In Lebanon, nobody makes baklava at home! Every neighborhood has at least one famous pastry-maker whose family has been making it for hundreds of years. People just buy it!
I had used phyllo dough a few times over the years; decided it was too much trouble.
Then one day, a lady I knew was having a fund-raiser at her house with 125 attendees, and I agreed to help out; as soon as I realized what I was getting myself into, I placed an urgent call to my Egyptian-born friend Phoebe; “You have got to help me!“ I knew she had years and years of experience churning out thousands of trays of baklava for her Coptic church festivals all over the South. Cooking and baking for a crowd was second nature to her.

I had 48 hours and we had no time to lose; I set out unrolling the phyllo out of each package and apprehensively praying that the thing would not dry out or tear or do something very annoying like crumble in little pieces; I checked Phoebe on my right: I was stunned!!!!!
Here she was, grabbing the phyllo, slapping it over, crumbling it like a piece of old tissue paper! I wanted to scream: “Are you crazy? What are you doing? This is phyllo dough, not your old mop!” Only the fact that I was desperate for her help made me bite my tongue. As it turned out, her manhandling of phyllo was sure-footed and she produced tray after tray of the most professional-looking (and tasting) baklava, taking 10 minutes to finish up one tray, and moving on to the next, until it was all completed, in ample time.
Here is Phoebe’s 10-minute, fool-proof technique, step-by-step. (I have adapted it slightly).

INGREDIENTS: One tray, 9inX13in, 24 baklavas or 48 mini-baklavas
- 12 ounces of pistachios, peeled and chopped coarsely in a food processor for one minute. See note at the bottom on peeling. I strongly encourage you to chop your nuts.
- 1 cup of syrup. See note on how to make the syrup at the bottom of the post.
- 1 cup of unsalted butter, melted and clarified. (See note at the bottom of the post on clarifying butter)
- 1 pound package of Phyllo dough
METHOD:
Before starting make sure all the ingredients are ready and placed nearby on a work surface.
Utensils needed are:
A brush (for greasing the pan), a baster, a rectangular pan (9×13), a large spoon for mixing the nuts, a sharp knife, a small spatula or knife (not sharp), a large spatula. A damp kitchen towel.
FIRST STEP:
- Place the chopped pistachios in a bowl, pour two ounces of melted butter on top.
- Pour 2 tablespoons of syrup over the pistachios and combine the syrup, pistachios and butter mixture for 10 seconds until shiny and well-mixed.
- Grease the pan with some melted butter, or spray with a can of butter spray for 3 seconds.
- Pour the oil and the clarified butter in one bowl. Set a spoon or brush nearby.

SECOND STEP:
- Open the package of Phyllo; unroll it; place the pan on top of the sheets of Phyllo, with one end on top of the edge. Count the sheets: you should have 22 sheets of Phyllo. You will use 10 sheets for the bottom and 10 sheets for the top layer. That leaves 2 sheets for the middle section.
- Cut the dough with kitchen shears, following the edge of the pan, so that all the sheets will fit the pan, within half an inch. You will have 22 sheets of scraps. Leave a quarter-inch border all around, no more.
- The scraps will be used as a filler in the middle, to give the baklava volume, and save time in assembly. Cover the scraps with the damp kitchen towel.

THIRD STEP:
- Using the baster, squirt two tablespoons of clarified butter on the pan. Brush for a few seconds to spread it all around.
- Take 2 sheets of the cut Phyllo and place in the pan; with the baster, squirt butter/oil mixture at different spots on the pan.
- Take 2 more sheets, repeat the operation; take 2 more sheets, then 2 then 2, until all 10 sheets have been used. Cover the remaining 12 sheets with the damp kitchen towel.
FOURTH STEP:
- Take 1 sheet of scrap and crumple it up like a piece of tissue paper. Place on the pan, and crumple one more sheet until all are crumpled and placed side by side.
- Squirt butter on all the crumpled sheets generously.


FIFTH STEP:
- Place two sheets of Phyllo on top of the crumpled sheets to prepare a smooth surface for placing the pistachio nuts.
- Spread the pistachio nuts all over and smooth the layer of nuts with the large spatula.

