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Old Place, New – carb-loaded! – Soul Food |
This is a new twist, not only on a beloved, "old" dessert but also on this cookbook. This is the first entry co-written for a contest I enter, namely the Food/Cooking prompt for "Journey Through Genres: Official Contest" ![]() ![]() As you can read it in the story, "Bratlava" ![]() Even two rolls of yufka-dough turned bad as I tried to resist committing the culinary sacrilege! ![]() ![]() And – ZACK! – there it was again, in time for the above-mentioned contest. ![]() For those who don't know, Baklava is a Turkish sweet staple. (The Greeks claim it, too, but that'd go too far now ![]() It's made of thin layers of puff pastry. Common are about 20+ layers, which are each brushed with molten butter, an extra layer with a mix of nuts (pistachio, walnut most common), floured almonds, sugar and cinnamon added every 5+ layers. Then it's cut into rhombs / oblongs and baked 40-60 minutes, depending on the recipe. When it's done, you pour honey-lemon syrup on top and sprinkle with more nuts as decoration. I couldn't do a traditional Baklava as this is incompatible with the baking time of the bratwursts, which is 20-25 minutes max. ![]() Therefore, I – like my story's FMC, Laura – consulted the most popular German cooking site, Chefkoch.de, where I found a solution for "our" problem. I hope that, different from Laura's visiting bestie, Turk Hatice, and her husband, Vince, you, the reader will honor her (my) effort more. ![]() Okay, enough foreplay... off to the kitchen! ![]() Serves: 5 "BRATlava" & 1 BAKlava (15 pieces) Prep Time: 2 hrs BRATlava ; 1 hr BAKlava Degree of Difficulty: One tedious B– BRATlava ![]() WE NEED 150 gr / 5.3 oz. hazel- and / or walnuts I did 50/50 100 gr / 3.5 oz. floured almonds 75 gr / 2.7 oz. chopped pistachios Dudes! Nuts for the Nut, eh? ![]() 200 gr / 7 oz. sugar 1/4 tsp ground cinnamon Ceylon, NOT Cassia as the latter contains HUGE amounts of Cumarin, which can cause liver damage ![]() ![]() 250 gr / 8.8 oz. butter 450 gr / 1 lb. filo-dough Even BETTER when you get Turkish Yufka-dough, like in a deli ![]() 125 gr / 4.4 oz. honey 150 ml / 5 US fl.oz. water 1/2 lemon I can't believe I'm writing this into a baking recipe! ![]() 5 Nürnberger mini bratwursts Try to find the original (deli) or – at least – get the sausage from a real butcher.It's worth the few $ more. ![]() WE DO 1. Roughly chop / blitz the hazelnuts, walnuts & pistachios. Melt the butter and let it cool off. 2. Mix almonds, wal-/ hazelnuts, 50 gr / 1.75 oz. pistachios with 4 tbsp sugar + cinnamon. 3. Pile up all dough sheets and place an oven-proof dish on them upside down; then cut around the dish with a sharp knife. Really sharp! ![]() ![]() Before you might've to entangle the sheets before layering them as neatly as possible again. ![]() Also, it can be tricky that dough sheets come in different sizes + packaging sizes. It can be 20, 10 or, like in my case 7 sheets / package. But my choice is with roughly 1.5 x 1 ft./sheet so large that I could double their number! Means: 7 BIG sheets = 14 LAYERS! ![]() 4. Preheat the oven to 200°C / 390°F top-/bottom heat OR 180°C / 350°F fan/convectionand grease the dish. 5. Place the sheets/layers into the dish individually and brush each with butter. After about 5-7 layers, sprinkle 1/3 of the nut mix on top, and that again after another 5-7 layers, and once more. Top with the remaining dough sheets, brush with the remaining butter and cut the raw baklava into rhombs or – Easier! – oblongs. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() 6. Bake until golden-brown, about 25 minutes – and watch it! Explicitly mentioned in the recipe; probably because ovens are individual, and take longer/shortere:ExclaimR} 7. While the baklava is in the oven, make the syrup: boil honey, water and remaining sugar to a syrup, for about 10 minutes. Do it on middle => high heat, stirring continuously. Burned syrup is a real B– to clean up. ![]() ![]() ![]() 8. Remove the finished BAKlava from the oven, let it rest for about 5 minutes, then pour over the syrup and sprinkle with the remaining nuts / pistachios, and continue letting it cool off. 9. BRAT-lava For the bites with the bratwursts I had to do it differently ![]() I procceded the same as with the BAKlava, BUT: I cut the remains of the dough sheets for the BAKlava into about 5 cm / 2 in squares for these. In the middle layer I used a little less nut mix and added the mini Nürnbergers there. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Due to the "mininess" of the Nürnbergers, those indeed took roughly 20+ minutes in the oven. ![]() When something remains: – the BAKlava keeps fresh in an airtight container / cookie tin for up to 2 weeks. – the BRATlava should be eaten quicker because of the "special" ingredient and be kept in the fridge, obviously ![]() ![]() ![]() So, when – after recovering from the shock – you dare... ![]() Guten Hunger! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |