Real phyllo, eating well's low-fat method


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Recipe by: maËlyss

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Preparation Time:
10 Min
Serves:
1
Difficulty:
Easy
Cost:
cost recipe

Main Ingredients:

See below ingredients and instructions of the recipe


Cooking Preparation of the Recipe:



For appetizers with a lot of style but little fat, phyllo pastries are a
natural. The paper-thin sheets of phyllo dough can be rolled, folded,
shaped, seasoned, or filled in countless ways. In typical phyllo recipes,
however, the layers of dough are freely brushed with melted butter; when
baked, the butter keeps the thin sheets separate, producing a flaky--and
fat-saturated--result. We developed a technique in which the leaves of
phyllo are lightly coated with a blend of egg white and olive oil. During
baking, the egg whites become crisp while the oil keeps the leaves
separate. The low-fat technique has an unexpected and welcome benefit: the
pastries turn out crisper and less oily than those made with pure fat, and
filled pastires don't become soggy.

Frozen phyllo (or filo or fillo) is available in most supermarkets; it is
also sold fresh in some Greek and Middle Eastern specialty shops. One pound
of dough averages 25 large sheets of pastry. Our recipes were devloped for
full-sized sheets, either 14 by 18 inches or 12 by 17 inches. These
appetizers work beautifully for entertaining because they can be prepared
in advance and refrigerated or frozen.

TIPS:

Phyllo Dough is easy and fun to work with as long as it doesn't get soggy
or dried out. To avoid these potential hazards:

Thaw frozen phyllo in the refrigerator for at least 8 hours or
overnight; this will prevent damp spots that could cause the sheets of
dough to stick together.

Remove phyllo from refrigerator, and leave unopened at room temperature
for 1 to 2 hours.

Clear a large work surface before removing phyllo from the box.

Carefully unroll sheets onto a dry surface.

Keep sheets of phyllo covered with plastic wrap or wax paper while you
work; if the dough is left uncovered for even a short period of time, it
dries out and breaks into flakes.

Work quickly and with a gentle hand.

From Eating Well, May/June 1993.

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