Baklava
This top-rated Baklava recipe features buttery layers of flaky phyllo dough, spiced walnuts, and a generous drizzle of sweet honey syrup. It’s the ultimate make-ahead dessert—perfect for holidays, dinner parties, or just because. If you’ve never made baklava before, don’t worry—this step-by-step guide will walk you through it. It’s one of my all-time favorite desserts, and I think you’ll see why after the first bite.
I’ve been making Baklava for over 15 years and this is my perfected recipe. I made this free guide to share with everyone so you too can be an expert: Expert Guide to Baklava
Anyone who’s tasted this Middle Eastern dessert knows why. The flavors and textures are so unique and so delicious!
If you haven’t had it before, baklava is a dessert made with layers upon layers of butter brushed phyllo dough with cinnamon scented walnuts in the middle. After you bake it, you pour a citrus honey syrup all over it for each layered sheet of phyllo to soak up.
This dessert is quite sweet, but provided you use a good quality honey, you can really taste those nuances, and the texture has the most pleasing crunch and bite.
Why This is the Best Baklava Recipe
Perfected proportions – After countless rounds of testing, this version hits the sweet spot: not too many nuts, just enough flaky pastry to hold it all together, and while it’s sweet, it’s never overwhelming.
Make-ahead friendly – Baklava actually improves as it sits. It’s one of the easiest desserts to prepare in advance, perfect for holidays or hosting.
Freezer and Travel Friendly – Baklava stays fresh for a week at room temp or 3 months in the freezer. It also ships beautifully if you’re gifting or sharing with loved ones.
Simple Ingredient List – You don’t need anything fancy. Just a handful of pantry staples: phyllo dough, honey, walnuts, warm spices, and citrus.
How to Make Baklava Step by Step:
Baklava is mostly all about layering and assembly. It’s not really a difficult dessert, but just takes some time to put together. For best results, scroll through the following visual guide and read the recipe in its entirety to understand how it’s assembled.
Prepare the Spiced Nut Filling
- Place walnuts, cinnamon, cloves, and salt in a food processor:
- Pulse about 10 times, until the walnuts are well chopped:
That’s the filling. It’s so easy!
Layer the Phyllo and Melted Butter
- Place layers of thawed phyllo dough down into a 9×13 metal pan or baking dish, brushing each one with melted butter. Our layers will be 8-5-5-5-5-8.
- You don’t need to brush each layer thoroughly. Just a quick swish across several times, to cover most of it.
- Assembling the baklava, you want to move relatively quickly, to prevent the sheets of phyllo dough from drying out, so no need to be meticulous with the butter. If the phyllo starts to seem dry while you’re working, cover it with plastic wrap or a damp towel.
- Once you have 8 layers of phyllo in the bottom of the pan, add about 1/5 of the nut mixture to the pan, spreading it evenly:
- You’ll need about 2/3 cup of the ground nuts for each layer.
How to Make It Perfectly Even:
If you’re keen on making your homemade baklava really even, here’s how I did mine.
I bought a 1-lb box of phyllo sheets, which stated on the box that there were 18 13×18″ sheets.
Using a 9×13 pan, you should cut the sheets in half, which gives you 36 total sheets.
So for the phyllo dough, I did the layers like this: 8, 5, 5, 5, 5, 8, with nut layers in between each of those sets. Note that the top layer and the bottom layer have 3 more sheets of phyllo than the middle layers.
Cut Before Baking
- Once the baklava is layered, cut it into pieces using a very sharp knife:
- You can do squares, diamond shapes, triangles, or whatever shape you want.
Bake Until Golden
- Bake the baklava in the oven for 50 minutes, until it looks golden brown on the tops and edges: Keep an eye around the 40 minute mark as everyones ovens are different
- Then let the baklava cool for at least 15 minutes. In my experience, pouring the hot sweet syrup over hot baklava can make the bottom layers soggy. It’s best to let the baklava cool a bit before adding the syrup.
Prepare the Syrup
- In the meantime, start the syrup. Combine honey, water, sugar, cinnamon, orange peel, and lemon peel in a small saucepan:
I prefer to use the citrus peels and not any actual orange or lemon juice in the syrup, because the juices can get bitter during boiling. You may also wish to try adding 1 tablespoon of orange blossom water for flavoring, if you enjoy it.
Bring the sweet honey syrup to a boil, then cook for 5 minutes, until the sugar dissolves, and also to allow the cinnamon and citrus to flavor the syrup.
While the sugar syrup is still hot, pour it all over the baklava, which should soak it right up.
It is SO important that the syrup is hot when you pour it over, otherwise it won’t soak properly. Yes, I have tested this.
Let it rest
Now here’s the hard part….leave the baklava at room temperature for 8 hours, uncovered, to let the syrup properly absorb, and allow the flavors and layers to meld together.
You want to leave it without a cover, to prevent sogginess. Then your homemade baklava is ready to enjoy!
Next try my Rice Pudding or butter swirl Shortbread Cookies. Happy baking!
What Readers Are Saying
I’d love to share all 100+ five-star reviews on this recipe, but here are just a few highlights from home bakers who gave it a try:
“This is without a doubt the best baklava I’ve ever had. I’ve eaten baklava in the US, Greece, and Turkey and this one tops them all!” – Jim
“It was absolute perfection! I used frozen phyllo dough, skipped cloves, and still nailed it. So easy to follow!” – Janice
“My first time making baklava and it turned out amazing. I’m allergic to walnuts, so I used almonds—it still worked beautifully!” – Nunzie
Recipe FAQ:
Yes, it freezes beautifully. Store it in an airtight container for up to 3 months to prevent it from absorbing any odors.
