Skip to main content

Cooking Around the World: Kosovo


Kosovo is a southern province of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, which is composed of Serbia and Montenegro. The country is about the size of Kentucky. It is bordered by Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Macedonia, and Albania.

Its independence, while supported by the United States and a host of other Western nations, is controversial. Still, I'm here for food not politics.

To travel by tabletop to Kosovo, today, I decided on Flija for breakfast. It's one of the most typical Kosovar dishes that is mostly prepared in mountainous areas. Flija is a layered cake of crepes with a honeyed cream in between each layer. It's traditionally baked with cinders: the batter put in a pie pan, then covered with a saç- a metal dome, then baked over cinders.

Recipes seemed to disagree about the contents of the batters - flour and cream - as well as how the Flija is actually made. Some recipes have you layer the batter and cream and bake all together. Others seem to say that you layer, bake, layer, bake. But since all agree that "the process is long, but the results are delicious!" I leaned towards the latter and baked each crepe layer, added the cream, baked the next layer, and so on...for six or so layers. It's a good thing that I gave myself 90 minutes to make this breakfast!




Flija Batter 
2 C flour
3 eggs
2 C milk
dash of ground cinnamon

Flija Cream
2 C sour cream
2 T honey
1 T butter

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Butter the inside of a springform pan and wrap the outside with foil to prevent leaking. Ladle in enough of the batter to coat the bottom of the pan with a thin crepe-like layer. Bake until the batter is no longer glossy - approximately 5-8 minutes. Layer in the cream and top with another crepe batter. Bake again until matte. Repeat. When all of your batter is used up - I got about six or seven layers total - return the Flija to the oven to completely cook through. All told, it took me about 70-80 minutes. Cool for 10 minutes. Run a knife along the edge of the pan and unmold the cake. Slice and serve with a dusting of powdered sugar.


The family verdict: "It's a little like a funny cheesecake...with pancakes. It's weird, but weird good."
My verdict: I like the flavors, but with the time and effort, it's a one-timer.

With our Flija breakfast, we've wrapped another county in our Cooking Around the World Adventure. We're off to Kuwait next.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Connecticut Lobster Rolls, Canned Lobster Bisque, and a 2019 Henry Fessy 'Maître Bonhome' Viré-Clessé #Winophiles

This month the French Winophiles group is looking at affordable wines from Burgundy.  Host Cindy of Grape Experiences wrote: "Burgundy, or Bourgogne, is known for its wines of Chardonnay and Pinot Noir... as well as Aligote, Gamay, Sauvignon, César, Pinot Beurot, Sacy, Melon in lesser quantities. Many of the well-known wines are quite expensive, but there are plenty of values to be found." Read her invitation here. And there won't be a Twitter chat for this event, so you will have to dive into the articles themselves to read about our pairings and findings. Here's the line-up... Wendy Klik from A Day in the Life on the Farm enjoys Domaine Chevillon Chezeaux Bourgogne Hautes Cotes de Nuits, 2018 Paired with a Maple Pecan Chicken . Camilla Mann from Culinary Adventures with Camilla shares her love of Connecticut Lobster Rolls, Canned Lobster Bisque, and a 2019 Henry Fessy 'Maître Bonhome' Viré-Clessé. Jeff Burrows of FoodWineClick! explains why we should Look t...

Homemade Lorna Doone Cookies #SundayFunday

Today the Sunday Funday group is celebrating childhood favorites. Thanks to Stacy of  Food Lust People Love , Sue of  Palatable Pastime , Rebekah of  Making Miracles , and Wendy of  A Day in the Life on the Farm  for coordinating this low-stress group. Today Stacy is hosting and she's given us the following prompt: "Childhood favorites. Did you have a favorite dish growing up? It could be something your family cooked or a restaurant dish, even a Chef Boyardee canned good or packaged ingredients like Rice-a Roni or mac and cheese. Recreate THAT dish from SCRATCH for this event."  Here's the #SundayFunday childhood favorites line-up... Chili Mac from A Day in the Life on the Farm Ham and Mushroom Breakfast Burritos from Making Miracles Homemade Lorna Doone Cookies from Culinary Adventures with Camilla Homemade Wonder Bread from Karen's Kitchen Stories K-Mart Sub Sandwiches from Palatable Pastime Kempakki Dosa from Sizzling Tastebuds Meat Chilly Fry...

Quick Pickled Red Onions and Radishes

If you've been reading my blog for even a short amount of time, you probably know how much I love to pickle things. I was just telling a friend you can pickle - with vinegar - or you can ferment - with salt - for similar delicious effect. The latter has digestive benefits and I love to do that, but when I need that pop of sour flavor quickly, I whip up quick pickles that are ready in as little as a day or two. I've Pickled Blueberries , Pickled Asparagus , Pickled Cranberries , Pickled Pumpkin , and even Pickled Chard Stems ! This I did last night for an upcoming recipe challenge that requires I include radishes. Ummmm...of course I'm pickling them! Ingredients  makes 1 quart jar radishes, trimmed and sliced organic red onions, peeled and thinly sliced (I used a mandolin slicer) 3/4 C vinegar (I used white distilled vinegar) 3/4 C water 3 T organic granulated sugar 1 T salt (I used some grey sea salt) 6 to 8 grinds of black pepper Proce...