Dairy
Contains Dairy • Contains Eggs • Contains Gluten
Yield24 burekas
DifficultyIntermediate
Active Time45 minutes
Total Time2½–3 hours
BrachaMezonot
Burekas are the Sephardic pastry that conquered Israel. Walk down any street in Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, or Haifa and you will find them: golden, flaky, sesame-crusted crescents and triangles filled with salty cheese, creamy potatoes, or wilted spinach. They are the ultimate Israeli street food, sold from bakery windows for breakfast, lunch, and every snack in between. They are also one of the great Sephardic Jewish contributions to the world’s pastry canon.
The word burekas (also spelled börek, bourekas, or burek) traces back to the Ottoman Empire, where filled pastries were a staple of Turkish, Greek, and Balkan cuisines. Sephardic Jews throughout the Ottoman world — in Istanbul, Salonica, Izmir, and Rhodes — adopted and adapted the tradition, creating their own versions filled with the cheeses and vegetables available in their communities. When these Jews immigrated to Israel, they brought their burekas with them.
In Israeli bakeries, the shape of a burekas tells you its filling — a code that every Israeli learns as a child: triangles are cheese, half-moons are potato, rectangles are spinach. This system allows you to grab what you want without asking, even at the busiest bakery counter. It is an elegant solution born from practical necessity.
For another Sephardic filled pastry tradition, try our Sambusak. For Ashkenazi filled pastries, see our Hamantaschen.