Cheese Sambousek

Updated Dec. 5, 2023

Cheese Sambousek
Ryan Liebe for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Barrett Washburne. Prop Stylist: Paige Hicks.
Total Time
1½ hours
Prep Time
10 minutes
Cook Time
1 hour 20 minutes
Rating
4(146)
Comments
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These crescent-shaped pocket pastries from Rachel Harary Gindi, a home cook living in Los Angeles are popular in one form or another throughout the Middle East and India. Cooks will find, of course, many variations from all over. This Syrian Jewish version from Aleppo creates the dough using flour and smeed, a fine semolina often also used in Middle Eastern cookies, which is not essential but adds a pleasing texture to the tongue. Some Syrian Jews add several kinds of cheese including feta to the cheese mix. Make this dish your own, as this recipe does with the use of nigella seeds. Topping the sambousek with sesame seeds or (nontraditional) nigella seeds adds a slight complexity to the taste of this mild, homey snack. Though you could certainly brush the tops of the sambousek with water and sprinkle with the seeds, for efficiency you can do as Poopa Dweck, author of “Aromas of Aleppo: The Legendary Cuisine of Syrian Jews” (Ecco, 2007), instructed: “Dip the dough ball or formed sambousek into sesame seeds before baking. The seeds will stick onto the dough.” —Joan Nathan

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Ingredients

Yield:About 48 pastries
  • 2cups/256 grams unbleached all-purpose flour, plus more as needed
  • 1cup/180 grams fine semolina
  • 1teaspoon kosher salt (such as Diamond Crystal)
  • 1cup/227 grams unsalted butter (2 sticks), diced then brought to room temperature
  • 1large egg
  • 8ounces/227 grams Muenster, mozzarella or kashkaval cheese, grated
  • 6tablespoons/57 grams sesame or nigella seeds, or both
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (48 servings)

94 calories; 6 grams fat; 3 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 2 grams monounsaturated fat; 1 gram polyunsaturated fat; 7 grams carbohydrates; 0 grams dietary fiber; 0 grams sugars; 2 grams protein; 48 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    To make the dough, in a large bowl, use your hands to mix together the flour, semolina and ½ teaspoon of the salt. Add the diced butter, toss to coat in the dry ingredients, then mix it in with your fingertips until thoroughly combined. Add ¼ cup lukewarm water and mix to make a soft but not sticky dough, adding another 1 to 4 tablespoons of water if needed (or enough that the dough cleans the bowl). Cover the dough with a damp towel or plastic wrap and let it rest while you prepare the filling.

  2. Step 2

    To prepare the filling, beat the egg in a medium bowl, then mix in the cheese and the remaining ½ teaspoon salt.

  3. Step 3

    Heat the oven to 350 degrees and divide the dough into 4 pieces, then leave 3 of the pieces covered in the damp towel or wrapped in plastic.

  4. Step 4

    Sprinkle the rolling surface lightly with flour and roll out one piece of dough until about ⅛-inch thick, rubbing the rolling pin with flour if needed to prevent sticking. Using a 2½-inch-wide cookie cutter or glass, cut out about 9 rounds of dough. Reroll the scraps to make as many rounds as possible, ideally about 3 more rounds (12 rounds total from the one piece of dough).

  5. Step 5

    Cover the cut rounds with a damp towel. Working with one round at a time, put 1 packed teaspoon of cheese filling gingerly in the center of each round, gently pressing the cheese into the dough then folding the dough into a half-moon shape. Then use your finger and thumb to seal the rounded edge. (You can also flute it, folding to seal as you would fold an empanada.) Place the filled sambousek about ½ inch apart on 2 parchment paper-lined sheet pans and cover with a damp towel.

  6. Step 6

    Repeat with the remaining 3 pieces of dough, forming about 48 sambousek, making sure the dough and sambousek stay covered so they don’t dry out.

  7. Step 7

    Once you’ve formed all your sambousek, set the seeds in a small bowl and set each sambousek in the seeds, pressing to coat one side. Return them to the baking sheet, seed side up, and bake for 15 to 20 minutes, until lightly golden brown.

  8. Step 8

    Serve immediately. (You can also form and freeze the sambousek before baking, then bake them directly from frozen, increasing the cook time by 5 or so minutes.)

Ratings

4 out of 5
146 user ratings
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Comments

It's not just your recipes, but the history you include in your writing. I so enjoy the traditions and history of other cultures and how simple it would be for all of us to come together. Thank you.

The Armenian version my grandmother made, 'banirov-boreg', includes chopped flat leaf parsley in the cheese filling.

I have made a very similar recipe for decades. Delicious! A few tips from experience: * I use a light egg wash on top if using seeds, otherwise the seeds tend to fall off. * Any cheese of your liking is fine, as long as you can get a decent grate. * Use a sharp biscuit cutter for the best dough cut and forming.

I don’t understand. Is this sweet or savory? Dessert or appetizer?

Would it be possible to add spinach to the filling to make mini spanakopita?

I made these lovely little sambusak for Shavuot. Great recipe and adaptable - could. It get kashkaval but had muenster and aged white cheddar. A little time consuming but worth it for the holiday. A good processor helps. Family loved them.

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Credits

Adapted from Rachel Harary Gindi

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