What is Baklava?
Baklava is a multi-layered sweet pastry made from paper-thin sheets of phyllo dough, brushed with butter, layered with chopped nuts, baked until golden, and soaked in honey or sugar syrup. The dessert is a centerpiece of Ottoman, Levantine, and Greek cuisine, traditionally served at weddings, religious holidays, and major celebrations across the eastern Mediterranean and Middle East.
Popular Recipes and Regional Variations
The most renowned form is Turkish baklava, particularly the Gaziantep style protected by EU geographical indication, which uses pistachios from the Antep region, clarified butter, and a thin sugar syrup. The pastry is cut into diamond, square, or rolled shapes called cevizli sarma when filled with walnuts and rolled into cylinders.
Greek baklava typically uses walnuts and almonds, scented with cinnamon and cloves, and finished with a honey-heavy syrup that produces a darker, more aromatic glaze. Lebanese and Syrian baklava favor pistachios or pine nuts and orange blossom or rose water in the syrup, creating a lighter, more floral character. Iranian baqlava from Yazd uses ground almonds and is cut into smaller rhomboid pieces with a thinner syrup.
Modern variations include chocolate baklava, where dark chocolate is layered between phyllo sheets; baklava cheesecake, an American fusion combining the layered pastry with a baked cheesecake base; and kadayif baklava, made with shredded phyllo (knafeh-style strands) instead of flat sheets, producing a crisper, hair-like texture around the nut filling.
Preparation Technology
Use 500 g of phyllo dough (approximately 24 sheets), thawed slowly in the refrigerator for 8 hours. Keep stacked sheets covered with a damp cloth while working to prevent drying. Prepare 400 g of finely chopped pistachios or walnuts mixed with 30 g sugar and 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon. Melt 250 g unsalted butter and clarify it by skimming foam off the surface.
Brush a 30×40 cm baking pan with clarified butter. Layer 8 phyllo sheets in the pan, brushing each sheet generously with butter before adding the next. Spread half of the nut mixture evenly across the surface. Add 8 more buttered phyllo sheets, then the remaining nut mixture, and finish with the final 8 sheets, brushing the top liberally.
Using a sharp knife, score the unbaked baklava completely through all layers into diamond or square pieces of 4×4 cm before baking — cutting after baking shatters the brittle phyllo. Bake at 165°C for 50–60 minutes until uniformly deep golden brown. The slow, moderate temperature ensures the layers stay distinct and crisp without burning the surface.
While the baklava bakes, simmer 400 g sugar, 250 ml water, 100 g honey, 1 tablespoon lemon juice, and optional 1 teaspoon orange blossom water for 10 minutes until syrup thickens slightly (105°C). Pour the hot syrup over the just-removed hot baklava — or, classically, pour cold syrup over hot pastry — and let it rest uncovered at room temperature for at least 6 hours, ideally overnight, to absorb fully.
Tips and Common Mistakes
Pouring hot syrup over hot baklava produces soggy pastry because both phases of moisture penetrate the layers simultaneously without resistance. The classical technique uses temperature contrast — cold syrup over hot pastry, or hot syrup over cooled pastry — so the layers crackle and seal as the syrup is drawn into them. Either contrast works; matching temperatures does not.
Skimping on butter between layers leaves dry pastry sheets that fuse into a thick, leathery slab rather than separating into the signature flaky strata. Each phyllo sheet must be brushed corner-to-corner with melted butter; a single dry patch ruins the layer structure. Use clarified butter when possible because milk solids can scorch during the long bake.
Cutting the baklava only after baking causes the phyllo to shatter into uneven shards, and pieces fail to absorb syrup uniformly. Score completely through all the layers before baking with a long sharp knife, using a ruler if necessary for clean diamond shapes. The cuts also let syrup penetrate down into the layers rather than pooling on top.
History and Cultural Significance
The origins of baklava are contested between Turkish, Greek, Arab, and Iranian traditions, with each claiming a distinct lineage. According to Wikipedia’s account of baklava, the most widely accepted scholarly view places its modern form in the kitchens of the Topkapı Palace in Istanbul during the Ottoman Empire, where palace pastry chefs refined Central Asian layered-bread traditions into the thin-phyllo form recognized today.
The dessert spread throughout the Ottoman territories from the 15th century onward, taking root in the cuisines of Greece, the Balkans, the Levant, North Africa, and the Caucasus. Each region adapted the recipe to local nut crops and aromatic preferences — pistachios in Anatolia, walnuts in Greece and the Balkans, almonds in Persia, pine nuts in Lebanon — producing the distinct regional styles that persist today.
Today baklava remains a marker of hospitality and celebration across the eastern Mediterranean. It is the centerpiece of Eid al-Fitr in Muslim communities, Easter and Christmas tables in Greek and Armenian households, and Persian Nowruz spreads. Specialty baklava shops in Gaziantep, Istanbul, Athens, Beirut, and Damascus continue to sell the pastry by weight, with master pastry chefs holding generations-old reputations for distinct house styles.