Spanakopita
(Spinach and Feta Pie)
I was
first introduced to Spanakopita by the wife of a Czechoslovakian
ambassador in early 1990. She is a gorgeous woman, full of life and she
absolutely loves our good Australian beaches. How she survives with
her pale white skin after endless beach days is quite beyond me, perhaps
she has always had 30+ sunblock.
I
distinctly remember she put ingredients into a saucepan, sauteed the spinach, onion
and (in her case, garlic) then removed it from the heat to add parsley,
egg and breadcrumbs. All of this completed whilst still in her
bikini! Now she is back in Czechoslovakia and not beach swimming
regularly but I know memories of her Bondi summers sustain her through
the coldest of Czechoslovakian winters.
There
are so many versions of Spanakopita but this is one we enjoy and with
the abundance of fennel fronds and spinach/silverbeet every pie tastes
as good as the last.
It is Autumn in Australia, a beautiful
season with great weather and a slow introduction to winter, including
comfort food and warm, creamy delights. Spinach, or it's neighbour
silverbeet, grows in our mid north coast region all year around. We
love it, the chickens love it as well as the grubs and we have to grow
plenty to make sure we all get our share.
Luckily the turtles do not seem to eat spinach. The turtles rescued from the middle of a nearby busy street should be appreciative for their lives, but no, they think any lettuce or kale plant in their path is worthy of a good feed by bypassing the guppies and greens in the pond in favour of lighter greens. Ungrateful turtles.
We do not know where the turtles sleep, but we sure know what they eat!
There
are so many versions of Spanakopita but this is one we enjoy and with
the abundance of fennel fronds and spinach/silverbeet every pie tastes
as good as the last.
Spanakopita is very versatile. It is great for lunch as the star dish, served with a salad and crusty bread , or served as a side vegetable offering anytime.
You can use thawed frozen shortcrust pastry for the base and thawed frozen puff pastry for the top of the pie. Filo pastry slathered with plenty of butter is a great pie pastry as well. Brush either of these with an egg wash before baking.
Provencal Pastry ingredients
2 cups plain flour
1/4 cup olive oil
1/4 cup tepid water
1 egg
1/4 teaspoon salt
Method:
Blend all the ingredients together in a food processor until
they form a ball. Remove it from the bowl, smooth it out,
cover with plastic wrap and let it rest in the fridge for about 1 hour-I find 40 minutes is enough.
Spanakopita Ingredients
300g Spinach or Silverbeet, washed and finely chopped
100g Feta, crumbled
1/3 cup fresh parmesan cheese, grated
4 green shallots, finely sliced
1/2 cup fresh fennel fronds, finely chopped
2 Tablespoons fresh Italian parsley, finely chopped
2 eggs, lightly beaten
Freshly ground black pepper, to taste.
Method: Place all ingredients into a large bowl and mix together. I do not add salt as the feta is salty enough, but check for seasoning, you may want to add salt.
Preheat oven to 180 Celsius fan forced.
Take your pastry that has been rested and roll out to fit a 20cm square baking tin. Spray the tin with olive oil. Divide pastry into thirds, roll two thirds out to cover base and sides of tin. Press gently into corners.
Place the filling inside, smoothing it out evenly.
Roll remaining third of pastry and place on top.
Prick all over with a fork and brush or spray with olive oil.
Cook for 25 minutes, it will be a pale golden brown and crisp when ready.
Buon appetito!
If you have enjoyed this post, kindly let me know. Regards Merryn :D