Method
- Saute the onion in the oil until it changes color
to dark yellow.
- Add the meat and brown it then add the water,
salt and pepper and let it cook until all the
water has evaporated. If you decide to use nuts
add them at this time. This is called asaag and
it is used in makaronah felforn bilbashamel
(pasta casserole).
- Open the Fillo dough package and divide the
sheets in half (they are usually sheets of
10X20" rectangles, you want to end up with 2
stacks of 10X10 sheets.
- In a greased 9x12x3" baking dish layer 2 to
3 sheets at a time and sprinkle them with a few
drops of the melted butter, and so on until you
finish the first half of the sheets.
- Spread the meat and nut mixture on it and start
doing the same thing with the other half of the
sheets. Don't worry about spreading the butter on
the sheets.
- When you finish with all the dough cut the feteer
in 2X1" squares with a sharp knife.
- Mix together the left-over melted butter, the egg
and the milk and a pinch of salt (not much) beat
it with fork.
- At this point, if you want, you can wrap the dish
in plastic wrap and refrigerate until 1/2 hr
before it is time to eat.
- Pour the egg mixture gently over the feteer and
bake, uncovered, in a 375o oven for about 20
minutes or until the milk is absorbed and the
feteer turns gold yellow.
When I make this, it lasts for a week and can be used
for suhur (mid-night meal) by those people who wake up
hating to fix something or finding nothing to their
liking to eat.
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