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Antep-style pistachio baklava recipe

 pistachio baklava

Antep-style pistachio baklava is named after the city of Gaziantep in southeast Turkey for which this classic sweet pastry is renowned. "Normally at the restaurant we make our own filo" says Somer Sivrioglu. "It’s so thin that you could read a newspaper placed under it. This is a more practical recipe, particularly fun to do with children".

Dan Coward admits to "being slightly stumped by a baklava drink match, as I’ve always thought of tea as the perfect accompaniment. So, with that in mind, I decided to get a little creative and find a way to pack a little extra punch into your afternoon tea. Try an iced tea cocktail combining bruised mint leaves, a dash of lime juice, a shot of vodka and some pre-made, sweetened ice tea. You get a bit of sweetness as well as that minty tea flavour so familiar to baklava lovers. If that all sounds like too much work, relax, pop the kettle on and have a cuppa."

Makes 42
Preparation 45min
Cooking 30min
Skill level Mid

By
Somer Sivrioglu

Ingredients

Sugar syrup

500 g caster sugar
¼ lemon, juiced

Baklava

1 x 375 g pack of Antoniou filo pastry
500 g ghee or clarified butter, melted
350 g pistachio kernels, crushed (Turkish or Iranian, unsalted)

Cook's notes

Oven temperatures are for conventional; if using fan-forced (convection), reduce the temperature by 20˚C. | We use Australian tablespoons and cups: 1 teaspoon equals 5 ml; 1 tablespoon equals 20 ml; 1 cup equals 250 ml. | All herbs are fresh (unless specified) and cups are lightly packed. | All vegetables are medium size and peeled, unless specified. | All eggs are 55-60 g, unless specified. 

Instructions

Standing time: 30 minutes

Drink Mint tea cocktail

To make the sugar syrup, place 600 ml of water and the sugar into a medium-sized pot and cook over a medium heat. Add the lemon juice.

Take off the heat once it is syrupy and dense, but without caramelising. Cool at room temperature and then pour into a jug. (Do not cool in the fridge or iced water as it will make the syrup too thick.)

To make the baklava, preheat the oven to 180°C.

Cut the filo to the size of a 30 cm x 20 cm x 4 cm deep tray. Divide the filo pieces into two and cover with a damp cloth.

Brush the base and inside of the tray with the ghee using a pastry brush.

Place one filo piece at a time into the tray, brushing each layer. On every three layers, sprinkle a very thin layer of crushed pistachios (to aerate the pastry while cooking).

Once you are halfway, coat the pastry with a thick layer of pistachios. Continue to layer the pastry and brush with the ghee. Once again, on every three layers, sprinkle a very thin layer of crushed pistachios until there are ten layers of filo left. Don’t sprinkle any pistachios on the last ten layers.

With a sharp knife, cut seven equal pieces widthwise and six equal pieces lengthwise.

Pour the remaining ghee over the filo, making sure it goes into the cuts of the filo.

Cook in the oven for 30 minutes, turning if needed for even cooking.

The baklava is ready once golden brown. As soon as the baklava comes out of the oven, pour the room temperature sugar syrup on the hot baklava. Rest for 30 minutes to absorb the sugar. Decorate with crushed pistachios.

From sbs.com.au

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