Donair & Sweet Sauce Recipe (2024)

Posted on May 6, 2009 by RuneRider | 10 Comments

Donair & Sweet Sauce Recipe (1)

The donair is the Canadian iteration of the popular Döner kebab that has been served throughout the middle east for hundreds of years and is now growing quite popular in Europe and around the world. The donair is related in some ways to the popular Lebanese version of this dish called the shawarma and shares some of the basic building material such as the pita and some of the veggies. In parts of Canada donair meat is now frequently found as an offering at the increasingly popular shawarma shops that are opening across the country. While there is usually nowhere near the assortment of toppings on a donair that is offered on a shawarma, with donair meat now on the menu the hybrid donair meat shawarma with more toppings and a choice of sauces is growing in popularity.

The Donair is more basic than the shawarma and features a ground meat and spice blend which is usually beef but sometimes a combination of beef and lamb that is formed into a barrel-shaped loaf and cooked on a vertical spit. The finished meat once cooked is then carved off the loaf in strips before being wrapped in a pita with various additions, most commonly lettuce, tomato and onions are added and the fillings are coated with a sweet creamy sauce.

This Canadian version is credited to have been first made in Halifax, Nova Scotia and while there is some argument as to the exact originator, Velos Pizza which was taken over by the current claim holder King of Donairs in the late 1970’s was said to be making them as early as 1971.

Extremely popular in the Atlantic provinces of Canada and in the province of Alberta since the late 1970’s the donair has spread throughout Canada and is found in shops in cities and even some smaller towns across the country. The tasty meat is in Alberta and the maritimes now used to make a variety of different hybrid dishes such as: donair pizzas, donair subs, and even egg rolls or stuffed pasta in some east coast shops. While this dish is not yet widely available in the United States the Greek version of the Döner kebab called the Gyro is quite popular and is found served from mobile carts, as fair food and at Greek or Italian style pizza and sandwich shops all across that country.

This is the closest I’ve come to finding the taste of a real donair from a shop. Thanks go out to Dash Riprock for the meat recipe. The sauce is my version of the sweet one that is normally served on a donair. I’m aware that there is debate over whether there should be any garlic in the sauce and I’ve added both it and onion, so if you’re some sort of purist then simply leave them out. This aside, If you want the right taste here is the one recipe you need.

Donair & Sweet Sauce Recipe (2)

Ingredients:

  • 6 pitas
  • 1 medium tomato, chopped
  • 1 onion, chopped
  • 2 cups shredded lettuce

For Donair Meat

  • 1 lb of medium ground beef (for better texture have the butcher run the beef through the grinder at least 3 times)
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1 tsp flour
  • 1 tsp ground oregano
  • ½ tsp garlic powder
  • ½ tsp onion powder
  • ½ tsp Italian seasoning
  • ½ tsp pepper
  • ¼ tsp cayenne pepper

For the Sauce

  • 1 can evaporated milk
  • 1 can sweetened condensed milk
  • 2 tbsp of garlic powder
  • 1 tsp onion powder
  • 4 tbsp white vinegar

Method:

For Donair meat

  1. Place ground beef in a large metal bowl and set aside to bring to room temperature.
  2. Mix all the spices together in a small bowl(I use a morter & pestle to grind them.)
  3. Add spice mix to the meat a little at a time, working it through well. Pick the meat up and throw it down into the bowl(or if you have a large cutting board use it). Do this 20-30 times, kneading it after each throw.(When throwing the meat you need to do so with force, this gives the meat the proper texture).
  4. Heat oven to 350°F
  5. Form the meat into a loaf patting it down like you would a hamburger, but making it into a single flat loaf shape. Place the loaf on a broiler pan (if you don’t have one a cookie sheet will do).
  6. Bake for 1¼ hrs (turning over half way through).
  7. Remove from oven and let the meat cool down somewhat before cutting it into strips.
  8. Fry the slices before assembly if you want your meat crispy.

For the Sauce

  1. Combine both milks with onion powder and garlic in a medium glass or metal bowl(not plastic, as for some reason it doesn’t set up right in one).
  2. Slowly add vinegar and stir lightly with a fork just until mixture begins to thicken. Stir it too much and it will become runny.
  3. Refrigerate until ready to use. (This sauce will last a very long time if refrigerated)

To Serve

  1. Warm a frying pan over medium heat. Slightly wet each pita and warm it in the pan, turning until softened.
  2. Lightly coat a pita on one side with donair sauce.
  3. Place some of the meat on the pita and pour more sauce over it.
  4. Add shredded lettuce, chopped onion & tomato before folding and serve right away with plenty of napkins.

