Crimean Tatar chebureks: a recipe with different fillings

CHEBUREK Crimean Tatar cuisine
Usually lamb is used, but you can also use cheese and, of course, any other fillings. Once upon a time, a long time ago, I ate my most delicious cheburek – which was with meat, tomatoes, and cheese at once and in the Crimea!
INGREDIENTS.
Dough:
-500g of flour + for dusting
-260g of water (boiling water)
-25g of vodka
-15g of vegetable oil
-salt
Stuffing:
-400g minced meat (beef or lamb)
-1 large tomato (180-200g)
-2 onions (200g)
-120g of cheese
-salt, pepper
Refined odorless oil for frying about 1 liter (but do not throw it away - cool and strain)
COOKING.
Make the dough:
- take flour, add salt, oil, and vodka, and pour boiling water over it
- Mix it with a wooden spatula and then with your hands. leave it to cool under the film.
- The dough should be pleasantly elastic, but not too tight and not too soft.
Stuffing:
I love it with tomatoes and cheese. So I took the meat, twisted it in a meat grinder, grated onions, and a whole tomato. I added grated cheese, like mozzarella or gouda, salt, and black pepper. The minced meat turned out to be very juicy (you can do everything in a blender, but the tomato is better on a grater)
Form the pasties:
- On a well-floured table, roll out a piece of dough thinly, adding flour, and cut out a circle with a lid.
- put a good spoonful of minced meat, sealing the edges, and securing them with a fork. (Sometimes you can inflate the cheburek a little so that it is even more inflated when cooking)
- I heat the oil on a fairly high heat, check how the piece of dough is fried
- I put 1 piece in the oil and fry it for about a minute on one side and the other.
The cheburek is ready when it starts to "puff up" – this is a sign that the filling has boiled inside, then it should be quickly and carefully removed on a paper napkin or on a wire rack to drain the excess oil
It is better to eat it folded in half, so that an "envelope" is formed and the juice does not leak out.