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Filo or phyllo is a very thin
unleavened In cooking, a leavening agent () or raising agent, also called a leaven () or leavener, is any one of a number of substances used in doughs and batters that cause a foaming action (gas bubbles) that lightens and softens the mixture. An alterna ...
dough used for making pastries such as
baklava Baklava (, or ; ota, باقلوا ) is a layered pastry dessert made of filo pastry, filled with chopped nuts, and sweetened with syrup or honey. It was one of the most popular sweet pastries of Ottoman cuisine. The pre- Ottoman origin of the ...
and börek in
Middle Eastern The Middle East ( ar, الشرق الأوسط, ISO 233: ) is a geopolitical region commonly encompassing Arabia (including the Arabian Peninsula and Bahrain), Asia Minor (Asian part of Turkey except Hatay Province), East Thrace (European ...
and Balkan cuisines. Filo-based pastries are made by layering many sheets of filo brushed with oil or butter; the pastry is then baked.


Name and etymology

The name ''filo'' (phonetic) or ''phyllo'' (transliteration) comes from Greek 'leaf'.Alan Davidson (2014). '' The Oxford Companion to Food'. Oxford: Oxford University Press. . p. 307. In Turkish, it is called ' 'thin', a word which is also used for a kind of thin unleavened bread. In Arabic, it is called ''reqaqot''; in Morocco, warqa ( ar, ورقة). The Albanian
flia Flia, also known as fli or flija, is a dish in Kosovan cuisine and Albanian cuisine. It consists of multiple crêpe-like layers brushed with cream and served with sour cream and butter. The name translates to "sacrifice" (see '' fli''). March 17 ...
also may be named for ''fije''/''fli'' 'sheet, leaf'.


History

The origin of the practice of stretching raw dough into paper-thin sheets is unclear, with many cultures claiming credit.Mayer, Caroline E.
Phyllo Facts
. Washington Post. 1989
Archived
Some claim it may be derived from the Greeks; Homer's '' Odyssey'', written around 800 BC, mentions thin breads sweetened with walnuts and honey. In the fifth century BC, Philoxenos states in his poem "Dinner" that, in the final drinking course of a meal, hosts would prepare and serve cheesecake made with milk and honey that was baked into a pie. Others claim it originates with the Turks; the 11th-century '' Dīwān Lughāt al-Turk'' by Mahmud Kashgari records the meaning of ''yurgha'', an archaic term for ''yufka'', as "pleated or folded bread". Filo is documented in the Topkapı Palace in the Ottoman period.


Preparation

Filo dough is made with flour, water and a small amount of oil. Homemade filo takes time and skill, requiring progressive rolling and stretching to a single thin and very large sheet. A very big table is used, preferably with a marble top. If the dough is stretched by hand, a long, thin rolling pin is used, with continual flouring between layers to prevent the sheets from sticking to one another. In modern times, mechanical rollers are also used. Prior to World War I, households in Istanbul typically had two filo makers to prepare razor thin sheets for baklava, and the relatively thicker sheets used for börek. Fresh and frozen versions are prepared for commercial markets.


Use

When using filo to make pastries, the thin layers are made by first rolling out the sheets of dough to the final thickness, then brushing them with oil, or melted butter for some desserts, and stacking them. This contrasts with puff pastry and croissant doughs, where the layers are stacked into a thick layer of dough, then folded and rolled out multiple times to produce a
laminated dough Laminated dough is a culinary preparation consisting of many thin layers of dough separated by butter, produced by repeated folding and rolling. Such doughs may contain more than eighty layers. During baking, water in the butter vaporizes and exp ...
containing thin layers of dough and fat. Filo can be used in many ways: layered, folded, rolled, or ruffled, with various fillings.


