The following highlights some of the popular Traditional Bosnian Foods. If you manage to be in an Bosnian restaurant or you are visiting Bosnia and Herzegovina, I recommend the following:
1. Roast Lamb
It is one of my favourite typical meals. It is a whole lamb, roasted on a spit over a fire. The cooking time varies, but it can take up to 8-10 hours. Although roast lamb is prepared in various parts of the country, the tradition comes from the mountain settlements in the southern part. When the lamb is roasted, it is usually served with sliced onions, spring onions or baby potatoes and a few slices of bread.
3. Cevapi
Bosnia’s national dish, cevapi, looks like a short, thick sausage made from minced beef or lamb. You’ll find cevapi, the Bosnian kebab, in most restaurants and is often served in five to ten pieces with raw onions, sour cream and somun. Each restaurant cooks and seasons it differently, making each cevapi slightly different.
6. Baklava
Baklava is not traditionally a Bosnian food, but the sweet filled dessert is available throughout the country. As in the region, Baklava was introduced to Bosnia by the Ottomans. It is a dessert made from sheets of filo pastry. Bosnian Baklava looks like a small cake with layers of nuts, syrup and honey.
8. Sogan Dolma
Dolma is another dish found in the Balkans and the Mediterranean, Bosnia adds its own delicious twist. Vegetables, such as aubergine, peppers and courgette, are stuffed with meat or rice and seasonings. Bosnians serve hot meat dolma, often with a lemon-based sauce, and room-temperature rice dolma with a yoghurt-based garlic sauce. In Mostar, a regional speciality is Sogan Dolma which uses an onion as a vegetable base.