Rockdale is worth exploring on foot, a fascinating blend of cultures that sprawls across both sides of the Princes Highway. You'll find Halal butchers next to Asian grocery stores, and restaurants that specialise in Chinese, Thai, Bangladeshi, Greek and Himalayan cuisine. There's a giant used furniture shop on the corner, a supermarket selling Pakistani groceries in bulk, and Lebanese bakeries fragrant with oregano and thyme from za'atar-topped manoosh pizzas.
A significant local Macedonian community means you'll stumble upon plenty of burek too: flaky pastries sold in cafes for breakfast, lunch or a leisurely snack. There are several in the area but I was drawn to Balkan Oven Burek as soon as I saw all the old men in shirts and cardigans sitting out the front. The men here are in no hurry, nursing coffee and cigarettes as they catch up on all the news in a constant stream of Macedonian and Croatian chatter.
Balkan Oven Burek
WHAT IS BALKAN OVEN BUREK?
A bakery cafe serving Macedonian burek and breads.
WHAT’S IT LIKE?
There’s always a queue for takeaway, but it’s much more fun to eat in, joining the hordes of locals sitting at the shaded café tables on this cosy pedestrian strip.
Spinach and cheese burek
WHAT SHOULD I ORDER
Burek is the specialty here: flaky baked pies made with multiple layers of paper-thin pastry. The burek are baked all day, tipped out piping hot from their tins and sold as family-sized whole pies ($18) or cut into quarters ($5).
The pastry layers progress from crisp and golden shards to soft waves before hitting a filling of either beef mince, cheese, or cheese and spinach. The cheese is a housemade mixture of Bulgarian and Australian fetta combined with ricotta cheese.
Cheese burek
Meat burek with buttermilk
WHAT SHOULD I DRINK
You can jump-start your system with a cup of Macedonian coffee, boiled in a long-handled copper pot directly over flame, but the traditional drink to have with burek is buttermilk, served cold by the glass.
Kifli so sirenje
WHAT ELSE?
The crescent-shaped bread rolls on the counter top are kifli so sirenje, a soft yeast roll filled with a crumble of brined cheese that makes a perfect takeaway snack.
For dessert, move onto strudli so jabolko, or apple strudel: squat pastry rolls of cinnamon-spiced apples and sultanas, dusted with icing sugar and served with cream.
Strudli so jabolko apple strudel
Macedonian creaming soda
Slatki or traditional sweets [clockwise from bottom left]:
Chocolate fig wafer; fruit slice; date almond roll; tulumbi and coconut roll
- The chocolate fig wafer was my favourite by far Pogacha traditional wedding bread
- My visit was anonymous but my camera was enough to grant me access into the kitchen. "You want a nice picture? Come look! Special bread for wedding!"Pogacha traditional wedding bread
- Two birds represent the bride and groom
Burek baking in the oven
- Only six trays fit in the oven, so the oven works non-stop to keep up with demandFreshly baked burek
Macedonian coffee is brewed by hand over a gas flame
Macedonian coffee
- Strong but with minimal bitterness, boasting a deep richness and pleasing finishView Larger Map
Balkan Oven Burek Bakery Café
Shop 2, 1-3 King Street, Rockdale, Sydney
Tel: (02) 9567 1102
Opening hours:
Monday to Saturday 6am-5pm
Sunday 6am-3pm
This article appears in the March 2011 issue of Time Out Sydney in my monthly Food & Drink column Eat This!
More Time Out Sydney reviews:
ATL Marantha, Kensington (Indonesian fried chicken with edible bones)
Durban Dish, Baulkham Hills (South African bunny chow)
Hijazi's Falafel, Arncliffe (Lebanese breakfast)
Island Dreams Cafe, Lakemba (Christmas Islands cuisine)
La Paula, Fairfield (Chilean empanadas, lomitos and sweets)
Sea Sweet, Parramatta (Lebanese sweet kashta cheese burger)
Sizzling Fillo, Lidcombe (Filipino pork hock crackling)
Tehran, Granville (Persian cuisine)
Tuong Lai, Cabramatta (Vietnamese sugar cane prawns)
This is terrible: I've never been to Rockdale. The Macedonian food looks out-of-this-world, will definitely be making a trip !