List of filo-based pastries

*
Baklava Baklava (, or ; ota, باقلوا ) is a layered pastry dessert made of filo pastry, filled with chopped nuts, and sweetened with syrup or honey. It was one of the most popular sweet pastries of Ottoman cuisine. The pre- Ottoman origin of the ...
– Ottoman dessert with layers of filo with chopped nuts, sweetened and held together with syrup or honey. * Banitsa – A Bulgarian dish consisting of eggs, cheese and filo baked in the oven. * Börek – A savory Ottoman filo pie *
Bougatsa Bougatsa ( ) is a Greek breakfast pastry (sweet or savoury) consisting of either semolina custard, cheese, or minced meat filling between layers of phyllo. Origin The name comes from the Byzantine Greek πογάτσα (pogátsa), from the anci ...
– A type of Greek breakfast pastry. *
Bülbül yuvası Bülbül yuvası ( tr, bülbülyuvası, lit=nightingale's nest) is a Turkish phyllo dough dessert. It takes its name from its hollow and circular shape. Having been baked, warm syrup is sprinkled, and the hollow center is filled with pistachios be ...
– A Turkish dessert with pistachios and syrup. *
Bundevara Bundevara is a type of pastry in Serbian cuisine and of other parts of former Yugoslavia. It is a sweet pie made of rolled phyllo, similar to strudel, filled with sweetened grated pumpkin pulp and baked in an oven. Occasionally nutmeg, cinnamon or ...
– A Serbian sweet pie filled with pumpkin. *
Flia Flia, also known as fli or flija, is a dish in Kosovan cuisine and Albanian cuisine. It consists of multiple crêpe-like layers brushed with cream and served with sour cream and butter. The name translates to "sacrifice" (see '' fli''). March 17 ...
– An Albanian dish consisting of multiple crêpe-like layers brushed with cream and served with sour cream *
Galaktoboureko Galaktoboureko ( el, γαλακτομπούρεκο, tr, Laz böreği, ar, شعيبيات, lzz, Paponi) is a Greek, Turkish, Laz, and Syrian dessert of semolina custard baked in filo. Turkish ''Laz böreği'' is made with a type of puddin ...
– A Greek dessert consisting of filo and semolina custard. *
Gibanica Gibanica ( sr-cyr, Гибаница, ) is a traditional pastry dish popular all over the Balkans. It is usually made with cottage cheese and eggs. Recipes can range from sweet to savoury, and from simple to festive and elaborate multi-layered ...
– A Balkan dish made from filo, white cheese, and eggs. * Pastizz – A savory pastry from Malta filled with ricotta or mushy peas. * Spanakopita – A Greek spinach pie. *
Tiropita Tiropita or tyropita (Greek: τυρóπιτα, "cheese-pie") is a Greek pastry made with layers of buttered phyllo and filled with a cheese-egg mixture. It is served either in an individual-size free-form wrapped shape, or as a larger pie that is ...
– A Greek dish similar to Börek, filled with a cheese-egg mixture. *
Zelnik Zelnik is a traditional pastry eaten in Bulgaria and North Macedonia. It is composed of layers of thinly-rolled leavened wheat flour dough, or possibly phyllo pastry, filled with various combinations of sirene (a white cheese), feta cheese, egg ...
– A savory pie from the Balkans. * Jabukovača – Bosnian pastry made of filo dough stuffed with apples.


See also

* Flaky pastry * Puff pastry * Brik * Samosa * Wonton


References


Bibliography

* Perry, Charles. "The Taste for Layered Bread among the Nomadic Turks and the Central Asian Origins of Baklava", in ''A Taste of Thyme: Culinary Cultures of the Middle East'' (ed. Sami Zubaida, Richard Tapper), 1994. . * Engin Akın, Mirsini Lambraki, Kosta Sarıoğlu, ''Aynı Sofrada İki Ülke: Türk ve Yunan Mutfağı'', Istanbul 2003, .


External links

* * * {{Pastries Greek pastries Middle Eastern cuisine Balkan cuisine Doughs Turkish pastries