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Bestilla 02 – African Recipes

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Recipe ingredients and directions:

Moroccan Bastilla

2 lbs chicken breast (pigeon/squab is more authentic, or try cornish hens)

cinnamon

saffron

ginger

cumin

lemon juice

1 1/2 cup almonds

sugar

6 eggs

10 sheets phyllo dough

1 stick melted butter

Powdered sugar

Poach chicken in water to cover with 1-2 teaspoons each of cinnamon,

ground ginger and cumin. Add 1/2 teaspoon saffron (or tumeric if

you don’t use saffron).

Meanwhile, toast almonds, chop and mix with 1/3-1/2 cup sugar and

1 tablespoon cinnamon. Put aside.

Remove chicken, shred when cool enough to handle.

Reduce broth severely and add 1 tablespoon lemon juice.

Beat eggs till frothy and add to broth. Cook until broth evaporates

and eggs look scrambled. The eggs should not be wet.

Remove from heat.

Have the chicken, almonds & eggs ready before you pull out the

phyllo. Phyllo dries out easily, follow the directions on the

package for thawing and handling.

I use a cast iron skillet (10-12 inch) to bake the Bastilla, but

any round, heavy casserole would work as well.

Melt 1 stick butter or margarine. Using pastry brush butter pan.

Place 6 phyllo sheet in pan overlapping all around. I usually put

1 left-right; 1 up-down, 1 each diagonal direction, then the last

two up-down & left- right. Fold an additional 2 phyllo sheets into

a square and place in bottom of pan for support. You should be

buttering each sheet as you go. At this point you should have

phyllo hanging over the edge of your pan all the way around.

Spread almond mixture evenly over the bottom of the pan. Layer 1/2

the eggs all the chicken and the remaining eggs.

Fold an additional 2 sheets of phyllo and put over the eggs. Fold

the original 6 sheets of phyllo in, over the 2 folded pieces.

Additional butter may be needed to ensure that phyllo sticks

together.

Bake at 425F for 20-30 minutes, until phyllo is brown and crispy.

Invert onto serving plate, sprinkle top with powdered sugar.

Bastillia is traditionally eaten with the fingers as an appetizer.

The filling can be very hot and it is also traditional to make

holes in the top with your index finger to release steam and cool

the Bastilla. (This is done after presentation to the table.) I

usually do this with a chopstick as soon as the Bastilla is removed

from the oven, so that it is at serving temperature when placed on

the table.

This recipe serves 6-8 as an appetizer and 2-4 as a main course.

Category: African Recipes

About the Author

P

Paul

Home Cook

Home cook from Europe. Collected and tested recipes from cuisines around the world — in a regular kitchen, no professional gear.

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