foodgeeks.com: Home
 
Search:  
Title Ingredients      
 

Category:  

Recipes  |  Ethnic / International  |  Greek  |  Tiropitakia

Print This Recipe Email This Recipe Add Your Review for This Recipe Add This Recipe to My Cookbook

Tyropita Trifti Thrakis (Thracian-Style Cheese Squares)

Login

 
Photos for this Recipe:


Recipe Tools:


Scale & Convert Recipe:
Scale to
U.S. / Imperial
Metric
Decimal
Fraction


Epicurean Resources:

Foodgeek:

Kathleen Morrison

Rating:

     

Servings:

100

Prep. Time:

Total Time:

Ingredients:

1/2 cup butter
1/2 cup light olive oil
1/3 cup plus 2 tbsp. milk
1-1/2 tsp. baking powder
1/2 tsp. salt (less, if cheese is salty)
1 cup grated Greek cheeses
2 cups all-purpose flour (or more)

Directions:

The mixing of the dough may be begun with an electric mixer, but should be finished by hand. Beat the butter until fluffy, then lower the speed and add the olive oil. Continue beating, and when fluffy beat in the milk, baking powder, salt, if necessary, and cheese. Begin adding flour, but after 1 cup stop beating with the mixer and beat in the remaining flour by hand, adding only enough to make dough soft enough to roll into strips. Knead a few minutes.

Spread or roll on buttered sheet (jelly roll tray, cookie sheet, or any flat pan) to a thickness of half-finger's width and cut into squares of desired size (the smaller the better, since they are rich). Bake in a moderate oven (350°F) for 20 to 25 minutes, moving to the top shelf for the last minutes to achieve a golden chestnut color. (If making the little canes, the baking time will be 10 to 12 minutes.) Remove when done and cook on a rack.

Comments from Kathleen Morrison :

Delicious! And simple to make in a large batch for appetizers. As made in Thrace, the soft dough may be spread into a sheet and cut into squares before baking, or each can be shaped individually into daintly bastounakia (little canes or sticks). The word trifti identifies the texture -- "crisp and crumbly" in the mouth. They are also called kourou -- "cut small". If making the individual little canes, they should be half a (dainty) finger wide and a finger in length. The secret of the crispness is in adding only enough flour to make a soft dough.

Stored in covered tins, these will keep for several weeks.

 
 
 

User Reviews:

0 user reviews. Add your review of this recipe.

 
Home  |  Recipes  |  Food Encyclopedia  |  Diets  |  Resources  |  Discussion  |  Geeks  |  About  |  RSS
©1998-2008 GeekSpeak, LLC. All rights reserved.   Privacy Policy