SIXTH STEP:
- Now that the pan is covered with a layer of pistachios, cover with the remaining 10 sheets of Phyllo; take 2 sheets at a time, squirt with butter going up and down until all 10 sheets are used up.
SEVENTH STEP:
- Take a knife with a dull edge or a spatula, run all around the pan tucking the phyllo into the pan so that it is neatly tucked.
- With the sharp knife, cut 3 columns (measure with a ruler if you wish) and 4 rows; you will obtain 12 squares. Cut diagonal lines in the squares to obtain 24 triangles.
- Squirt butter on top of pan.
- Place the pan in a 350F oven for 45 minutes or until the baklava appears toasted and a deep gold.


EIGHT STEP:
- Pour the syrup on the baklava when you pull it out of the oven; use a tablespoon and pour the hot syrup one spoon at a time in the cut sections of the baklava; use as much syrup as your taste dictates, reserving the extra syrup for people who want to pour more on their plate. I use less than 3/4 cup of syrup for the entire pan.
- After having drizzled the syrup, let it sit uncovered for a few hours, then cut the individual pieces with a sharp knife and set side by side in a metal or plastic container to be stored for three weeks.

HOW TO MAKE CLARIFIED BUTTER:
- Take 4 sticks of unsalted butter and place in a heavy-bottomed saucepan. Let the butter melt slowly; it will foam at the top; remove the foam with a spoon. Let it melt completely and continue to heat up, remove the foam until there are none left. When the butter is clear, transfer to a jug through a sieve on which you will have placed a paper towel or coffee filter; this step is to remove more of the whitish substance as possible; the clarified butter is the yellow clear liquid that remains. When ready to use, it should be reheated slowly so that it is clear again and liquid. Keep any extra clarified butter covered in the fridge for up to a year.
HOW TO MAKE THE SYRUP:
- Measure two cups of sugar and one cup of water and place in a saucepan. Bring to a boil, stirring from time to time and boil for 10 minutes. Add a teaspoon of fresh lemon juice to the syrup and boil one minute longer; add the rose water and orange blossom water and remove from the heat. You will obtain a larger quantity of syrup than what I have used for this batch, which you can keep for several weeks in a closed container in the fridge and offer more syrup to people who like their baklava sweeter. In Lebanon, Arabic pastries always come with a small container of extra syrup on the side.
HOW TO PEEL THE PISTACHIOS:
- Place the pistachios in a bowl and cover with water; let them sit in water for one hour, drain them and using your fingers, rub the pistachios together until the peels detach easily. Dry them with paper towel and dry further by spreading them out on a cookie sheet and roasting in a 300F oven for 10 minutes. Do not let them burn or brown. Remove from the oven, cool the pistachios at room temperature for one hour and process in a food processor or chop them by hand with a good knife, until they are coarsely chopped. They are now ready to be used.
If using other nuts, toast them for 10 minutes in a 300f oven, cool and chop coarsely in a food processor pulsing for 30 seconds.
NOTE: The clarified butter can be mixed with oil for those concerned about cholesterol. I would recommend 1/2 cup of oil and 1/2 cup of unsalted clarified butter.
The amount of butter and syrup is a matter of taste and personal preference. If you like more, douse more all over the pan. Do the same for the syrup. Here I tried to minimize the butter/sugar ratio for health reasons.










99 Comments
Joumana,
This looks delicious! I wish I had a couple of squares to go with my tea right now.
I love filo dough made foods. The idea of laying the sheets at bottom this way cuts prep time by at least1/2 of the time.
btw I recommended your blog to Omar my Lebanese friend who lives in the Mid West and he loves it
Cheers!
Heguiberto
I absolutely adore this sweet treat and gave made it just once at home. Thankfully here in Sydney you don’t have to travel or walk too far to get your fix!
Oh la la je suis si contente d’avoir trouvé votre blog. J’adore le baklava (aussi le ekmek kadayif, tukalik,mamoul et kurabia) mais je croyais que cela prendrait trop de temps. Quand j’habitais à Paris, mon père en ramenait d’une patisserie orientale. Mais je me rapelle à Marseille, quand mon père a retrouvé ses cousines (qu’il pensait étaient disparues) elles avaient fait une grande fête et il y avait des plats énormes, ronds, où elles avaient fait des baklavas. Aussi quand j’avais été à Istambul avec maman, j’étais très petite, mais je me rappèle toutes les patisseries, surtout le baklava (et les loukoums!) I shall try your recipe, that does not sound as hard as I would have thought. Thanks for posting it. Je voulais aussi vous demander – maman avait appris à faire des beureks, au fromage. Ils étaient si bons – vous connaissez? Avez-vous une recette?
I’ve always been intimidated by baklava, but it’s so delicious that I might just get over my fear of phyllo and try this 10-minute method!
Brilliant! Why didn’t we think of that. I will definitely remember this trick when I make this kind. My husband’s culture is used to a more Turkish kind that has finely chopped nuts between every two or three layers… but I love alllllll kinds of baklava!