ReplyDeleteI love Rockdale, very underrated.
ReplyDeleteRockdale is one of those places that make this city fantastic place. You get off at the train station and you're virtually in another country. Burek is something I grew up eating, a unique sweet or savoury pastry from this part of Eastern Europe. The name of the wedding bread translates to underpants!
ReplyDeleteNot a light meal but a tasty one, I bet.
ReplyDeleteThat coffee looks intense. I've actually passed this and thought it looked interesting - cheese and pastry - yes please!
ReplyDeleteOMG!!!I have spent a lot of time in this part of Sydney but had no idea about this place! I think a visit is on the cards!
ReplyDeletewhat a great find! and the pastriesssss yum!
ReplyDeletethe cheese! it oozes!
ReplyDeleteMy friend always takes me here when she's craving real burek...I love this place. Rockdale is def a smorgasboard of foodie delights!
ReplyDeleteLove the coffee pour in action shot... nice work.
ReplyDeleteVery interesting cafe. Love the tools for the coffee.
ReplyDeletethe burek looks so flaky and crispy! yum!
ReplyDeleteOmgosh! Burek! I havn't had this since I left my job in Rockdale years and years ago! Nor have I been back to Rockdale since. There was a small bakery a few doors up from the florist I worked at on the Princess Hwy that we always used to go buy burek from, I think it was partial to my weight gain while I worked there!
ReplyDeleteI used to be around Rockdale a lot as a kid, however my mother wouldn't take me to such "exotic" places due to her somewhat limited sense of adventure when it comes to food. Shame, as I have now come to love burek! Or anything with flaky pastry for that mater =p
ReplyDeleteComing from a Balkan background, I can't get enough of burek. Also Balkan Oven is a great choice, much better than Pellas "Best Burek in the World" claim. Funny you mention the old men sitting around outside. Macos, Cros and Serbs, they all talk to each other, but none of them trust each other :D
ReplyDeleteYou should also try the Cevapi place near the entrance to the station. It is excellent Spicciatevi Cafe
I love how you captured the coffee drips in the first photo! My camera would cry if I asked it to do that ;)
ReplyDeleteLove the look of the traditional sweets... but you'd have guessed that, for sure ;)
Meat and Pastry - there is no better combo!
ReplyDeleteGreat find Helen, my favorite burek place was a little Serbian joint in Newtown which has now closed down.
I've only ever driven through Rockdale, and I've never had Burek which is very remiss of me. AND I've never drunk buttermilk, only ever had it "in" food like pancakes. Yes, I've been living under a rock. Looks like a trip to Rockdale is in order.
ReplyDeleteloving that creamy soda!
ReplyDeleteinteresting mix of desserts.
and that coffee looks deadly!
that first photo is pretty cool! hmm macedonian coffee...so exotic!
ReplyDeletedrink buttermilk?! haha isnt that like milk with some acid? hehe
Well well well, does it look like my prayers have been answered. For so long have I been prancing about trying to look for a Macedonian/Croatian/Serbian eatery; I'm always on the search to try new cuisines and there just doesn't seem to be enough of Balkan around. So thanks for the lovely post; any Balkan restaurants you'd recommend?
ReplyDeleteCheese, meat and a good amount of carb load! Yuummm that bread sure looks so fluffy and soft!
ReplyDeleteI always discover something new that I haven't tried on your blog! The burek looks divine!
ReplyDeleteSigh, love discovering (or seeing you discover) wonderful places like this!
ReplyDeleteCheese and pastry equals deliciousness! I would love to have a local place like this around, I would eat it every day.
ReplyDeletewow that wedding bread looks so pretty!!
ReplyDeleteAll looks Greek to me.. looks good tho, worth a try.
ReplyDelete