Cheese Burek, Balkanika Restaurant, NYC |
It was Tuesday, my designated Slovenian cooking day. It also happened to be February 21. Mardi Gras.
But there would be no home cooking this week. My husband and I were in the middle of a trip back east, visiting family in New York before we continued on to Rhode Island.
We were feeling miserable and slightly queasy. Both of us fighting off the flu. Walking the streets of Manhattan, dragging our bags behind us, in a damp, bone-chilling cold we no longer knew how to face. On our way to my cousin's apartment on the Upper West Side, after spending several days with family on Long Island.
It was past lunch time. We were definitely in need of some comfort food.
We passed a New Orleans style restaurant. A fitting choice, perhaps. But we had just hosted a Louisiana-themed party back home, to celebrate the launch of Zydeco Nation, a new radio documentary about our music community in California. I didn't think this Manhattan restaurant could top my husband's offerings for the event, which included his trademark muffaletas, along with red beans and rice.
Then I spotted another possibility across the street. Balkanika, a wine bar and restaurant. That sounded promising. We hurried over to take a look.
Balkanika Restaurant made a tantalizing promise: Balkan and Mediterranean food in the heart of Hell's Kitchen. They even included Slovenia in the long list of cuisines we could sample.
Inside, we found a comfortable, woody restaurant with a long bar in back. Not too crowded, since we had managed to arrive after the weekday lunch crowd.
The menu was dazzling and varied. Too many choices, for diners in our weakend state. We spotted the lunch special: a glass of wine, a starter, and an entree for just $14. Hard to beat that anywhere, much less in Manhattan.
I didn't notice anything designated as Slovenian on the menu, although I saw a couple of dishes I had made recently: stuffed cabbage and stuffed peppers. There were any number of exotic choices from Turkey, Albania, and Bosnia. But I immediately zeroed in on the burek, one of the restaurant's signature offerings.
Burek, a savory phyllo-wrapped pastry, is found all over the Balkans and the Middle East. The origins are probably Turkish. There are endless variations in the spelling, the filling, and the shape. The one constant is deliciousness. In the months before I began my Slovenian cooking project, I had been experimenting with making it myself, with store-bought phyllo.
As usual, we decided to share. I chose the cheese burek. My husband picked out four selections for his meze platter. We each ordered the bean soup with beef to start.
It was just what the doctor ordered. The soup was soothing and hearty. The cheese burek, in a traditional coiled shape I hadn't tried before, was mild and just tangy enough, with a filling of ricotta and feta cheese. It was served with a cup of thin, sharp homemade yogurt alongside.
The assorted meze provided a nice counterpoint, with some unusual selections. The green fava bean spread, with the characteristic bitter edge, would have been tantalizing, if not for our slightly "iffy" stomaches. We really enjoyed that pinkish paprika walnut spread. The whole wheat pita was a welcome addition.
And the glass of wine was good medicine, too.
Highly recommended, if you find yourself in Manhattan and in need of unique and satisfying comfort food with a Balkan flair.
After we returned to California, I discovered the restaurant's website, complete with a detailed menu. I also checked out some review sites, and learned that New Yorkers share my enthusiasm for Balkanika. See, for example, Zagat and
Meze Platter, Balkanika Restaurant, NYC |