Cheese Saganaki

Saganaki is a pan seared cheese, one of the best Greek mezedes (plural of the word mezes).   For my readers who are new to this blog, mezes is an appetizer served with wine, ouzo or tsikoudia.

Cheese saganaki served with lemon wedges image

There is a lot of false information given on the internet and if your read about saganaki in Wikipedia, you will read that it means flaming cheese, sometimes translated as fried cheese.

In Greece no one flames the cheese.  This was invented in the United States as an attraction in restaurants.

(Update 2026: Well, I just checked it years later and finally they have fixed their post!!!).

A Short Historical Note on Saganaki

The word “saganaki” does not originally describe the ingredients, but the vessel in which the dish is cooked in.

It comes from the Turkish word sahan, meaning a small, usually two-handled frying pan.

During the Ottoman period, the term passed into Greek culinary vocabulary and remained associated with dishes prepared and served in this shallow metal pan.

Over time, “saganaki” came to describe a whole category of foods cooked in this way, from the famous fried cheese to shrimp in tomato sauce or mussels saganaki.

What unites them is not a single recipe, but the method: ingredients cooked quickly in a small pan and brought straight to the table, in this pan, bubbling and fragrant.

It is a beautiful example of how a cooking utensil gave its name to an entire style of Greek dishes, simple, immediate and deeply convivial.

So, saganaki has nothing to do with the cheese but it is the cooking "pan" in which it is made and usually served in, called "sagani".

That does not mean, of course, that we cannot make saganaki in any other frying or sautéing pan.

Note:

As explained, saganaki originally referred to the dish it was cooked in. Over time, however, the term expanded in restaurant cuisines to include oven-baked dishes prepared in individual ceramic or clay dishes, especially when topped with melting cheese.

While this is not the original definition, it reflects the natural evolution of culinary language. An example is my Eggplant (melitz;anes) saganaki dish.

Eggplant (Melitzanes) saganaki image

What kind of cheese do I need to make Saganaki

Cheese Saganaki is very easy to make but you will need a very good Greek hard cheese. In Greece, you can find Saganotyri, which is made especially for this purpose.

Saganotyri, a cheese made for saganaki image
Saganotyri, a cheese made for saganaki

For those who can read Greek, they will see on the label that it says Traditional Greek Cheese, ideal for frying (saganaki) in hot oil (no dredging in flour is necessary) or grilled etc..., ideal for wine, ouzo etc.

However, saganaki can be made with many other Greek cheeses, such as Graviera, Kefalotyri, Kefalograviera, Formaella, Halloumi, Kaskavalli (another very good Cypriot cheese), hard feta or the special saganotyri you see in the photo, above.

Cheese saganaki image

Cheese Saganaki is something I make quite often here is a different way to make it.

Fried Saganotyri with sesame seeds

Ingredients

  • Saganotyri or any other of the above cheese
  • 1 egg or milk to wet the cheese
  • ½ cup sesame seeds (or flour)
  • ¼ cup olive oil
  • 1 lemon

Directions

  1. Cut the cheese into 1 cm thick slices.
  2. Beat the egg and wet the cheese (or wet it with the milk), then dip it in the sesame seeds.  If you don't like sesame seeds, just wet it and dredge it in flour.
  3. Heat the olive oil in a saganaki pan or if you don't have one in a frying or sautéing pan and fry on both sides.
  4. Serve hot with a squeeze of some lemon juice.
Cheese saganaki coated with sesame seeds image

cheese saganaki served image

Cheese Saganaki

Yield: 2
Prep Time: 5 minutes
Cook Time: 5 minutes
Total Time: 5 minutes

Authentic Greek cheese saganaki, pan-fried to a golden crust and finished with lemon. An easy traditional Greek appetizer made with kefalotyri or graviera.

