To be good, boza – the cereal-based slightly  fermented drink – should have a hint of the grain it is made out of, master  boza-makers say. How is boza actually made, following the traditional Radomir  recipe – that is something guests to the town of Radomir are going to find out  if they go to the town on 14 October when the colourful festival dedicated to  boza takes place.
At the beginning of the 20th century, Radomir  was known as the centre of the boza-making trade, and the fame of the boza from  Radomir had spread far and wide in the country. The people of Radomir learnt  the art of making boza from Albanians - of whom it is said they are the top  master boza-makers in the whole of the Balkans.
Ali Serbez’s famed boza shop is  going to open doors once again this year – he was Albanian, and the “father” of  boza making and trading in the town.
 The old marketplace is also going to come  to life – with elegant ladies with their parasols and their fans, coming to buy  home-made products, and together with the gentleman, replicating the atmosphere  of the market from the turn of the 20th century. Besides boza, there  will also be baklava-making demonstrations. In addition to all that – the museum  exposition at the Stoyo House will display ancient utensils and objects  connected with the boza-making trade.
The world’s only monument to  the boza-maker is to be found right here, in Radomir, and it is a reminder of  the skills of old master Ilia. And the recipe for Radomir boza sounds simple  enough: “It is made out of millet, if you don’t have millet – out of barley or  rye flour. Roast the millet, then boil in water for 3 hours, pour into a trough  made out of pine-wood, add leaven, leave for 8 hours – and there you have it,  the miracle is done.”
Compiled by Gergana Mancheva
Translated and posted by Milena Daynova
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