Boortsog are shaped into triangles or sometimes spheres. The dough consists of flour, yeast, milk, eggs, butter, salt, sugar, and margarine.
Tajik boortsog are often decorated with a criss-cross pattern by pressing the bottom of a small strainer on the dough before it is fried. It has been adopted by
Cossack cuisine as "bursak". Boortsog is often eaten as a dessert, with syrup, jam, or
honey. They can be thought of as cookies or biscuits; since they are fried, they are sometimes compared to
doughnuts. Mongolians and Turkic peoples sometimes dip boortsog in tea. In Central Asia, boorsok is often eaten alongside
chorba.
Mekitsa (, ) are doughnut-like fried dough balls popular in
Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Croatia,
Bulgaria,
Serbia (especially in the
Srem District of
Vojvodina), and
Slovenia (where they are known as "miške"). ==Preparation==