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Baklava: Recipe

By Thegenaboveme @TheGenAboveMe

Baklava: Recipe

I've been making baklava since 1982. 

The first time I made baklava--three decades ago--it was a disaster.
Having recently returned from six months studying in Jerusalem (Jan-June 1982), I decided to tackle this Mediterranean treat.
As a novice, I accidentally added the syrup before baking the butter-layered pastry filled with nuts and spices.
Oops.
I assembled it at my apartment but baked it at a reunion--held at one of our teacher's home,  David K. Ogden aka DKO.
When others asked me about the progress of this dessert, I remember looking in the oven and then shouting back over my shoulder, "It's swimming in so much butter and syrup that it's doing the backstroke!"
I've had 33 more years to practice making baklava.  May you benefit from my slow learning curve!

Baklava: Recipe

Gathering ingredients. 

Ingredients
1 pound of nuts* (4 cups of halves)
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 cup of melted butter
1 pkg (16 oz) phyllo dough aka fillo, thawed
1 cup of water
1 cup of granulated sugar
1/2 cup of honey
1 teaspoon vanilla
1/2 teaspoon lemon zest
*I prefer pecans, but others use pistachios, walnuts or even mixed nuts.  If they are already chopped, you only need 3.5 cups.

Directions:
1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F and butter a 9x14 inch baking dish.

Baklava: Recipe

I hand chop pecans even though a food processor is faster.

Keep the phyllo dough in the fridge and in the packaging until immediately before use.

2. Create nut mixture by chopping 3.5 cups of pieces or 4 cups halves and mixing in the cinnamon.
Sometimes I use cinnamon, nutmeg and/or cardamom. I chop the nuts by hand because a food processor produces very inconsistent results.
3. Separate nut-spice mixture into 6 custard dishes so that each dish has the same amount of spices and the same ratio of fine to coarsely chopped nuts.

Baklava: Recipe

Add nut-spice mixture between
2 layers of buttered phyllo

I recently started dividing the nut-spice mixture into custard dishes before layering.  Previously, the baklava would have uneven layers with very course layers at the bottom and finer and finer layers as I worked my way to the top. 

4. Check to make sure you remembered to butter the 9 x 14 baking dish.

5. Place a phyllo sheet in the butter dish and dab with melted butter.  Put 2 or 3 layers of butter-dabbed phyllo on the bottom of the baking dish.
Then sprinkle 1 custard dish worth of the spice-nut mixture (about 1/2 a cup for each layer), then 2 layers of phyllo.

Baklava: Recipe

Cut the baklava BEFORE baking

Alternate until you complete 6 layers of nut-spice mixture.  Top that off with 4 or 5 layers of butter-dabbed phyllo at the top.

I don't cover every inch with butter. I create a pattern like circles on the side of dice.  I like my baklava crispy, so I'm moderate with my use of butter. 

6. Cut the phyllo into triangles BEFORE baking.

Baklava: Recipe

Make syrup while baklava cooks

7. Place into the oven and set the timer for 30 minutes.
8. While the baklava is baking, create the syrup.
Combine 1 cup of water with 1 cup of granulated sugar and bring to a boil, stirring to make sure that the sugar is dissolved into a syrup.

9. Bring to a simmer and add 1/2 cup of honey, 1 teaspoon of vanilla, and 1/2 teaspoon of lemon zest.
Keep warm on a low burner.

Baklava: Recipe

I like the corner pieces because they are crunchy! 

10. I usually check the baklava after 25 minutes. I remove it from the oven when it's golden brown, which can be anywhere from 25 to 35 minutes.  This time, it was 30.
11. Place the baklava on a cooling rack and pour the syrup evenly over the top. It will sizzle (so much fun).
12. Cool before serving.
Serve out of the pan our place into paper muffin cups.
People tell me this freezes well. I have no idea, because my friends and family members eat the whole pan at the first opportunity.
Related:
Cranberry Salsa
Berry-licious Lighter Dessert
Travel to Jerusalem Made Me Feel My Youth


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