B'stilla (Pastilla)
Morocco (Fès, Andalusian-Moorish culinary tradition; 'bastilla' from Castilian 'pastilla')
B'stilla is Morocco's most architecturally complex dish — a large, round pie of ultra-thin warqa pastry filled with a layer of sweet-savoury braised pigeon (or chicken) in saffron sauce with egg, topped with a layer of fried almonds with cinnamon and sugar, all enclosed in more warqa layers, baked until golden, and dusted with powdered sugar and cinnamon. The sweet-savoury contrast within a single pastry — rich braised bird, almond sugar, and crisp pastry — is the Andalusian-Moorish synthesis at its most refined. Warqa (paper-thin Moroccan pastry) is made by daubing wet dough repeatedly onto a hot pan surface; it requires specialist skill and is now often replaced with filo pastry. B'stilla is served at weddings and major celebrations — it is the grandest dish in the Moroccan repertoire.