No Ratings

Ingredients

  • 1 slice (about 200 grams) Kefalotyri or Graviera, about 1 cm thick
  • 2 tablespoons plain flour
  • 2–3 tablespoons olive oil
  • 1 wedge lemon
  • Freshly ground black pepper (optional)

Instructions

  1. Pat the cheese dry with kitchen paper.
  2. Lightly dredge it in flour on all sides, shaking off the excess. The flour helps create a crisp crust and prevents sticking.
  3. Heat the olive oil in a small frying pan over medium heat. The oil should be hot but not smoking.
  4. Place the cheese carefully into the pan and fry for about 2–3 minutes on the first side, until deeply golden.
  5. Turn it carefully with a spatula and fry the other side for another 1–2 minutes.
  6. Remove immediately and serve at once, squeezing fresh lemon juice over the top.

Notes

Tips for Perfect Saganaki

• The cheese must be cold from the fridge
before frying.
• Do not use feta as it will melt completely, unless it is a very hard feta.
• If the oil is too hot, the crust will brown before the inside softens.
• Serve immediately; saganaki waits for no one.

Nutrition Information
Yield 2 Serving Size 1
Amount Per Serving Calories 64Total Fat 0gUnsaturated Fat 0gSodium 1mgCarbohydrates 15gFiber 2gSugar 1gProtein 2g

"These values are automatically calculated and offered for guidance only. Their accuracy is not guaranteed."

Did you make this recipe?

Tried this recipe? Tag me @ivyliac and use the hashtag #kopiaste!

 

Collage cheese saganaki served image

I am sending this over to Loulou, who is hosting La Fête du Fromage.

Tyrini Sunday Recipes

Here are some creations of mine with cheese:

Other recipes with cheese:

Tyropita with Kourou Phyllo

Savoury Cake with Peppers

Tyrokafteri

Cypriot Tyropita

Tyropita with Kataifi

Tyropitakia (Cheese triangle bites)

Kopiaste

Kopiaste and Kali Orexi,

33 Comments

  1. This is a great post, Ivy. Very informative, and the food looks yummy! Thank you for your kind words on my blog. I'm really sorry I didn't manage to post my pineapple pie for your event - all the entries look amazing, and you did a excellent job with the round-up.

  2. I love all your presentations Ivy, it's one of the most loved mezedes by Greeks and lovers of Greek food alike.

    As for the dredging, it's a personal choice as to the approach. Some find the egg wash adheres better to the cheese when dredged in flour first. No right or wrong, just different approaches.

  3. Giz, sometimes, depending on the brand halloumi can be very salty but not all the time. Unfortunately I haven't tried this with any other cheese.

  4. Going to the beach?????? Oh my god! It's so cold here and it's been cold for so many days now and rainy... both mediterranean countries and yet so different ;D

    You know I'm now a cheese lover Ivy, but I would love to taste halloumi one day... I just have to get the guts to do it ;D

  5. I've never had cheese like that before, but I love the hard crust it forms on the outside. It looks rough and then smooth and creamy inside. Very cool 🙂

  6. All those picts made me hungry! I had grilled cheese in one of Athens taverna. I think my family and I were the only tourists in that room! Thanks Ivy for clarified the meaning of Saganaki. My in-laws love fried cheeses like that called Croquettes fromage de chèvre - goat cheese coated with crumbs.

    I definitely will try this dish because recently my local supermarket imported products from Cyprus. Wish me luck...

    Take care.

  7. Yum. I absolutely love cheese done like this. The last recipe with the orange juice looks particularly yummy. Definitely going to give it a try soon. Thanks so much. 😀

    +Jessie
    a.k.a. The Hungry Mouse

  8. A nice overview of Cheese Saganaki, Ivy. Kaseri (Kasseri) cheese is also widely used for cheese saganaki, but my preference is a kefalotiri or kefalograviera cheese.

  9. This is my favorite post so far! When my parents went to Limnos in April (and found my dad's long lost cousin), they introduced them to the Limnos cheese that you fry like this. They brought back tons of the cheese (we were staying in France for a month) and every day we fried it up and ate...it was SO GOOD. They will go to Limnos again in a few months and bring back more cheese, and at that time, I'm going to try your variations! (It's too expensive to buy here at my store...$10 for a small chunk).

  10. I don't get the whole Nofollow thing - I mean, people want others to comment on their blog, giving them content, but they're not prepared to give the commenter something in return. Seems a bit selfish to me

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.