Yes! Baklava keeps well at room temperature for up to one week. For longer storage, refrigerate for up to 3 weeks or freeze for up to 3 months.
Absolutely. Since baklava needs around 8 hours to fully soak up the syrup, it’s actually ideal to make it ahead.
Yes! Pistachios are also a popular choice, and you can blend any nuts you prefer. That said, I personally think walnuts give the best flavor and texture.
Tried this recipe? Leave a rating and comment below — I’d love to hear how it turned out! Or, follow me on Facebook, Instagram or Pinterest!
Baklava
Ingredients
For the Baklava:
- 16 oz walnuts
- 1.5 tsp ground cinnamon
- 1/4 tsp ground cardamom (or ground cloves)
- 1/4 tsp salt
- 16 oz phyllo dough* thawed
- 1 cup butter melted
For the Syrup:
- 1 cup water
- 1 cup sugar
- 1 cup good quality honey**
- 1 cinnamon stick
- 1 strip orange peel
- 1 strip lemon peel
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.
- Pulse the walnuts in a food processor with the cinnamon, cardamom, and salt until well chopped.
- To assemble the baklava, place 8 layers of phyllo dough one-by-one on the bottom of a 9×13 baking pan, brushing each lightly with butter.
- Spread 1/5 of the walnut mixture evenly on top (about 2/3 cup).
- Add another 5 layers of phyllo one-by-one, brushing each with butter, then add another layer of nuts. The total sequence should be phyllo layers of 8,5,5,5,5,8, with nuts in between those layers.
- Using a sharp knife, cut the baklava into whatever shape you desire (diamonds, squares, triangles, etc). See blog post for picture.
- Bake the baklava for 50 minutes, until golden on the edges and tops. Then let cool for at least 15 minutes.
- In the meantime, bring all the syrup ingredients to a boil in a saucepan, then reduce to a simmer for 5 minutes.
- Remove the citrus peels and cinnamon stick, and pour the hot syrup evenly over the baklava.
- Let the baklava cool completely at room temperature for 8 hours (uncovered, to prevent sogginess). Then it’s ready to enjoy!
Notes
Nutrition
Nutrition is estimated using a food database and is only intended to be used as a guideline for informational purposes.
Originally published March 2012.
107 Comments on “Baklava”
the orange blossom water ~ can it be added in addition to the citrus peel or is it in place of ?
In addition is fine. Orange blossom water is very powerful, so I would not add more than 1 tbsp. Maybe even start with 1.5 tsp.
I love baklava so much, my mom is Greek and experimented trying to find the perfect recipe for years. I would like to try my hand at making them myself now. The thing is, I don’t own a food processor. Would crushing the nuts with parchment paper and a meat tenderizer work? The closest thing I have is a small blender, the size of a bullet blender. Thanks for the recipe and tips!!
Yes, or even just cutting them up well with a knife on a cutting board.
By putting the walnuts into a heavy freezer quality zip lock bag and rolling over them with a rolling pin or a heavy canned food they crush really easy into a perfect texture for chopped walnuts. Parchment paper, plastic wrap or even a grocery store bag laid on top works as well.
Stellar recipe! It was easy to follow and my family and I were quite impressed with the result!
This is wonderful. Was not sure what “strip” of orange or lemon might signify, so did two short strips of both. Also wound up warming syrup for long time as started immediately after placing phyllo/walnut layers in oven. Flavor was fantastic.
I only changed one thing to this recipe. I am Greek and my Yaya always used pecans. It works better with the honey taste. Raw Honey or Wildflower honey makes the best for baklava. Hope this helped.
I love this baklava! I made it for work and everyone raved about it. They loved it because it’s not too sweet!
Should unsalted butter be used in the nut ingredients? Making this today. Thanks.
I am going to rate it even though I have not tasted it because it does look great!
Hello, I am a retired Chef and have not made Baklava in a very long time. I saw your recipe and liked the combination. My syrup had rose water & lemon juice. I also used homemade ghee/clarified butter. It does vary from region to region in the middle east. I just made it and it is cooling. Read the reviews. I am making this for a refugee family from Syria who are now placed in Raleigh NC. I will taste a tiny bit tomorrow before taking it to them. Keep doing amazing testing. Have a wonderful day and take care.
Kind Regards
Guna
Fabulous recipe
I have had my cousin’s baklava before, and it has always been delicious! Now, it’s my turn to give it a try…
Best I have ever had!
THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU I was going to go the bakery to get some baklava for my Mediterranean dinner party but saw your recipe. I never knew there was a difference in the honey and learned there was ..THANK YOU. My husband’s aunt always had soupy baklava and now I know why. Thank you…This baklava was easy and so good …the only problem is eating too much of it. Thank you for the recipe.! My husband had experienced such bad baklava in his life, he would not even try it for years but he loves this baklava…Thank you
That’s wonderful! So happy to hear. Enjoy!
I made it for a Mediterranean dinner party and the guests brought some baklava from their favorite bakery. We did a taste test and hands down your recipe won. They asked for the recipe and will make their own from now on. Thank you so much!
I can’t wait to try this recipe. I made 2 pans of baklava last night, poured cool syrup over hot baklava, rested overnight, and the layers are saturated with the honey syrup. Is that correct? Wish I could attach a photo.
Wonderful!! Easy instructions to follow.Better than any greek restaurant I have had.Enjoy all your recipes so far.
This is a great recipe! I made it this morning for a special dinner and it was a hit! I used 8oz of pistachios and 8oz of walnuts and 1/2 tsp salt by accident, which balanced the sweet syrup well. I followed the recipe exactly and it was delicious!