Valerie
You’re a genius! Thank you for sharing thsi recipe. I’ve been craving this and can’t wait to try this once my new oven arrives! Have a great weekend!
Oh, I love your friend.
She just made my life a whoooooole lot easier!
Your friend Phoebe sure has brought a light to my day. I tried making a baklava once.
Although it had turned out amazing…and many pestery requests later…I still did not make it again. I have so many other recipes to try! But there may be hope yet.
Thanks for these lovely tips ;o)
BTW…are you trying to get yourself a gig as a xxx mama?!? Kidding…you look wonderfully vivacious. You seem to have the allure of someone who enjoys life immensely. Great on you
)
Ciao for now and flavourful wishes, Claudia
I have just one thing to say, NO WAY!!!
That is just amazing, Joumana. I actually feel empowered enough to give Baklava a whirl after this post. Of course, I have a slew of “some day” recipes but, I think the ease and outcome is a good enough reason to inch your post and recipe near the top of my bookmark list.
Thank you so much for sharing…your friend is a treasure:)
I have never seen a baklava recipe like this before (I’m so excited about it!
)! I can’t believe it’s so fast! I don’t make baklava all that often because it’s so time-consuming, but this recipe completely eliminates that problem!
TEN MINUTES!! Really?!?!? If that isn’t incentive then i don’t know what is.
Gorgeous.
What a great tip! I haven’t tried making baklava before, but this makes it easier. Perhaps I’ll try that technique making other things with phyllo.
@Vagabonde: j’ai posté une recette de beurek au fromage, mais je ne sais pas si ça ressemble à ceux de ta maman; je les ai fait avec une pâte qui vient de Turquie.
Hi Joumana,
I see that Phoebe used the syrup warm. Does that make it better? because I have a couple of recipes that insist that the syrup is cool before pouring over the baclava.
@Naziira: I used to do that to , but Phoebe likes to pour the syrup while it is simmering hot, she says it keeps the pastry crispy; I will say that it did, also halped by the fact that we put just a tablespoon of syrup on the creases and not on top.
Your friend has some serious skills, and noteworthy tips. Everybody raves over baklava, it is very delicious all that nice mix of nuts flaky and crisp blanket of pastry, they are caloric, but it is a nice treat for once in a while, Joumana ,can you substitute butter spray for the butter and use agave for the sugar?
I bake baklava so many time but Phobe make it so different by crumble 1/2 of the Phillo i will try this way.its much easy.
You had me at 10 minutes…but are you sure….so many steps lol
Wow, I have to take my time and read this slower and let it all sink in. I was hooked when you said 10 minutes and “crumbling like a piece of tissue”!
Sylvia, I don’t see why not! But it would be dry though. Worth trying.
I really adore these flaky treat….but to make them at home is quite a challange for me. Yours look so good that I even want to make some myself!
j’adore la baklawa et je là prépare souvent pour les fêtes de l’aid et autres, seulement nous on là coupe en losange et on arrose avec du miel, bisou joumana
OMG, I am drooling and it’s only 8:30 a.m. Love baklavas and believe me if I was not on a diet I would go and grab some phyllo and make it right now.
J’adore cette méthode ultra rapide…je connaissais cette méthode de froisser la pâte filo pour la pita au fromage mais j’ai jamais pensé à le faire pour les baklavas..Merci !!Bises.
PS: je vais finir par imprimer tout ton blog avec toutes les recettes que j’aime chez toi
10 min balkava! I will try this for sure!
Eh bien voilà, il n’y a plus qu’à s’entraîner ! ;o) Avec ton reportage tout en photos, ça devrait aider un peu ! ;o)
Bises
Hélène
Joumana, your baklava looks wonderful. I always make it but never tried to use the crumpled phyllo dough, i will try your recipe next time
Thanks for the tips!
