Tahini roll
Alternative names | Tahinopitta, Tahinli çörek |
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Type | Sweet roll |
Place of origin | South Caucasus, Cyprus, Greece, Turkey |
Main ingredients | Dough, tahini, sugar, cinnamon |
A tahini roll or tahini bread roll is a sweet pastry found commonly in the cuisines of Armenia as Թահինով Հաց; Cyprus and Greece as ταχινόπιττα or τασιηνόπιττα; Turkey as tahinli çörek; and in Arab cuisine as khubz tahini.[1] They are a popular street food in Cyprus.[2]
The dough includes sugar and oil and has a texture between a bread and a cookie. It is leavened with yeast and can be baked after the first rise.[1] Sometimes the pastry may be soaked in syrup of sugar or honey, and flavored with cinnamon.[2]
Tahini rolls are made by rolling the dough flat, spreading it with the tahini mixture, sprinkling with sugar, and rolling into a log shape. The dough is then sliced into smaller pieces and flattened to form a circle.
According to Palestinian chef Sami Tamimi, the pastry originates in Armenia.[3]
See also
References
- ^ a b Perry, Charles. "Tahini Cookies". Los Angeles times.
- ^ a b "Recipe: Traditional Cypriot tahini pies". The Globe.
- ^ "Cook this: Kubez el tahineh — sweet tahini rolls — from Falastin". National Post.
- Greek pastries
- Sweet breads
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