Spanakopita Strudels
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I am Greek. I did not, however, grow up in a family like the one portrayed in My Big Fat Greek Wedding. My mother did not pack me “mouss-ka-ka” for lunch. My aunt never chased me around with a roasted lamb’s eyeball. And I never felt pressure to marry a nice Greek boy nor to become a Greek baby-breeding machine.
But I do have about 50 uncles named Nicky. And my aunt’s vegetarian chili does contain lamb. And many family celebrations do culminate in circular dances stepped to the rhythm of Macedonian folk music. And every woman in my family does make it her mission to feed everyone around her till the day she dies.
Greek food is comfort food for me, and yet, if you searched the recipe archive of my blog, you’d never know it. You’d never know that before my mother comes to visit, I request she make a spanakopita, and that once she’s here, keftedes (lamb meatballs), and that before she departs, kourabiedes (powdered-sugar almond cookies).
In preparation for Easter, I’ve started brushing up on a few of my favorite Greek recipes, starting with spanakopita. Here I’ve halved my family’s recipe, which fills a 10×13-inch roasting pan with enough spanakopita to feed a large family for weeks, and made 10 strudels instead — isn’t everything more delicious when baked in small packages? In strudel form, spanakopita assumes an almost breakfast croissant-like character, a perfect bundle of flaky pastry, egg, cheese, and greens. Yum.
Over the next few weeks, as my Easter menu — spanakopita, keftedes, tzatziki, and olive bread — comes together, I hope the all-but-absent Greek category on this blog starts gaining a presence. I’ll be sure to keep you posted. Happy spring everyone.
When making spanakopita, don’t be tempted to brush each layer with butter. If you spoon a few teaspoons of butter over each layer, the resulting pastry will be lighter and flakier.
Spanakopita Strudels
- Total Time: 1 hour 30 minutes
- Yield: 9 to 10
Description
Notes:
Fillo comes in all shapes and sizes these days. The variety I can find, Athens brand, weighs 1 pound and contains two 8-oz bags of 20 sheets each measuring 9 x 14-inches. This size sheet is perfect for strudels. If your fillo comes in the larger sheets, cut it in half so that it’s roughly 9 x 14-inches. (Don’t cut the fillo until you’re ready to assemble. See step 4 below.) If you’re making a large pan of spanakopita, this small size of fillo is kind of pain — use two sheets per layer.
Ingredients
- 10 oz. baby spinach
- 8 oz. cottage cheese (small curd)
- 12 oz. feta
- 5 eggs, beaten
- 1 box fillo dough, thawed at room temperature for a few hours or in the fridge overnight
- 1 1/2 sticks butter, melted
Instructions
- In three batches, place spinach in food process and pulse until just roughly chopped. Place in a large bowl.
- Add cottage cheese, feta cheese (break this into pieces as you add it to the bowl) and eggs. Use a spatula to stir it all up.
- Set up your work station: A large cutting board is helpful (see picture below). I use a 1/2 cup measuring cup to measure out the filling. You need a teaspoon (like one you eat cereal with not a measuring teaspoon) to spoon butter onto the fillo dough and you need a brush to brush butter onto the assembled strudels. Line a sheetpan with parchment paper and set aside.
- Open up the box of fillo. If your fillo is like mine — in that it comes in two sealed bags — open up one bag and unroll it. Place it next to your cutting board. Fillo dries out quickly, so if you need to step away from your assembly process, be sure to gently re-roll it or fold it up and place it in a ziplock bag. If you are working with the larger sheets, cut them in half to roughly measure 9 x 14-inches. Place half (about 20 sheets) in a ziplock bag.
- Preheat oven to 350ºF. Place one sheet of fillo on your cutting board or work surface. Spoon three teaspoons (again, an eating spoon vs. a measuring spoon) of the melted butter over the layer of fillo (see picture above in the upper-left corner of the montage). Note: You do not have to brush it or make sure that every bit of the dough is covered with butter. The finished spanakopita is actually lighter when you don’t brush the dough with butter. Top with another layer of fillo. Spoon three more teaspoons of butter over the areas of this layer that were not covered in the previous. Top with one more layer of fillo and again spoon over three teaspoons of butter.
- Using your 1/2-cup measuring cup, scoop out a level 1/2-cup filling and place on fillo about 2-inches from the bottom (see photo above). Pull bottom of fillo overtop of this filling. Fold sides in. Then, fold this bottom portion up and over itself and keep folding till you’ve made a little parcel. Place this parcel seam side down on your parchment-lined baking sheet. Brush top with butter. Repeat with remaining fillo and filling.
