Dolmades (called in Bulgarian ‘Sarmi’) are
perceived as a strictly Greek dish, which is a kind of misunderstanding. Rice stuffed grape leaves (which are vegetarian and very tasty) or meat stuffed vine leaves are specific for all the countries on the Balkan
peninsula and are widely served in Bulgaria and Turkey. In fact, they are
probably part of the heritage of the Ottoman cuisine (even the word 'dolma' used in Greece has a Turkish origin) and every nation has adapted the recipes in line with the specific
taste of the population. Stuffed grape leaves take a little bit of time to
prepare and require some patience, but nothing is as tasty as the slow food prepared at home. Meat dolmades
are served warm with a dollop of yogurt and vegetarian dolmades are served cold.
Another very tasty dish prepared during the winter months in every Bulgarian home
are the Sauerkraut rolls with chopped meat. Unlike most of the popular recipes for stuffed vine leaves I pre-cook the rice and the minced meat which provides a far better and intense taste.
· 30 preserved vine leaves, packed
in brine
· 600 g (20 oz) ground beef
· 2 Tbsp fresh dill, finely chopped
· 1 small onion, finely chopped
· 100 g (3 oz) short grain rice
· ½ tsp salt
· freshly ground black pepper
· 1 tsp red pepper flakes
· ½ cup olive oil
· 3 Tbsp butter
· 2 cups heated vegetable stock
· 1 tsp salt
· 2 lemon s, cut in wedges or 1 cup
yogurt for serving
Make the filling:
Put olive oil in a pan and turn heat to
medium. Add onion, sauté for 3-4 minutes until softened and stir in the rice. Cook
for 2-3 minutes and add the minced meat, salt, pepper and red pepper flakes. After 2-3 more minutes take the pan off the
heat and fold in the chopped dill. Leave to cool slightly while you
prepare your vine leaves.
Stuff dolmades:
Gently unroll the vine leaves, carefully separate
them from each other and put them on a flat surface. The veins shall be facing upwards and the stalk end facing towards you. Put a heaped
teaspoon of the meat mixture in the middle close to the stalk
end of the leaf.
Fold the stem end up over the filling then fold both lateral sides
towards the middle and roll up completely like a small cigar. Don't roll too
tightly because the rice will expand and dolmades will break. Repeat
until you roll all dolmades.
Arrange meat stuffed dolmades into a pot
and boil:
Take a medium pot or a deep frying pan
with a lid and cover the bottom with one layer of vine leaves (this will
prevent dolmades from burning and sticking to the bottom of the pan). Arrange dolmades
seam side down and close together in one or two layers depending on the
dimensions of your pot. Add the hot vegetable stock and top with diced butter.
Place a shallow plate on top of the
dolmades bottom side up to weigh them down. Cover with a lid and simmer for
about half an hour until cooked. Remove plate from the pot and serve dolmades with
some cooking liquid poured over as a sauce. Serve with some lemon wedges or
some yogurt.
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