Turkish Baklava – Crispy Pistachio and Walnut Pastry in Honey Syrup
Layers of paper-thin filo, crushed pistachios and walnuts soaked in fragrant honey and lemon syrup.
About This Recipe
Baklava is the crown jewel of Middle Eastern and Turkish pastry-making — dozens of paper-thin filo layers sandwiching a fragrant nut filling, baked until shatteringly crispy, then drenched in hot syrup that seeps into every layer, creating a confection that is simultaneously crispy, sticky, nutty and sweet. The contrast between the crunch of the pastry and the yielding sweetness of the syrup is what makes baklava so irresistible. The Turkish city of Gaziantep holds a PGI (Protected Geographical Indication) for its baklava, which uses local pistachios and a specific butter-clarification technique. The key to home baklava is working quickly with the filo (it dries out fast), using generously clarified butter between every layer, and making the syrup before you bake so it is cold when the hot baklava comes out of the oven — this temperature contrast is what creates the crunch. While baklava takes patience, it is genuinely achievable at home and produces results that rival professional versions. It keeps for a week at room temperature and makes a spectacular gift or dinner-party dessert.
Ingredients
Serves 24
- 400 gfilo pastry(thawed if frozen)
- 200 gunsalted butter(clarified)
- 200 gpistachios(finely crushed)
- 150 gwalnuts(finely crushed)
- 1 tspground cinnamon
- 400 gcaster sugar
- 300 mlwater
- 3 tbsphoney
- 1lemon(juice only)
- 2cloves
Instructions
- 1
Make the syrup first
Combine sugar, water, honey, lemon juice and cloves in a saucepan. Bring to a boil, stir to dissolve, simmer 10 minutes. Cool completely.
Cold syrup on hot baklava creates the crispy texture. Never pour warm syrup on warm baklava.
- 2
Prepare the filling
Mix crushed pistachios, walnuts and cinnamon together.
- 3
Layer the filo
Brush a 30x20cm baking tray with clarified butter. Lay one filo sheet, brush with butter. Repeat until you have 10 buttered layers. Spread half the nut filling. Add 5 more buttered filo layers, then remaining filling. Top with 10 more buttered filo layers.
Keep unused filo under a damp cloth — it dries out in minutes.
- 4
Cut before baking
Using a sharp knife, cut into diamond or square shapes all the way through to the bottom. This allows syrup to penetrate.
- 5
Bake
Bake at 160°C for 40–45 minutes until deep golden and crispy throughout.
- 6
Add syrup
Remove from oven. Immediately pour cold syrup evenly over the hot baklava. You will hear it sizzle. Leave to absorb for at least 2 hours before serving.
Pro Tips
- →
Clarify your own butter for the best flavour — melt and skim off the white foam.
- →
Cut before baking so the lines are clean. Trying to cut after baking shatters the layers.
- →
The minimum rest time after adding syrup is 2 hours. Overnight is even better.
Variations
- •
All-pistachio baklava: Gaziantep style, using only finely ground pistachios.
- •
Rose water syrup: add 1 tbsp rose water to the syrup for a floral variation.
Storage
Store covered at room temperature for up to 1 week. Do not refrigerate — it makes the filo go soggy.
History & Origin
Baklava's origins are contested between Turkey, Greece, Lebanon and Armenia, all of which have ancient layered pastry traditions. The Ottoman Imperial Palace kitchens in Istanbul are credited with refining baklava to its current form in the 15th–16th centuries. The Gaziantep style became so prized that it was awarded EU Protected Geographical Indication status in 2013.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why is my baklava soggy instead of crispy?
The most common cause is pouring warm syrup over warm baklava. The syrup must be cold and the baklava hot — this temperature contrast creates steam that penetrates the layers while keeping the top crispy. Also ensure you used enough butter between every single filo layer.
Nutrition Facts
Per serving (250g) · 24 servings total
Time Summary
Have Questions?
Ask our AI cooking assistant anything about this recipe — substitutions, techniques, scaling.
Chat with AI Chef →More Turkish Recipes
Community
Join the conversation
Sign in to leave a comment and save your favourite recipes