- Bake strudels for 30 to 45 minutes or until nice and golden brown on top. Cool briefly and serve.
- Prep Time: 45 minutes
- Cook Time: 45 minutes
- Category: Dinner
- Method: Oven
- Cuisine: Greek
Keywords: spanakopita, strudels, spinach, feta, fillo, phyllo, vegetarian
Update: 7-17-2012: Full-size spanakopita for your reference. This was from this past Easter:
Large Spanakopita
- Total Time: 1 hour 45 minutes
- Yield: 12 servings
Ingredients
- 2 10oz. pkg of baby spinach or 3 6oz pkgs (about 20 oz total)
- 16 oz. cottage cheese (small curd)
- 3 8-oz. pkgs feta (24 oz. total)
- 10 eggs (well beaten)
- 1 pkg fillo dough (20–28 layers)
- 3 sticks butter (gasp! melted)
Instructions
- Chop up baby spinach — you can do this very quickly in the food processor. Just do a rough chop.
- In a large bowl, combine the spinach, cottage cheese, feta cheese (break this into pieces) and eggs. You can whisk this all together or use a spatula.
- Butter the bottom and sides of a large roasting pan. Use about two sheets of fillo per layer — they’ll overlap a little bit, but you need about two to cover the surface of the pan. In between each layer, spoon three teaspoons (an eating spoon vs. a measuring spoon) of the butter over the layer of fillo. You don’t have to brush it or make sure that every bit of the dough is covered with butter. The finished spanakopita is actually lighter when you don’t brush the dough with butter. Depending on how many layers of dough your box of fillo has, layer half of the number of sheets in the pan to form the bottom layer of the spanakopita. Pour the filling over top. Repeat layering the fillo dough on top of the filling with butter in between each layer until you are out of dough. Brush the top layer with butter. Bake at 350ºF for 1 hour.
- Prep Time: 45 minutes
- Cook Time: 1 hour
- Category: Dinner
- Method: Oven
- Cuisine: Greek
Keywords: spanakopita, spinach, feta, vegetarian, Greek
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
145 Comments on “Spanakopita Strudels”
Alexandra—Wow these look great! Saw them pinned on PInterest and followed that link back here. Are interested in entering them (or any original recipe you prefer) in our first ever Food Blogger Recipe Contest? Details are on our Facebook page.
Gregg — thanks so much! I will check out the contest right now!
I have made these twice now and they are AH-MAZING. Even my husband who was indifferent even when I showed him the crispy, melty, picture of what I was going to make, was drooling over his first bite. He then proceeded to tell me that the rest were eaten by our “eldest” dog Isabelle who magically learned to open the fridge and pull out the tupperware container that held these delicious gems. I can attest that they do freeze, but freeze them in individual baggies as they will stick together. Mine got a little juicy and wanted to fall apart before I baked them, but nothing tragic has happened yet and they are like flaky, crunchy, RICH hot pockets of magic. Just sayin. 😉
Jaimee, you are too funny. I am so happy to hear that you like these strudels. We love them hear as well, and your idea about freezing in individual baggies is a good one. I am going to have to get back to you about the calories. My only thought would be to add up (manually) all of the calories of all of the ingredients and then divide them by the number of strudels you make per batch. This will obviously be a rough estimate since every batch has varying amounts of butter, but it will be nearly accurate. I’ll get back to you. So happy you like these!
Also, how can I find out how many calories are in these? I count calories and I would like to be able to add these to my food tracker!
Wow, these sounds delicious! I am going to make some this weekend. Thanks for sharing.
These look delicious. The good thing about spinach is that none of my kids like it so I can make this AND eat it all.
Med School Mom — Love it!
We made these after seeing someone pin it on Pinterest and posted our results on The PinterTest Kitchen. Curious – how did the fillo do after you refroze it? I ended up making something else with the leftover sheets.
Allison, I still haven’t opened it. I have a feeling it’s a mess — my freezer is the worst. I shouldn’t have been so lazy and walked it downstairs to our free-standing freezer, which definitely would have preserved it much better. Maybe I’ll take a peak at it this weekend. I will report back for sure.
Jamie, myfitnesspal.com has a recipe ‘calculator’. You input the ingredients & numbr of servings & it tells you the calories per serving.
I use any leftover fillo to make little triangle tarts. I use four buttered layers and then cut them into 4ths. I spoon 1 tablespoon of jam. After I fold them, I brush with butter and sprinkle with cinnamon and sugar. So easy! Bake 10-15 minutes till golden.
