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[5] [6] Bulgarian food often incorporates salads as appetizers and is also noted for the prominence of dairy products, wines, and other alcoholic drinks such as rakia. The cuisine also features a variety of soups, such as the cold soup tarator, and pastries, such as the filo dough-based banitsa, pita, and the various types of börek.
Lyutenitsa with bits of peppers. Ajvar; Pindjur, like lyutenitsa and ajvar but with eggplant (aubergine); Zacuscă, a similar vegetable spread in Romania; Kyopolou, an eggplant-based relish in Bulgarian and Turkish cuisines
Mekitsa (Bulgarian: мекица, romanized: mekitsa, lit. 'softness'; plural mekitsi) is a traditional Bulgarian dish made of kneaded dough made with yogurt that is deep fried. [1] [2] They are made with flour, eggs, yogurt, a leavening agent, water, salt, and oil. In Serbia they are called mekike (sing.
Kyopolou (Bulgarian: Кьопоолу, Kopoolu, more often Кьополу, Kopolu; Turkish: Köpoğlu [1]) [citation needed] is a popular Bulgarian and Turkish spread, relish and salad made principally from roasted eggplants and garlic.
العربية; Asturianu; Azərbaycanca; বাংলা; Башҡортса; Беларуская; Беларуская (тарашкевіца) Български
Zelnik is a traditional pastry eaten in Bulgaria [1] and North Macedonia. [2] It is composed of layers of thinly-rolled leavened wheat flour dough, or possibly phyllo pastry, filled with various combinations of sirene (a white cheese), feta cheese, eggs, sorrel, browned meat, leeks, spring onions and/or rice.
Princess sandwiches are a purely Bulgarian invention, as no neighboring country have any similar recipes, and they are a typical socialist dish, most probably invented sometime in the mid-1960s as a clever way to make a satisfying meal without using too much of the expensive at the time meat, and even though they may not be particularly esthetically pleasing, being delicious and easy to make ...
Sour cabbage is a popular Bosnian, Bulgarian, Croatian, Macedonian, Romanian, and Serbian food, consumed mainly during the winter half of the year, both raw or cooked. Raw, it is a very popular winter salad , usually served dusted with pepper powder ( aleva paprika ) and/or black pepper , but also as-is.