, a Slovenian variant , a Croatian variant Many varieties of gibanica and related dishes can be found throughout the Balkans; different gibanica are known as part of the national cuisines of
Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Croatia,
Serbia,
North Macedonia,
Slovenia, and
Friuli-Venezia Giulia (Italy, where it is called
ghibanizza),
Greece, and
Bulgaria, where it is usually called
banitsa. Recipes can range from sweet to savoury, and from simple to festive and elaborate
multi-layered cakes. The so-called "chetnik gibanica" is the fatter, greasier version; it received the name after World War II. From the basic recipe, many local specialties have evolved.
Prekmurska gibanica, for example, is a "fancy" multi-layered cake from
Prekmurje in Slovenia, served as a dessert course on festive occasions.
Međimurska gibanica, from the neighbouring
Međimurje region of Croatia, is a closely related but simpler and less "formal" dish consisting of four layers of fillings (prepared fresh cheese (
quark), poppyseed, apple and walnut). Another gibanica variety, called
Prleška gibanica, is known from
Prlekija to the west of the
Mur River. The basic concept of gibanica, a cake or pie involving a combination of pastry with cheese in differentiated layers often combined with layers of various other fillings, is common in the cuisines of the Balkans,
Anatolia, and the
Eastern Mediterranean. For example, a similar dish known as shabiyat (sh'abiyat, shaabiyat) is part of the cuisine of
Syria and
Lebanon. Gibanica can also be considered to resemble a type of cheese
strudel, with which it likely shares a common ancestry in the pastry dishes of the region, and the cuisines of the
Byzantine and
Ottoman empires. ==In culture==