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    Home » Turkish Pastries » Su Boregi (Water Borek)

    Published: Apr 8, 2010 · Modified: May 24, 2025 by Zerrin & Yusuf

    Su Boregi (Water Borek)

    Jump to Recipe

    Turkish Water Borek aka Su Boregi is the star of all Turkish borek recipes. Homemade phyllo sheets are slightly cooked in simmering water, which gives the name of this special borek. Line the cooked phyllo sheets in a pan, brush with butter and stuff with feta and parsley. Super yummy!

    A slice of Turkish water borek stuffed with feta and parsley.

    When it is served with Turkish tea or plain yogurt drink, su boregi makes a perfect breakfast or lunch.

    We know the name water borek sounds weird but it has a reason for sure. What gives its name is one of the steps of the recipe instructions. Homemade phyllo sheets are cooked in simmering water and then stuffed and baked.

    That’s why it’s called su boregi (Water Borek). It is the best when you use homemade phyllo sheets, so it’s better if you can get help from someone to make Turkish su boregi.

    Ingredients For Turkish Su Boregi

    • Borek Filling: In Turkish cuisine you can make borek filling with anything you like. From ground beef to cheese and vegetables. All of these are very customizable. However, su böregi filling is always with cheese like feta cheese. If you can’t find feta or feta crumbles, use a crumbly cheese that doesn’t melt when baked. Optionally, you can combine the cheese with parsley. Besides cheese and parsley, we need melted butter to spread on the layers of phyllo sheets.
    • Dough: To make the phyllo sheets is very similar to making pasta without machine. We need flour, milk and eggs for the dough. It won’t be very soft due to the eggs. 
    • To Cook the Phyllo Sheets: We need boiling water in a pot, cold water in a large bowl, salt and oil.
    • For the golden top: Just like when making easy phyllo borek, we need a mixture of egg, olive oil and yogurt. If you don’t have yogurt on hand, you can use milk instead. 

    How To Make Turkish Water Borek

    Make The Filling 

    Combine feta cheese and chopped parsley in a bowl and put it aside. Also, keep the melted butter in another bowl on the side.

    Make The Phyllo Sheets

    Combine flour, milk and eggs in a large bowl. Knead it well either with your hands or in your stand mixer. Add little flour if necessary. It won’t be a soft dough.

    Now transfer the dough on the counter, roll it into a log and cut it into 10 balls. Cover them with a damp kitchen towel so that they don’t dry when you are rolling them out one by one.

    Dust the counter with a little flour each time you roll out a dough ball. Stack the phyllo sheets on the counter.

    Make sure you sprinkle a generous amount of flour between each so that they don’t stick. Brush a baking sheet with oil or use a cooking spray. Place an uncooked phyllo sheet in the baking sheet as the bottom of your water borek. Then cook the remaining phyllo sheets. Read on to learn how.

    Related: How To Make Phyllo Dough Sheets

    Cook The Phyllo Sheets In Simmering Water

    Fill a large pot with water and bring it to a boil. Fill a large bowl with cold water and put it aside. With the help of a thin rolling pin, take the phyllo sheet to the pot and drop it into the simmering water. Keep it there for 2 minutes and take it out with a large slotted spoon. Transfer it into the cold water to stop cooking. Keep it there for a few seconds and then transfer it on a clean kitchen towel. Repeat the same steps for the remaining phyllo sheets. 

    Assemble The Börek

    Remember the first phyllo sheet you place uncooked in the baking sheet? Brush the top of it with melted butter. Now place a cooked phyllo sheet on that first one. Brush it with melted butter too. Repeat with 3 more phyllo sheets. Spread the cheese mixture on the fifth phyllo sheet. Place the 6th phyllo sheet on it. Brush it with melted butter and repeat with the remaining sheets. 

    In another bow, whisk together the egg, yogurt and olive oil. Spread this mixture on the top sheet generously. And finally bake it in a preheated oven at 350F/180C. for about 40 minutes or until golden. Cut it into squares and serve.

    A slice of homemade su boregi on a white plate.

    More Turkish Pastries

    • Sigara Borek
    • Spinach and Cheese Borek
    • Gozleme
    • Simit
    • Pogaca
    • Lavash Bread

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    📖 Recipe

    A slice of Turkish water borek stuffed with feta and parsley.
    5 from 2 votes

    Su Boregi (Water Borek)

    By Zerrin & Yusuf
    Homemade phyllo sheets are slightly cooked in simmering water, then stuffed with feta cheese and baked in oven.
    Yields: 12 slices
    Prevent your screen from going dark
    PRINT PIN
    PREP 1 hour hr
    COOK 40 minutes mins
    TOTAL 1 hour hr 40 minutes mins

    INGREDIENTS
      

    Filling:

    • 500 g feta cheese crumbled
    • ½ bunch parsley chopped
    • 200 g butter melted

    Phyllo Sheet Dough:

    • 10 cups flour
    • 1¼ cup milk
    • 6 medium eggs

    To cook the phyllo sheets

    • 3 liter water to boil the borek sheets
    • 3 liter water cold
    • ½ tablespoon salt
    • 2 tablespoons olive oil