I am really looking forward to making these spinach strudels this week. I’ve always made triangles and cooked the spinach. Definitely going to try it your way this time! (My mother was born in Athens, but her family is from Cyprus)
Looks Marvelous! I am from a big german family and they all act the same about the food. Gotta love em!
I found your blog through pinterest. Thanks so much sharing this recipe, our family really enjoyed it!
Great post! Love spanakopita but have to confess I haven’t made it myself yet. Your clear recipe and droolworthy photos however give me the confidence and motivation to do it.
Angela — good luck with it — it is so much fun!
Hi, love this recipe….Greek food is to die for. Your blog is amazing…looking forward to trying out more than a few of your recipes
Paula — thank you!
Hi Alexandra, I made these last weekend after stumbling across a picture of these strudels on pinterest and they were just fanastic! I’m a sucker for the spinach and feta combo but have never made anything using them until this, and I can’t believe how easy it was to rustle up a batch of these strudels. Thank you for sharing!
I hope you don’t mind but I blogged making them (again this weekend, much to Hubby’s delight!) with Brit-friendly measures under my tried & tested tag, with a credit back to you and your blog 🙂
Fifi — This is fantastic! How wonderful of you to provide Brit-friendly measurements. I love your detailed post. And you added the butter so perfectly! It made me so happy to see your post, I can’t tell you. Hope you are enjoying the weekend. Side note: Call the Midwife is finally airing over here. LOVE it!
WOW, this looks amazing, so delish. i have to try this! I would prefer goat cheese, must be an explosion of tastes! 🙂
Someone mentioned not being able to get a nicely browned top when they bake the filo.
Have you tried brushing the top with milk or egg and milk whisked together?
LoveSweetButter — thank you for offering your guidance! Great tip. That definitely should do the trick.
Just made your strudels. Yummmmm! Thanks so very much for sharing this recipe! It was wonderful. I’m going to try to make bite sized strudels next time. They would make terrific hot hors d’oeuvres.
I followed your directions to a T and everything turned out as it should have. Though i patted the spinach dry and strained the cottage cheese to minimize the water in the filling.
They took almost twice as long to bake in my Frigidaire oven than the recipe suggests.
Things I will try next time:
– add salt and pepper to the filling
– brush the top with an egg/milk wash to give the strudels a nice shiny top
This is definitely a recipe I will make again and again.
Thanks!
LSB — thanks for sharing your results. I am sure others will find your tips very helpful. Love the idea of making bite-sized versions for hors d’ouevres. I have in fact made them in the same fashion as the tiropitas — small cheese-filled triangles and they are always a hit: https://alexandracooks.com/2012/04/06/tiropitas/
I’ve been dying to try the strudels with other fillings as well, like mushrooms and caramelized onions with some sort of cheese? I’m going to start experimenting. Thanks again for writing in!
can you use riccotta instead of cottage cheese?
Jan — I have not used ricotta, but I think you definitely could. I think one commenter did this in fact because she didn’t like cottage cheese. If you are wary of cottage cheese, just know that it doesn’t taste like cottage cheese in the finished product — you honestly wouldn’t even know it was in there. That said, definitely use the cheese you prefer. This mixture can be tailored to your preferences.
Thank you! I’ve been looking for this recipe for a long time! I’m not Greek but I’m from New Orleans and we love food (I love all kinds of food). I can’t wait to try this!
Nicole — I hope you like it! I love this recipe.
How many sheets of fillo dough do you use for each little packet?
Jessica — I use three sheets for each little packet. Now, I made a note of this in the recipe, but I can only find the boxes of fillo dough that come in two smaller packs — does that make sense? If you buy the large sheets, but them in half, and then use three of the half sheets. Hope that makes sense. Let me know if you have any other questions about this. I’m dying to make a mushroom-onion-cheese filled variation of this.
Your website makes me hungry!! Can’t wait to try your soups.
Just wanted to add if you have a Wegmans food store they carry their brand of Phyllo (fillo) in smaller boxes. I am trying their brand today wish me luck ,also I am adding spinach to your tiropita recipe. Nothing like experimenting, with 26 people coming for a 90th Bday for Mom.
Are you there help?
You are brave! I wish I could help you! Where do you live?
Great tip on the wegmans phyllo — thanks!
Spinach will be delicious in the tiropitas. You can also just use the spanakopita mix here — I would make a much smaller quantity — and make triangles with it.
Let me know if you have any other questions!
Would it be alright to include some type of meat to this mixture? I was thinking maybe grilled chicken? What do you advise?
This looks fabulous, and I can’t wait to try it. You are the first one I’ve seen use cottage cheese in a hot recipe. My father used to use it in his chili pie. I was like a Mexican lasagna. I sure do miss his cooking.
