Ataif
- 1 1/2 teaspoons active dry yeast
- 1 teaspoon sugar
- 1 1/2 cups lukewarm water
- 1 1/3 cups all-purpose flour
- 2 1/2 cups sugar
- 1 1/4 cups water
- 1 tablespoon lemon juice
- 12 tablespoons orange-blossom or rose water
- Vegetable oil
- For the batter, dissolve the yeast with the sugar in 1/2 cup of the water.
- Let it stand in a warm place for 10 minutes, or until it froths.
- Put the flour in a large bowl.
- Add the yeast mixture and the remaining water gradually, beating vigorously, to make a creamy, lump-free batter.
- Cover the bowl with plastic wrap, and leave in a warm place for about 1 hour.
- The soft, almost liquid batter will rise and become bubbly and a little elastic.
- To make the syrup, bring the water to the boil with the sugar and lemon juice and simmer for 10 minutes, until it is thick enough to coat the back of a spoon.
- Then stir in the orange-blossom or rose water and simmer for a few seconds more.
- Allow to cool, then chill in the refrigerator.
- When the batter is ready, rub a nonstick skillet with oil (use a paper towel) so as to grease it with a very thin film.
- Heat the skillet until it is very hot, then reduce the heat and keep it at medium.
- Pour the batter by the tablespoon into the skillet, making several small rounds that are not touching, in the pan.
- As little holes appear on top and the pancakes come away from the pan easily and become golden on the bottom, turn and do the other side.
- Drop them into the syrup when they are done.
- To serve, arrange in one layer on a flat serving dish.
- Spread with about 1/2 pound thick cream.
- In the Middle East the cream made from buffalos milk called eishta is used (see page 407), but you may use clotted cream or mascarpone or whipped heavy cream.
- Sprinkle on about 1 1/4 cups chopped pistachios or almonds, or spread a teaspoonful of rose-petal jam over the cream (this is popular at weddings).
- For a party, make a mound with several layers of pancakes, each spread with cream and rose-petal jam or sprinkled with chopped pistachios or almonds.
- This is one of my favorite Arab sweets.
- Pour 1/2 ladle of batter into the oiled skillet over medium heat, tilting the pan a little to allow it to spread.
- It will not spread out too much and will remain in a small, round, fattish shape.
- Fry one side of the pancake onlythis is very important.
- The other side must remain uncooked and moist, so that its edges can be stuck together.
- When the pancakes lose their whiteness and little holes appear, and as they become detached from the pan, lift them out and pile them up on a plate ready to be stuffed.
- Put a heaping tablespoon of stuffing (see below) in the middle of each pancake, on the uncooked side.
- Fold the pancakes in half over the filling to make a half-moon shape, and close the pastries by pinching the edges firmly together to seal them and trap the filling.
- Deep-fry, a few at a time, in medium-hot oil about 1 inch deep, until pale brown, turning them over once.
- Lift them out with a perforated spoon and drain on paper towels.
- Then dip them, while still hot, in the above syrup.
- Serve hot or cold.
- You can make them in advance and reheat them, covered, in the oven.
- For those who have a sweet tooth, serve them with more syrup poured over.
- Mix 2 cups coarsely ground or chopped walnuts, 3 to 4 tablespoons sugar, and 2 teaspoons ground cinnamon.
- They are divine.
- In the Middle East a slightly salty and sharp cheese called akaoui is used.
- Alternatives are ricotta, mozzarella, and even a slightly salted halumi (soak the cheese in several changes of water to remove the salt).
- A good combination is 3/4 pound of a half-and-half mixture of mozzarella and ricotta, blended to a paste in the food processor.
- Dip the hot pancakes in syrup and serve hot.
- Mozzarella and halumi become hard and rubbery when they are cold.
active dry yeast, sugar, water, flour, sugar, water, lemon juice, orangeblossom, vegetable oil
Taken from www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/ataif-373613 (may not work)