    Topping

    • 1 large egg
    • ¼ cup olive oil
    • ½ cup yogurt

    INSTRUCTIONS
     

    • Make The Filling 
    • Combine cheese and chopped parsley in a bowl and put it aside. Also, keep the melted butter in another bowl on the side.
    • Make The Phyllo Sheets
    • Combine flour, milk and eggs in a large bowl. Knead it well either with your hands or in your stand mixer. Add little flour if necessary. It won’t be a soft dough. Now transfer the dough on the counter, roll it into a log and cut it into 10 balls. Cover them with a damp kitchen towel so that they don’t dry when you are rolling them out one by one. Dust the counter with a little flour each time you roll out a dough ball. Stack the phyllo sheets on the counter. Make sure you sprinkle a generous amount of flour between each so that they don’t stick. Brush a baking sheet with oil or use a cooking spray. Place an uncooked phyllo sheet in the baking sheet as the bottom of your water borek. Then cook the remaining phyllo sheets. Read on to learn how.
    • Cook The Phyllo Sheets In Simmering Water
    • Fill a large pot with water, add in salt and olive oil. Bring it to a boil. Fill a large bowl with cold water and put it aside. With the help of a thin rolling pin, take the phyllo sheet to the pot and drop it into the simmering water. Keep it there for 2 minutes and take it out with a large slotted spoon. Transfer it into the cold water to stop cooking. Keep it there for a few seconds and then transfer it on a clean kitchen towel. Repeat the same steps for the remaining phyllo sheets. 
    • Assemble The Börek
    • Remember the first phyllo sheet you place uncooked in the baking sheet? Brush the top of it with melted butter. Now place a cooked phyllo sheet on that first one. Brush it with melted butter too. Repeat with 3 more phyllo sheets. Spread the cheese mixture on the fifth phyllo sheet. Place the 6th phyllo sheet on it. Brush it with melted butter and repeat with the remaining sheets. 
    • In another bow, whisk together the egg, yogurt and olive oil. Spread this mixture on the top sheet generously. And finally bake it in a preheated oven at 350 F / 180 C. for about 40 minutes or until golden.
    • Cut it into squares and serve.

    NUTRITION

    Calories: 729kcalCarbohydrates: 83gProtein: 21gFat: 34gSaturated Fat: 17gPolyunsaturated Fat: 2gMonounsaturated Fat: 12gTrans Fat: 1gCholesterol: 175mgSodium: 953mgPotassium: 245mgFiber: 3gSugar: 2gVitamin A: 985IUVitamin C: 3mgCalcium: 302mgIron: 6mg

    Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

    ADDITIONAL INFO

    Course Side Dish
    Cuisine Turkish
    Tried this recipe? Leave a comment below!
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    Reader Interactions

    Comments

      5 from 2 votes

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      Recipe Rating




    1. Erica says

      April 16, 2010 at 12:04 pm

      This is interesting, but looks so delicious,Zerrin! I love learning new ways to cook stuff!The pictures are amazing too! I just love your food 🙂

      Reply
    2. OysterCulture says

      April 15, 2010 at 7:39 pm

      What an absolutely yummy sounding borek. I have not heard of boiling the phyllo dough before, I am so intrigued I cannot wait to try it. As usual, you are a wonderful source of information and inspiration. Hope school is not too busy for you.

      Reply
    3. shahana says

      April 13, 2010 at 6:17 pm

      Worth for the effort.Looks so perfect dear!

      Reply
    4. Stella says

      April 13, 2010 at 8:03 am

      This looks like a lot of work, Zerrin. I think I've had this before. Yours looks wonderful-I want a piece now!

      Reply
    5. Sophie says

      April 12, 2010 at 9:53 pm

      Hello Zerrin!

      What a fab meal this is!! Beautiful photographed too!

      How are you girl???

      MMMM,...I surely must make this soon,...

      Reply
    6. dokuzuncubulut says

      April 12, 2010 at 7:19 am

      O kadar güzel yapmışsınız ki, "gözümü karartıp yapsam mı?" diye düşünmeye başladım. Sanırım önce yardım edecek bir arkadaş bulmam gerekecek. Tatlıya düşükün değilim ama, böyle böreklere hiç dayanamıyorum... Bir de bu kadar lezzetli görünüyorsa. Sevgiler.

      Reply
    7. Fearless Kitchen says

      April 12, 2010 at 7:47 am

      Interesting. I've never seen anything quite like this!

      Reply
    8. Faith says

      April 11, 2010 at 3:24 pm

      This is really beautiful and elegant, Zerrin. Looks really delicious too, I love that crispy golden layer on top!

      Reply
    9. citronetvanille says

      April 10, 2010 at 10:27 pm

      That is very interesting, I didn't know you could make borek this way. Then thinking about it, it's very similar to the Italian way of making lasagna, the little difference is the dough, you have milk in the borek. But the process of cooking the sheets in the water, then layering it, is similar. Great borek! now I want to taste it!

      Reply
    10. MaryMoh says

      April 10, 2010 at 8:37 am

      This looks interesting and challenging but delicious. Thanks for sharing.

      Reply
    11. Gera @ SweetsFoodsBlog says

      April 09, 2010 at 4:05 pm

      I'm hankering for borek now! My Grandma usually made it - yours is outstanding, can I eat the screen?

      Cheers,

      Gera

      Reply
    12. 5 Star Foodie says

      April 09, 2010 at 6:33 am

      A very unique recipe and an incredibly delicious result! I would love to try this!

      Reply
    13. lisaiscooking says

      April 09, 2010 at 5:20 am

      The dough looks so light and lovely, and the filling looks delicious too. This was worth the extra effort!

      Reply
    14. Cherine says

      April 08, 2010 at 10:32 pm

      this looks sooo delicious.

      Reply
    15. anncoo says

      April 08, 2010 at 6:25 pm

      WOW! Thanks for sharing this interesting recipe. Looks fabulous and yummy.

      Reply
    Newer Comments »

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    Meet Zerrin and Yusuf Gunaydin: The couple behind this blog. We bring Turkish food into your kitchen! From kebabs to desserts, everything you crave is here.

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