I love baklava. We make it in Greece either, only we use walnuts and almonds. My mother makes it a little different. One day I will post her recipe.
jou! what an awesome post with valuable tips! give phoebe a hug from me!
Fantastic! I can never get enough of this dessert.
Cheers,
Rosa
That could be one of the best Baklava I’ve seen for a while. It looks so Pro!
Maybe one day when I feel a bit daring I will try this (bookmark)… Tho I really want to take a bite or 10 of that little beauties. Scrumptious!
yummy post yummy recipe looks nice i like this post
Dear Joumana; I have heard so much about baklava, but I have never tried. Thanks for this recipe. I will be going to Poland for holidays soon, and I will definitely cook few dishes of yours for my Polish friends….I only have to decide what. What would you recommend ? (I am thinking about dinner). Thanks a lot.
Seems like a lot of work but rest is just superb,so beautiful and worth making many times…
I just ate a really good piece of baklava about an hour ago. I got it at an authentic Greek market here in L.A. I like the Greek kind better than the Turkish baklava I had in Turkey. Have been too intimidated to try making it myself though.
Your top pic is gorgeous! How do you have time to post every day? Wow!
10 minutes? You must be working really fast!
This is such a lovely post. I really love baklava. A Saudi friend always brought back a box for me when she goes back for holiday. I always thought it’s so difficult to make. I would love to try. Thanks very much for showing the steps. Have a lovely weekend. Mary
How I love baklava and I have always been timid about making it… you have given me courage!!! Your version looks perfect and delicious. thanks!
I am SO excited about this amazing method!! I adore baklava, of course, and I do make it at home on occasion, but every time I do it’s such a production that it takes me a long time to forget all the hassle and decide to make it again!
Now, I’ll be able to make it much more often – hooray!! Thank you SO much!!
Irresistible baklava, looks super delicious and marvellous..
OK, you sold me. I have put off making Baklava for years, but I will try this weekend following your directions. May the Phyllo Gods have Mercy…
BTW, love your new pic
-Doc
This looks fantastic! I am bookmarking this recipe. I have always wanted to try and make baklava.
What a great tip. I havent tried making baklava before but after seeing this, I feel like making some too
Have a great weekend, Jou
Wow, this is just the recipe I needed! My family has been asking me to make baklava and this is such a delicious and easy to make version, thanks!!!
Thanks for your answer on my blog. Actually, I will rather have all ingredients, I want to buy here those which are not available in Poland…I will check thoroughly your recipes over the weekend;
never had this wonderful dessert yet…that looks heavenly delicious…yummy!
Have a nice weekend Joumana…tk care!
Merci beaucoup Joumana, pour la recette. I would not have known that what we called beurek you called R’kakat bel-jebneh. The beurek were folded in triangles, but yours must be quite similar. I’ll look back at your former recipes as I am sure there are delicious. Merci encore, c’est très gentil Joumana de m’avoir repondu.
10 minutes? I am sold! well, maybe not 10 minutes if I do it, I’d probably end up with 30 minutes. I am kind of slow … lol.
Was going to say, that you look absolutely gorgeous, and skinny too. Wow!
baklava is one of my favorite treats, but like most others, i rarely make it myself. practically instant gratification in the form of homemade baklava is pretty much tops–bravo!
8 Trackbacks
[...] 10-minute baklava [...]
[...] 10-minute baklava [...]
[...] 10-minute baklava [...]
[...] 10-minute baklava [...]
[...] 10-minute baklava [...]
[...] 10-minute baklava [...]
[...] For the recipe, click here. [...]
[...] onto a quick technique I discovered here. Take the scraps that were hanging over and crumple them up like a tissue. You’ll want to try [...]