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Kibbeh bil sanieh recipe

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Rating:

5/ 5 stars 54 Votes
  • Cuisine: Syrian
  • Prep Time: 55 min(s)
  • Cook Time: 45 min(s)
  • Serves 6

Syria’s national dish of minced meat and burghul is so deeply loved that over the years its fans have found many different ways to prepare it. The secret is using fresh, very finely minced meat. This is carefully spiced then served raw, baked or fried in endlessly varying shapes, often with delicious fillings (that often include more minced meat). This recipe is for a kind of kibbeh sandwich: a layer of cooked, spiced meat and pine nuts is pressed between two layers of fine kibbeh, then baked and served in wedges like pieces of cake. Serve with salad and drained yoghurt (natural yoghurt that has been drained in muslin until thick).

You will need to begin this recipe one day ahead.

Ingredients

Filling
3 tbsp olive oil
800 g minced lamb or beef
4 large onions, finely chopped
1 tsp baharat
½ tsp cinnamon (optional)
1 tsp salt
1 ½ tsp freshly ground black pepper
1 tbsp butter
3 tbsp pine nuts

Kibbeh
1 ½ cups fine burghul, soaked overnight in 250 ml water, drained well
800 g lean, finely minced lamb or beef (ask your butcher to mince it twice)
2 large onions, finely grated
1 tsp baharat
2 tsp salt
3 tsp freshly ground black pepper
1 tbsp olive oil

Preparation

To make the filling, heat the oil in a frying pan over low heat and add the meat. Cook, stirring constantly to break up the grains of meat. When the meat is browned and separated and the moisture is starting to evaporate, stir in the onion, spices, salt and pepper and keep cooking until the onion is soft.

Meanwhile, melt the butter in a small frying pan and add the pine nuts. Fry until they start to brown, then stir into the meat mixture. Remove from the heat and set aside to cool.

To make the kibbeh, combine the burghul, meat, onion, baharat, salt and pepper in a bowl and mix well by hand until it forms a paste. You may need a little water to keep the mixture soft. Cover and leave to rest for 30 minutes.

Preheat the oven to 180°C and oil a round baking tray with deep sides (around 2 cm). Dampen your hands and layer the tray with half of the kibbeh by forming small balls of the mixture then flattening them over the tray. Smooth the surface and make sure there are no gaps. Spread the cooled meat filling on top, pressing it down a little to keep the layers tight. Top with the rest of the kibbeh using the same technique. When the surface is smooth, push a small hole through the centre of the kibbeh with your finger. Slice into wedges fanning around the hole. Brush with the olive oil and bake in the oven for 25 minutes.

SBS cook’s notes
Oven temperatures are for conventional; if using fan-forced (convection), reduce the temperature by 20˚C. | We use Australian tablespoons and cups: 1 teaspoon equals 5 ml; 1 tablespoon equals 20 ml; 1 cup equals 250 ml. | All herbs are fresh (unless specified) and cups are lightly packed. | All vegetables are medium size and peeled, unless specified. | All eggs are 55–60 g, unless specified.

If you enjoyed this Kibbeh bil sanieh recipe then browse more Syrian recipes, meat recipes and our most popular hainanese chicken rice recipe.

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Comments (11)

Previous Page 1 | 2 Next
15 Mar 2013 11:23 AEST
Christine
Germany
Fab video
Thanks for the great video - I'm of Lebanese and Syrian extraction and have eaten kibbeh since I was very small. The video really explained well how to do it and offered a few insights I hadn't seen before - I'm delighted!
Agree(0 people agree)
Disagree(0 people disagree)
08 Apr 2012 05:31 AEST
Guest
1
Lebanese
It is Lebanese and not Syrian!
Agree(12 people agree)
Disagree(15 people disagree)
13 Mar 2012 04:57 AEST
Ray Lynch
USA (R.I.)
baharat
you can come close to baharat spice by using 1/2 allspice and 1/2 cinnamon.
Agree(0 people agree)
Disagree(1 people disagree)
15 Oct 2010 09:50 AEST
Nick
Brisbane
Brings back memories
Just watched this ep - brings back memories of my trip to Syria two years ago. I drool every time I think about the food - and Maeve certainly did the cuisine justice!
Agree(0 people agree)
Disagree(0 people disagree)
08 Dec 2009 08:00 AEST
Roger Riverson
Templestowe Lower
Yum
Najla's my mum's cousin. Great gal, great food. May drop by soon.
Agree(0 people agree)
Disagree(0 people disagree)
02 Jun 2009 07:56 AEST
Jenny
Bendigo
Jenny
Wonderful. Have made for country friends who are over 60 and insisted they use yogurt instead of tomato sauce and have some "converts". Scoring the top/cutting into slices is important because the burghul within the Kibbeh makes a crust. In a baking dish/pan, I feel there is enough for 10 people, well thats how many I will 'score' it for, in future. My new 'hamburger'.
Agree(2 people agree)
Disagree(0 people disagree)
10 Feb 2009 09:31 AEST
Kate
The Basin
Yum
That looks so delicious! Will have to get some more spices and cook up this beautiful dish!
Agree(2 people agree)
Disagree(0 people disagree)
28 Jan 2009 01:08 AEST
susann
Innisfail, North Queensland
really good
I loved this show so much I wanted to make just about everything I saw on the show and travel there as well. Despite not being able to buy baharat, I attempted to make my own using a combination of the spices used, after googling "baharat". Not knowing what the spice tastes like, the dish worked out well. Recipe could be halved as it makes a quantity the equivalent of 2 large quiche flans. I made the yogurt cheese, draining 300 g natural yogurt through a calico lined seive. Perfect and different
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