Ćevapi sa lukom (grilled minced meat rolls with onion)
Small cylinders of seasoned minced meat, grilled over charcoal until golden and juicy, served in a soft flatbread (lepinja) with a mountain of raw chopped onion. Salty, smoky, deeply comforting.
Small cylinders of seasoned minced meat, grilled over charcoal until golden and juicy, served in a soft flatbread (lepinja) with a mountain of raw chopped onion. Salty, smoky, deeply comforting.
If you want to know what people really eat, you don't go to a fancy restaurant — you go to the ćevapi stand. In Belgrade on Saturdays, we'd queue in front of the grill, and for a few dinars you'd walk away with a lepinja stuffed with little grilled rolls and raw onion that stings. The secret was the meat kneaded long the day before and the charcoal fire, never gas. It's a dish that doesn't lie about inequality: rich or poor, in Sarajevo or Belgrade, everyone eats it standing up, with their fingers.
- •Minced beef (sometimes mixed with lamb) — generous amounts (base)
- •Crushed garlic — a few cloves (seasoning)
- •Baking soda — a pinch (tenderness)
- •Salt, black pepper — to taste (seasoning)
- •Raw onion — abundant (garnish)
- •Flatbread (lepinja/somun) — 1 per person (support)
Ćevapi sa lukom (grilled minced meat rolls with onion)
Small cylinders of seasoned minced meat, grilled over charcoal until golden and juicy, served in a soft flatbread (lepinja) with a mountain of raw chopped onion. Salty, smoky, deeply comforting.
Why this dish? Ćevapi are the quintessential Balkan street food: the food of markets, kiosks, and weekend outings in Belgrade. For an economist focused on understanding the material life of ordinary people, it is the democratic meal par excellence, accessible to all budgets.
If you want to know what people really eat, you don't go to a fancy restaurant — you go to the ćevapi stand. In Belgrade on Saturdays, we'd queue in front of the grill, and for a few dinars you'd walk away with a lepinja stuffed with little grilled rolls and raw onion that stings. The secret was the meat kneaded long the day before and the charcoal fire, never gas. It's a dish that doesn't lie about inequality: rich or poor, in Sarajevo or Belgrade, everyone eats it standing up, with their fingers.
Ingredients (period version)
- Minced beef (sometimes mixed with lamb) — generous amounts (base)
- Crushed garlic — a few cloves (seasoning)
- Baking soda — a pinch (tenderness)
- Salt, black pepper — to taste (seasoning)
- Raw onion — abundant (garnish)
- Flatbread (lepinja/somun) — 1 per person (support)
Ingredients
- Minced beef (20% fat) — 500 g (base)
- Minced lamb — 200 g (optional) (flavor)
- Garlic — 3 cloves, crushed (seasoning)
- Baking soda — 1/2 tsp (tenderness and binder)
- Sparkling water — 3 tbsp (moisture)
- Salt — 1.5 tsp (seasoning)
- Black pepper — 1/2 tsp (seasoning)
- Onion — 2 large, sliced (raw garnish)
- Flatbreads (lepinja or pita) — 4 (support)
Method
- Mix the meat with garlic, baking soda, salt, pepper, and sparkling water; knead vigorously for 5 minutes until a homogenous paste.
- Cover and refrigerate at least 4 hours, ideally overnight, to develop texture.
- Shape into small finger-sized cylinders (8–10 cm) with wet hands.
- Grill over charcoal or on a very hot griddle, turning, for 8–10 minutes until golden brown and juicy inside.
- Briefly warm the flatbreads on the grill.
- Serve 5–6 ćevapi per bread, with abundant raw sliced onion (and ajvar on the side).
How it was made : Ćevapi (ćevapčići) descend from Ottoman kebab, adapted in the Balkans as small unskewered rolls. In the 20th century they became the emblem of Yugoslav street food, sold in ćevabdžinica and grilled over charcoal; resting the meat and using embers are considered essential to the true taste.
The contemporary twist : Served in the "elephant curve" style: the rolls arranged in a rising arc on the board, a nod to the famous global inequality graph.
Branko Milanović · Charactorium