Hunny Kid — definitely! Just add whatever meat you like best. Grilled chicken sounds great, but really anything from ground hamburger to ground lamb to steak sounds good — spinach and cheese complement so many meats nicely. Love the sound of your dad’s chili pie. What a nice memory to hold on to.
Just wondering, how much butter is a ‘stick’?
Paul — hi, 1 stick of butter is 4 oz or about 114 g. Hope that helps!
I have made spanikopita and trigona before and I use the triangle folding method for both. I make them ahead of time and par-bake them; let them cool and then freeze them. I then just pull them out of the freezer when I get hungry for them or want an appetizer for company. They are so delicious, thanks for sharing.
Melissa — wonderful tips. Thank you — I hadn’t thought about par-baking them, but that’s a great idea.
Do you think it would work as well with ricotta cheese? I don’t have feta, but I have ricotta and all of the other ingredients at home.
Sterling — I can’t say for sure because I’ve never tried it, but I think ricotta will work nicely. Because ricotta is not quite as salty as feta, you might want to add a pinch of salt to the spinach-cheese mixture. Let me know how it turns out — I’d be curious to know. I think some of the texture of the filling might be lost because ricotta is creamier than feta, but I don’t think this is a big deal. Good luck with it!
It turned out really well 🙂 Everybody went for seconds! The ricotta made it quite creamy which was nice. But I want to try it with feta now so that I can compare the texture. Thanks for the recipe!
Sterling — thanks so much for reporting back! I’m so glad they were well received, and it’s good to know that ricotta can be used in place of the feta. I think a lot of people will appreciate that tip. Thanks!
It’s funny, I just read the last few comments about the ricotta and I was thinking to myself this morning (as I was contemplating my monthly making of this treat) if I could replace the COTTAGE CHEESE with ricotta! Hmmmm. Anyway, I had asked months ago about the calorie information on this little gem and I found out by entering the recipe in myfitnesspal.com. Using low fat cottage cheese, butter substitute, and fat free feta in this recipe, and having it yield 9 strudels, your caloric count per strudel is 362, 47g carbs, 10g fat, 20g protein, 3g fiber, and 4g sugar. For anyone who was interested. Most of this fat comes from good sources, except for what’s in the dough, but we all knew that anyway lol. If only I could keep myself from eating 4 of them!
Like I said earlier, I make this recipe once a month and only bake a few at a time for my husband and I, and freeze the rest. In case anyone missed my previous comment, when wrapped individually in saran wrap or in sandwhich bags, these freeze beautifully!
I love your blog and this recipe!
I’m going to try the ricotta trick!
Jaimee — Thanks so much for this nice comment and wonderful information — lots of people seem to be interested in a cottage cheese substitution, and calorie info is always (maybe not always) welcomed information for people, especially when these, or your healthful variation of these, turn out to be really quite light! Thank you for that. Now, how can you help us all from eating 4 at a time? 🙂 You are funny. Love the freezer tip, too. What a great food to have on hand! Thanks again for this nice follow-up comment!
This looks so yummy! I love that you used cottage cheese! I am pinning this for later!
ha ha. i don’t have any friends from Greece. love learning about different cultures and lifestyles 🙂
and that … looks … DELISH!
Can you prepare the packets and refrigerate them … to be cooked just before company comes over so they are warm?
I have so many ideas floating around in my head about different things to try – ricotta and pineapple or apple, adding meat (like suggested before), etc.
Can’t wait to try these … running out to grocery store this morning 🙂
Velma — yes, definitely. I would be sure to brush the top layer with butter extra well, so that they don’t dry out in the the fridge and definitely cover your sheet pan or plate or whatever you are storing them on in the fridge with plastic wrap. Also, I wouldn’t store them in the fridge for more than 8 hours or so, but you can stick them in the freezer for a much longer period of time. Wrap each parcel individually in plastic wrap. Hope that helps! Let me know if you have any other questions.
I can’t wait to try this recipe. I lived in Greece as a child and LOVE the food. Would like a recipe for the stuffed grape leaves if you have one.
Anne — I am sure my mother and/or aunt have a recipe for stuffed grape leaves. I will check with them and report back!
In answer to Sterling’s ? re subing Ricotta cheese for the feta…..Ricotta and cottage cheese are interchangeable, so you would not want to use both in the same recipe & leave out another cheese such as the feta. You could easily sub provolone or mozzarella for the feta, but you need to use either ricotta or cottage…but not both. Hope this helps.
Eula — good point. The ricotta and cottage cheese have a relatively similar texture/creaminess, so using both is probably not the ideal.