In season

May produce

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Fatayer Jibneh

Fatayer Jibneh

A soft yeasted olive-oil dough rises for 45 minutes. Filling: grated akkawi (desalted first if very salty) or a mix of low-moisture mozzarella + halloumi (rinsed to reduce salt), crumbled feta, chopped parsley, mint, dried mint, black pepper and a touch of nigella seed. Dough divides into 16 balls; each rolls into a 10 cm disc. A heaped tablespoon of cheese mix sits in the centre. Folded into a tricorn: three sides of the disc fold up over the filling, pinched at the top in three seams. Brushed with olive oil. Baked at 220°C for 15-18 minutes until deep gold.

Snacks 1 hour 43 minutes Serves4
Feteer Meshaltet

Feteer Meshaltet

A soft elastic dough rests; divides into 2 balls. Each ball stretches paper-thin on a heavily-oiled / ghee-buttered surface (similar to msemen or yufka, translucent dough). Layered with melted ghee between folds: stretch → ghee → fold into thirds → quarter-turn → stretch → ghee → fold. Repeated 3 times per ball. The two folded packets place stacked on top of each other in a buttered round dish (about 24 cm). Baked at 220°C 25-30 minutes until amber, golden, and the layers have separated dramatically. Served warm with honey, soft cheese, or molasses-and-tahini (the Egyptian classic dip).

Snacks 1 hour 45 minutes Serves4
Goghal

Goghal

A spiced flaky pastry from Azerbaijan's tea table, traditionally baked for Novruz alongside pakhlava and shekerbura, eaten with strong sweet tea any time of year. You make a yeasted milk-and-egg dough and let it rest for an hour, while you build a savoury-sweet spice mix from black pepper, caraway, fennel, saffron and a hard cheese-like crumble (Azerbaijani gurut, or a substitute). The dough rolls thin, brushes with butter, gets a scatter of spice; folds, rolls, sprinkles again, repeated three times in the same lamination motion you'd use for puff pastry. The final dough rolls to a centimetre thick, cuts into rounds with the rim of a glass, takes an egg wash for shine, and bakes at 180°C for twenty-five minutes until deep golden. Eaten with sweet black tea and a small dish of jam on the side.

Snacks 2 hours 25 minutes Serves12
Sambousek Jibneh

Sambousek Jibneh

The Levantine-Arabian cheese half-moon, the milder vegetarian cousin to the meat sambousek. You roll a smooth pliable dough from oil, yogurt and flour and let it rest briefly while you build the filling: grated akkawi (desalted by soaking for thirty minutes) or a mix of low-moisture mozzarella and halloumi, crumbled feta, chopped parsley, scallion, mint, an egg yolk to bind and a touch of ground black pepper. The dough rolls to three millimetres, cuts into eight-centimetre rounds, gets a spoon of filling in the centre, folds into a half-moon and is crimped sharp with a fork. From there it's either deep-fried at 175°C for two minutes a side until golden, or brushed with egg wash, scattered with sesame seeds and baked at 200°C for fifteen to eighteen minutes. The cheese melts inside the sealed shell, the pastry browns. Eaten warm with labneh or a chilli-lemon dip on the side.

Snacks 1 hour 20 minutes Serves4