I am starting to love Greek food more and more each time I cook it. As an Italian, the individual mediterranean flavours are so familiar to me and yet the way the flavours are combined are so different to the way we Italians put them together. There is something wonderful about making new discoveries from flavours you are already familiar with.
I have a little confession to make: I pass judgment on food sometimes (not always) based purely on what it looks like and it has resulted in me missing out on many years of dolmades eating! But never fear, I have rectified this oversight by eating and making truckloads of dolmades over the past two years.
Recently, I was cooking up the filling for a batch of dolmades and was loving the smells of cinnamon, lemon, tomato, parsley and mint emanating from the fry pan and thought to myself “how great would this be as a pie filling!”. So I finished my dolmades that day and quickly began brewing a recipe for dolmades pie in my mind.
The next weekend my creation came to life. I used filo pastry for the pie casing (filo pasty is used widely in Greek cooking so it seemed the best option), substituted silverbeet into the filling recipe to replace the dolmades vine leaf wrapping and added crumbled Greek feta cheese for creaminess.
Man, was I happy with how this turned out! The filling tasted just like my favourite pork dolmades with a crispy and crunchy golden filo casing. It survived the development test and will defnitely be making a guest appearance the next time we have company.
Dolmades Pie
YIELD: 4 serves
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 onion, finely chopped
1 can (400g) chopped tomatoes
1 tablespoon cinnamon
Handful chopped continental parsley
Handful chopped mint
Salt and pepper, to taste
500g pork mince
1 portobello mushroom, finely chopped
1 bunch silver beet, washed and finely chopped
Juice of 1 lemon
200g fetta cheese, crumbled
225g packet filo pastry, at room temperature
Olive oil spray
Preheat oven to 180°Celsius.
FILLING
In a shallow pan, heat olive oil and fry the onion until transparent. Add chopped tomatoes, cinnamon, parsley, mint, salt and pepper to taste, and mix well.
Add the pork mince to the pan and cook until browned. Add silver beet and mushroom and cook, stirring constantly, until the silver beet has wilted. Remove from heat and allow to cool for 10 minutes. Add lemon juice and fetta cheese and stir well to incorporate.
PASTRY
Remove the filo pastry sheets from their packaging and place them on a clean work surface. Keep them covered with a clean, damp cloth while working to stop the pastry from drying out. Place a sheet of filo pastry on your bench and spray the whole sheet with olive oil. Repeat with four more filo sheets, spraying with oil as you go. Cut two 15cm circles from the filo stack and line the base of two 13cm fluted tart tins with the circles hanging over the edges. Repeat the filo stack again with olive oil spray between each layer and line another two 13cm fluted tart tins (4 tins in total).
Divide the filling evenly between the lined tart tins. Create two more filo pastry stacks and cut four 10cm circles from the pastry. Lay a 10cm circle on top of each pie filling and fold the edges of the pie lining over the top spraying with olive oil spray.
Place all four pies on a baking tray in the centre of the oven and bake for 30 minutes (until the tops are lightly golden). Carefully remove pies from oven and take out of pie cases. Place pies back on the baking tray and bake for another 20 minutes until the entire pie is golden. Remove from oven and serve.
Anna @ The Littlest Anchovy says
Yay! We both have Greek themed posts today! Seriously, this looks so good, I just love filo for its crunch and those tangy flavours make this a wonderful pie for the warmer months ahead.
john@heneedsfood says
Great idea! I really love tucking into a plate of dolmades, yes a whole plate, so this kind of solves eating loads of them. I can have the whole pie!
EverydayMaven says
That is such a great idea. I am a big fan of Dolmades (I usually choose the Vegetarian ones) and would love it as a pie filling!
Connie says
Dolmades in pie form?!?! Genius! The pies are so cute and with all that wonderful filling and flaky phyllo, I can only imagine how delicious these are.
managedmacros says
I would say most of us eat with our eyes first, I am the same way. Now in this situation since I can ONLY see, I am eating this with my eyes (and I am even a non meat eater!). I am not familiar with a lot of Greek foods and this is my first run in with the Dalmade pie, but I am going to give yours the official title of BEST I HAVE EVER SEEN!!! 🙂 Seriously, your photography always captivates the foods true essence. Spot on!!!
mjskit says
What a fabulous creation!! I love it! I bet it smells good while baking and what a beautiful little pie it makes!
Chewtown says
Your words are always so kind! Thank you so much 🙂
the wicked noodle says
I really want to make this dish! What a great combination of flavors and it looks so pretty, too!
kitchenriffs says
Heck, if something doesn't look good I always pause before I dig in. But pig that I am, I usually go ahead and fork the chow even if it looks a little sketchy. I'd have no hesitation about eating this! Looks terrific, and the recipe looks wonderful. Good stuff – thanks.
bitemeshowme says
I am definitely loving your dolmades pie. You've definitely got an eye for creativity so it's no wonder you come up with genius recipes like this one! I'd love to put my fork right through the pie…. mmm
Rosa says
A scrumptious pie! So tasty looking. What a lovely combination of ingredients.
Cheers,
Rosa
Amy @ Food Crush says
I love the way you've styled these shots – such gorgeous colours and composition. You are one artistic lady! Yummy recipe too, of course. 🙂
Chompchomp says
Great idea: A domades pie! You are so creative!
Miss Foodie says
SO COOL!!!! I'm trying this out for sure 🙂