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    Home » Recipes » Treats

    Published: Oct 11, 2012 · Updated: Feb 28, 2025 by Becky Sue

    The Powerbar Of The Gods. A Recipe For Baklava.

    ↓ Jump to Recipe
    Baklava
    All hail the sweet and flaky ancient holy Greek dessert, baklava.

    According to my Greek friend, Yiorgos, baklava roughly translates to powerbar of the gods. Given the amount of sugar involved, I now know where those ancient Gods got their powers. I asked Yiorgi to teach me how to properly prepare authentic Greek Baklava. Below is the recipe. Warning it contains some curse words in both English and Greek.

    Walnut Grinder
    I wish i had one of these ancient nut chopping contraptions.
    Chopped Nuts
    Otherwise, you can always use a modern day food processor like this.
    Phyllo Dough
    Hundreds of phyllo dough sheets.

     

    Houfta
    Sprinkle a houfta (handful) of the nut mix over the phyllo dough.
    Yiorgi buttering the phyllo
    Yiorgi buttering the phyllo, there is so much butter involved.
    Measuring Baklava
    Gently score the top layer every 2 inches, then cut into squares along the lines.
    Cutting Baklava
    NEVER forget to cut the baklava before baking or it will be like cutting through Kevlar.
    Golden Baklava
    The baklava is baked with it resembles the golden tan of a Greek Goddess.
    Pouring Syrup
    Yiorgi pours the syrup over the hot baklava while I listen to the sweet sizzle.
    Ouzo shots!
    A big fat Greek shoutout to Yiorgos for teaching me a tradition that has been in his family for centuries. I am forever indebted to you, as all civilization is to Greece. Efharisto.
    Baklava Pan
    A half filled pan of baklava is like the golden ratio of dessert.
    Baklava Pan
    It's a sweet and sticky mess, the very best kind.
    Print

    Recipe

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    Powerbar Of The Gods, Baklava

    The Powerbar Of The Gods. A Recipe For Baklava.


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    • Author: Baking The Goods
    • Total Time: 2 hours 35 minutes
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    Description

    An authentic old world Greek baklava recipe, passed down from generation to generation and reluctantly shared with the new world. (No worries Grecians, we will never make it as good as all of the YiaYia's out there.)


    Ingredients

    Units

    You will need

    • roasting pan 16” x 12” x 2.5” deep - 1
    • fresh phyllo dough from an authentic Greek deli (non of that frozen BS from the grocery store - 2 packages)

    Ingredients for the filling

    • unsalted (butter melted - 3-4 sticks)
    • A shit ton of walnuts - 3 cups
    • 1 part blanched almonds to every shit ton of walnuts - 1 (ish cups)
    • sugar - ¼ cup
    • cinnamon - at least a few teaspoons

    Ingredients for the syrup

    • sugar - 4 cups
    • water - 2 cups
    • Lemon - 1 thick slice
    • cinnamon stick - 1
    • honey - ½ cup

    Instructions

    1. The first rule in making traditional Greek baklava is to let someone else do the tedious work for you....it’s well worth a trip to the Greek market and $4 for freshly made phyllo.
    2. Preheat the oven to 350°
    3. Melt butter in a small saucepan. While that shit is melting, put a small Greek kid to work at chopping the nuts.
    4. Grind the walnuts nuts until they appear evenly coarse. Toss them into a big mixing bowl and repeat with the almonds. Then add the sugar and add few punches of cinnamon into the mix. If you have a trained Greek nose like Yiorgi, you will know when the mix is right by the scent of the bowl, basically it should give off a nice nutty aroma with a spicy kick of cinnamon.
    5. Mix it all up with a wooden spoon and set aside. Lightly grease the pan. Roll out the phyllo dough.
    6. Lay down 1 sheet of phyllo and brush with melted butter. Repeat 6 more times so you have a base of 7 sheets, no more, no less. Sprinkle a houfta (handful) of the nut mix over the phyllo dough. If you have small and delicate American hands like me, you may need two houftas.
    7. Now cover with another sheet of phyllo and butter it up. Add a second sheet and butter that poutana up too. Sprinkle with your houfta and repeat, repeat, repeat, repeat...You will do this for what feels like 3000 years but, really only until you’ve made it through 2 of the phyllo packages.
    8. Once you have filled your pan nearly ¾ of the way to the top you will stop with the houfta nonsense and add 8-10 layers of only phyllo painted with butter. It’s almost oven time but NEVER forget to cut the baklava before baking or it will be like cutting through Kevlar. Gently score the top layer every 2 inches, then cut into squares along your lines.
    9. Once you’re square, you will cut each square in half forming little Greek deltas.
    10. Take a shot of ouzo.
    11. Bake the batch for 45-50 minutes. Rotate the pan and bake for another 20-30 minutes until it is the warm golden color of an Ancient Greek Goddess’ skin.
    12. While the baklava is baking, make the syrup. In this case, we will actually measure. Pour the sugar and water into a saucepan. Boil until clear, like ouzo. Also, take a shot of ouzo now....you’ve earned it, koukla!
    13. Once the syrup is clarified, remove from heat and and add the lemon, honey and cinnamon stick. Allow to cool.
    14. Once the baklava is baked to perfection, remove from the oven and evenly pour the syrup over the HOT baklava. The sweet sizzling sound lets your know that all of those crispy thin layers are soaking up the syrup.
    15. It is important that you let the baklava set for at least 8 hours before serving.
    16. Now, soak up some syrup yourself and shoot some more ouzo, you need to keep yourself occupied until the baklava sets. Yasou!
    • Prep Time: 1 hour 30 minutes
    • Cook Time: 1 hour 5 minutes

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    1. Aleisha says

      March 21, 2015 at 11:43 pm

      Hey Kim. For a food project for school i had to make baklava. I found your recipe and instantly loved it, from the pictures to the method of making the baklava. So i decided to make it and it turned out sooooooo gooooood. Will defiantly make it in the future 😀 Thankyou for giving me an A+ haha

      Reply
      • beckysue says

        March 23, 2015 at 7:10 am

        Hooray! I am so glad you enjoyed it...and even happier to hear you got an A+. Keep it up (the baking and the good grades). 😀

        Reply
    2. Kim R says

      September 18, 2014 at 7:55 am

      OMG! This recipe made me laugh...hard! Mine is similar. Might have to give this a go though!

      Reply
      • beckysue says

        September 22, 2014 at 9:15 am

        Hi Kim. I had so much fun making this baklava with my buddy, Yiorgi...glad you found it entertaining too! Baking is always better with buddies. 😀 Let me know if you make it!

        Reply

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