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Donair & Sweet Sauce Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is donair sweet sauce made of? ›

What is Donair Sauce? Donair sauce is a mixture of evaporated milk, white vinegar, garlic powder, sugar, and salt. Simply mix all of those ingredients together, allow them to curdle, then slowly stir. That is it.

Why is it called donair? ›

The Turkish word döner comes from dönmek ("to turn" or "to rotate"), so the Turkish name döner kebap literally means "rotating roast".

Why is my donair sauce not thickening? ›

The quicker you add the vinegar and the less you mix (I usually give the spoon 3 or 4 turns around the bowl), the thicker the sauce will be. Let sauce sit for at least one hour in refrigerator before using. Eventually (hours to days later), the sauce may start to separate.

What cut of meat is donair? ›

What is a donair? A proper donair is a tasty dish made up of four main ingredients: donair meat, toppings, donair sauce, and pita bread. Donair meat is made from spiced ground beef sliced off a rotating cone of meat.

Is a donair the same as a gyro? ›

So it's a gyro? No … but also yes. Donairs, like gyros and shawarma, are a variation of the Turkish doner kebab. It generally comes down to meat and toppings: donair is usually beef or chicken, gyros traditionally consist of pork or chicken and shawarma can be chicken, beef or lamb.

What is shawarma vs donair? ›

The first type of product (commonly referred to as donairs) is made from ground meat that is formed into a cone shape and frozen. The second type of product (commonly referred to as shawarmas) is made from thin or whole cuts of meat that are marinated before being stacked on a vertical skewer.

What do Americans call Donairs? ›

In the United States, it is usually called gyro(s), from Greek γύρος, sometimes pronounced [dʒaiɹow] according to its spelling, with the 's' taken to be the plural morpheme, sometimes [jiɹos] as in Greek. In Canada, the same dish is almost always known as doner, from Turkish döner, also spelled donair.

What does donair mean in Canada? ›

(dəʊˈnɛə ) noun. Canadian. a snack of doner kebab meat, onions, and chopped tomatoes, served with a sweet sauce. Collins English Dictionary.

Is a donair healthy? ›

The health benefits of eating donairs would be from the veggies they're topped with and the protein in the meat itself. Aside from that, don't expect to eat anything too nutritional from a donair meal. Regardless, donairs taste fantastic, and that's the entire point of ordering one anyway.

Is condensed milk the same as evaporated milk? ›

Both are concentrated, shelf-stable milk products that have been heated until at least 60 percent of their water content has evaporated. The main difference between evaporated milk and condensed milk is that evaporated milk is unsweetened while condensed milk is sweetened.

What does donair sauce taste like? ›

Donair sauce is creamy and sweet with a slightly sour taste. If sweet and sour sauce was made creamy, it would be something like this. Donair sauce originally was used to top donairs - which is kind of like a gyro but with donair sauce instead of tzatziki.

Is King of Donair real? ›

King of Donair (often abbreviated KOD) is a chain of restaurants that was established in Halifax, Nova Scotia, in 1973 by Greek immigrant Peter Gamoulakos, who popularized the donair in the city.

What do you eat with Donairs? ›

The Bread– Halifax Donair has to be served on pita bread, lightly steamed just to soften slightly and allow to soak up all of the juices of the meat. The stretchy texture of a properly steamed pita add so much.

What is a German donair? ›

The sandwich is Germany's most popular street food dish (recently stealing the title from currywurst), with around 18,000 shops in the country that together sell millions of kebabs a day. You can trace German döner back to the traditional Turkish version, served sliced on a plate and accompanied by lavash bread.

Is donair Greek or Lebanese? ›

Although donairs were chosen as the official food of Halifax in 2015, the meal is originally Greek. But the donair sauce was invented on the East Coast, a Greek donair cook said.

What is donair made of? ›

It's made with spiced ground beef, tomatoes, onions, topped with a uniquely delicious sweet garlic donair sauce, all wrapped up inside of steamed pita bread! Often compared to gyros, döner kabab, or shawarma, donairs are uniquely Canadian and so very delicious!

Is there sugar in donair sauce? ›

Ingredients: Sugars (sugar, glucose solids), Modified milk ingredients, Modified corn starch, Sunflower oil, Garlic powder, Butter solids, Sodium diacetate, Dipotassium phosphate, Mono and diglycerides, Tricalcium phosphate, Soy lecithin, Tocopherols, Lactic acid, Calcium lactate, Colour (caramel, paprika, turmeric).

Where did sweet donair sauce come from? ›

The Greeks who came to Halifax made sweet sauce because not everyone liked tzatziki. We have developed the sauce afterward and made it into what it is now.” With the sweet donair sauce, Greek immigrants were able to create a Nova Scotian version of the Greek gyros.

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