Want to learn about Romanian food? Looking for Romanian recipes? Read Irina Georgescu's guide below, then check out our olive podcast where Irina takes us through the 10 things you need to know about Romania. For more cook like a local guides, read our guides to Sardinia, Greece, Crete and Oman.

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Romanian food

One of the things that Romanians do well is baking. The repertoire is hugely diverse, from recipes considered to be quintessentially Romanian to those fiercely ethnic, all influenced by centuries of Habsburg and Ottoman rule, and by culinary fashions from France and Italy.

Traditional baking relies on local and seasonal ingredients such as fresh fruit, curd cheese, jams, honey, walnuts, poppy seeds, wheat and cornmeal. The thriving commercial routes of the past spanning between the Middle East, Black Sea, River Danube and Western Europe added their own foreign ingredients. In previous centuries, cinnamon, ginger, saffron, pistachios, almonds, chocolate and sugar used to be a measure of prestige in urban households. These constant culinary and cultural exchanges have created an edible mosaic of glorious pies, cakes and desserts.

Baking in Romania starts with pies called plăcinte, of which two are the most popular: cu mere, with apples, and cu brânză, with curd cheese. They are baked in rectangular trays, with two layers of dough sandwiching the filling while the sides remain open. Others are round, folded, griddled or fried, drizzled with honey or dusted with icing sugar. It’s a whole way of baking and eating a pie: they are served as a snack, cold, already sliced, and piled up on a plate in the middle of the table. They are also a street-food staple – people eat them on their way home while waiting for the bus to arrive or for lunch between errands. The realm of baking continues with strudels, filled with cherries or pumpkin, and syrupy baclavas and cataifs. Other beloved homemade desserts are plum dumplings, poppy seed noodles, vanilla doughnuts, fruit fritters and pearl barley puddings. Celebrations come with prăjituri, rectangular layered cakes, topped with chocolate glaze, and with torturi, round layered cakes, usually covered in a luscious buttercream. Baking in Romania is rich in influences, flavours and traditions that reflect centuries of diversity.


Romanian recipes

Extracted from Irina Georgescu's book, Tava (£27, Hardie Grant).

Moldavian layered pie with hemp cream

This pie is traditionally made on Christmas Eve in Moldovia. It's made of layers of flatbread soaked in a honey syrup and spread with a pumpkin seed filling.

Moldavian layered pie on a silver tray on top of a white patterned tablecloth

Curd cheese and semolina dumplings with bilberry jam

These Romanian soft cheese dumplings, coated in toasted breadcrumbs mixed with cinnamon, are best served with bilberry jam – but strawberry or blackcurrant work wonderfully too.

A white plate biled with golden crumbed curd cheese and semolina dumplings

Transylvanian griddle breads

These blistered, honey-drizzled flatbread pies are traditionally stuffed with Romanian brânză de vaci, but they work just as well with set cottage cheese.

Round flatbread cut into triangles on a white plate

Find more Romanian recipes below

Extracted from Irina Georgescu's book, Carpathia: Food From the Heart of Romania (£22, Frances Lincoln).

Oven-baked pearl barley pilaf with chicken and mushrooms

Often made with basmati rice, this easy, filling meal is one of the most popular weeknight dinners in Romania.

Carpathia Pearl Barley Pilaf Chicken Mushrooms

What to eat in Romania

Mici

Meaning ‘littles’ these meaty, garlicky, juicy, melt-in-the-mouth meat rolls are a Romanian street-food staple.

Romanian mici

Dobos torte

The magnificent Hungarian layered cake, made with luscious chocolate ganache and caramel, is perennially popular in Romanian patisseries.

Carpathia Romanian dobos: Seven Layer Hungarian Cake

Pasca

This cheesecake, encased in a rich, braided brioche bread, is made only at Easter.

Romanian Brioche Cheesecake

Bors

Made from fermented wheat, cornmeal and herbs, this tangy ingredient is added to meat or vegetable broths for its sweet and sour flavour.

Carpathia Romanian Bors

Aubergine dip

Delicious laced with red onion and fennel seeds, this is always served with a side dish of chargrilled pepper salad drizzled with garlic vinaigrette.

Carpathia Romanian Aubergine Caviar dip

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Find recipes for the above dishes in Irena's cookbook, Carpathia: Food From the Heart of Romania (£22, Frances Lincoln). Photographs by Jamie Orlando Smith

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