, adding more water if necessary. Set aside for 30 minutes.
Divide dough into six equal balls. Roll out the dough into an elongated oval until very thin. Then, using the back of your fists, slowly stretch out the oval into a rough triangle until you can see through it (a few small holes are okay).
Brush the surface with oil. Place a row of filling at the wider end, fold in the lower points of the triangle and roll up towards the upper point. Make the rest of the börek.
At this stage, the börek can be stored in the fridge or freezer.
Heat up a large frying pan and add about 2 tbsp of oil. Fry the börek until brown on all sides. Serve with a dip.
* The filling is a mixture of mashed potato, shredded cheddar, a Turkish hard cheese and snipped spring onions (green onions), and seasoned with a Turkish spice mix.
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