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Baklava is a treat I’ve wanted to make for years. I’m a fan of nuts in desserts, and this flaky, sweet pastry always hooked me. For a long time I didn’t even realize it was full of nuts — I just assumed it was some kind of caramelized heaven.
No one in my family made it, but my mom’s friends would sometimes bring some around the holidays and I’d happily hoard it, saving a last piece for my mom. I used to think making baklava was impossible.
When I finally decided to tackle it, I wanted to add a small personal touch, so I included cardamom and scraped vanilla beans into the nut mixture. It made a lovely difference.

My nut blend was mostly pecans, with almonds and some pistachios — pistachios are delightfully green. I processed everything in a food processor, adding the vanilla bean seeds in a couple of pulses so the flavor would be evenly distributed.

Full disclosure: I used salted pistachios because I didn’t want to shell a pound of unshelled ones. It worked fine — if you use unsalted pistachios, add a pinch of salt to the nut mixture.
I followed a recipe that called for a lot of nuts. If budget is a concern, you can usually get away with using about half the amount the original recipe suggests without losing flavor.

I chopped the nuts to a fairly fine texture. If you prefer chunkier baklava, pulse less; if you like a more uniform filling, pulse more carefully. Either way, it still turns out delicious.

Another change I made was cutting back the butter. The original recipe called for more butter than I wanted to use, so I started with two sticks and ended up using about 2 3/4 sticks total. It was still rich and flaky but a bit less buttery than the source recipe.

As with laminated doughs, there’s a lot of butter involved in baklava. I used a 9×13 pan and followed the suggestion to refrigerate the layered pan for 30 minutes before baking to help everything set and avoid any warping in the oven.
Start by brushing the entire pan with melted butter. Then layer phyllo sheets, brushing each sheet with butter as you go. I laid down eight sheets for the bottom, each brushed with butter.

About the phyllo: thaw it fully according to package directions and keep it covered with a slightly damp towel so it stays pliable. Even with care, sheets can rip. When that happens, gently press pieces back together and keep going — the finished bake will still be delightful.
Because I had a lot of nuts and didn’t want very thick single nut layers, I split the filling into four thinner layers. My assembly went like this: 8 sheets of phyllo (each brushed with butter), 1/4 of the nut mixture, 4 sheets phyllo, 1/4 nuts, 4 sheets, 1/4 nuts, 4 sheets, 1/4 nuts, then finish with 8 sheets of phyllo on top, brushing each sheet generously with melted butter. If any butter remains, pour it over the top.

Refrigerate the pan for 30 minutes, then remove and cut the pieces before baking so the cuts stay defined. I baked mine at 350°F for about 40–42 minutes, rotating the pan once. If the top gets too brown, tent with foil.

While the baklava was in the oven, I made a honey-vanilla syrup: water, granulated sugar, honey, vanilla bean paste and cinnamon sticks simmered together, then cooled. The moment the baklava comes out of the oven, pour the cooled syrup evenly over the hot pastry so it soaks in.

Let the baklava rest for several hours — overnight is ideal. This lets the syrup fully absorb and the layers set, making it easy to slice and remove from the pan. I placed mine in the fridge overnight, then covered with foil once cool.

The result: crisp, buttery phyllo, fragrant nut layers with cardamom and vanilla, and a bright honey-vanilla syrup. If you like, a drizzle of chocolate over individual pieces is a decadent finishing touch.


How To Make Baklava
Ingredients
- 16 ounces unsalted roasted pecans
- 8 ounces unsalted roasted almonds
- 8 ounces roasted pistachios (salted used here; if using unsalted, add about 1/4 tsp salt)
- 2 whole vanilla beans, scraped
- 1 teaspoon cinnamon
- 1/2 teaspoon ground cardamom
- 1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
- 1/4 teaspoon ground cloves
- 2/3 cup light brown sugar
- 1 pound phyllo dough
- About 2 3/4 sticks (roughly 1 1/3 cups / 22 tablespoons) unsalted butter, melted
Honey vanilla bean simple syrup
- 1 1/2 cups water
- 1 cup granulated sugar
- 1/2 cup honey
- 1 tablespoon vanilla bean paste (or scraped vanilla seeds)
- 2 cinnamon sticks
Instructions
- Thaw phyllo dough according to package directions and keep covered with a slightly damp towel so it stays pliable.
- Combine the nuts in a food processor and pulse until finely chopped, adding the scraped vanilla bean seeds in two or three pulses. Transfer to a bowl and mix with brown sugar, cinnamon, cardamom, nutmeg and cloves.
- Melt the butter. Brush a 9×13 pan with butter. Layer 8 sheets of phyllo, brushing each with butter. Spread 1/4 of the nut mixture over the sheets and drizzle a little butter over the nuts to help the next phyllo layers adhere.
- Layer 4 phyllo sheets (brushing each with butter), then another 1/4 of the nut mixture. Repeat two more times: 4 sheets, nuts, 4 sheets, nuts. Finish with 8 sheets of phyllo on top, each brushed with butter. Pour any remaining butter over the top.
- Refrigerate the assembled pan for 30 minutes. Preheat oven to 350°F while chilling. Remove from fridge and cut into desired pieces. Bake for about 40–42 minutes, rotating once; tent with foil if the top browns too quickly.
- While the baklava bakes, make the syrup: combine water, sugar, honey, vanilla paste and cinnamon sticks in a saucepan. Bring to a boil, reduce to a simmer and cook for 10 minutes. Remove from heat and cool completely, discarding the cinnamon sticks before using.
- When baklava is done, remove from oven, cut a piece to test, then pour the cooled syrup evenly over the hot baklava. Let it set for several hours — overnight is best — before serving.
Notes
Recipe lightly adapted from Tyler Florence.
Did you make this recipe?
Share photos and tag your posts if you’d like to document your baklava. Enjoy!

Now come on over — I have an entire pan of baklava sitting on my counter and it’s ready to be enjoyed.