Label
All
0
Clear all filters

Fila Pastries

Appears in

By Claudia Roden

Published 1986

  • About

Fila is a fine, paper-thin dough extremely popular throughout the Middle East (phyllo to the Greeks, yufka to the Turks, brik or malsouka to the Tunisians). It lends itself to an infinite variety of uses. It is also cheap and extremely easy to work with.

The dough itself is easy enough to make, a mixture of flour and water kneaded to a fine, firm, elastic mass. But the achievement of paper-thin sheets is extremely difficult and requires much skill. Expert pastry cooks knead the dough vigorously for a long time until it is very elastic, then allow it to rest for 2 or 3 hours. Next, it is divided into fist-sized balls, which are again kneaded, and then pulled and stretched as much as the dough will endure (until it becomes almost transparent).

Get instant online access via ckbk

  • Access this title via ckbk for one-off payment of the eBook price

  • ckbk includes hundreds of the world's best cookbooks

  • 150,000+ recipes, with thousands more added each month

  • Powerful search filters to match your tastes

  • Create collections and add reviews or private notes to any recipe

  • Swipe to browse each cookbook from cover-to-cover

Download on the App Store
Pre-register on Google Play

This à la carte title is available to ckbk members for a one-off payment of

In this section

Part of

The licensor does not allow printing of this title