Baklava with Rose, Cardamom and Pistachio

Baklava with Rose, Cardamom and Pistachio

Where classical Turkish baklava layers walnut or pistachio between many sheets of filo, this version rolls each sheet around a generous spoon of pistachio-and-cardamom filling, into cylinders that pack onto a tray. The bake is short and hot; the syrup is the heart of the dessert - sugar and water boiled to a single thread, stirred off the heat with a tablespoon of rose essence so the perfume stays bright. The hot baklava meets the cool syrup; the syrup soaks the cylinders to their cores. Cut into 5 cm pieces while warm, served on small plates with strong coffee.

Desserts 55 minutes Serves12
Bobotie

Bobotie

Bread is soaked in milk; mince is browned with onions; curry powder, turmeric and Cape Malay spices bloom. Apricot jam, mango chutney, vinegar and lemon balance the spice with sweet-sour notes. Raisins, toasted almonds and the soaked bread are folded through. The mixture is pressed into a baking dish; eggs are whisked with the leftover milk and poured over; bay leaves are stuck into the surface; the lot is baked until the topping is just-set with a faint wobble.

South African 1 hour 25 minutes Serves6
Charoset

Charoset

The Ashkenazi version, simplest and most common in northern Europe and the United States: tart apples chopped fine, walnuts crushed coarse, cinnamon, a little brown sugar, and sweet kosher red wine to bind. Stirred together and left for the flavours to meld. Some households add a pinch of ground ginger or a squeeze of lemon. There are dozens of regional variants (Sephardi versions use dates and figs); this one is the most familiar at a North American seder.

Sides 15 minutes Serves8
Dolmadakia (Greek Stuffed Vine Leaves)

Dolmadakia (Greek Stuffed Vine Leaves)

Brined vine leaves are soaked for 20 minutes to leach the brine. Filling: short-grain rice is par-cooked for 10 minutes with onion in olive oil; off heat, dill, mint, parsley, pine nuts, currants and lemon zest are stirred through. Each leaf is given a teaspoon of cool filling and rolled into a tight cigar. The rolls are packed tight in a heavy pot lined with broken / extra leaves. Olive oil, lemon juice and stock are poured in to barely cover. Weighed down with an inverted plate. Slow-simmered for 50-60 minutes. Cooled in the liquid; served at room temperature.

Snacks 2 hours Serves40
Eton Mess

Eton Mess

Strawberries are hulled and quartered (or sliced thick). Half are macerated in a wide bowl with sugar and a splash of balsamic vinegar (or lemon juice) for 30 minutes, they release a glossy pink syrup. The other half stay whole-ish and crisp. Cream is whipped with vanilla and icing sugar to soft peaks (not stiff peaks, too firm and the mess loses its silkiness). Ready-made meringue nests (or homemade) are crushed into rough pieces. At the moment of serving: cream goes into a wide bowl or glasses, the macerated strawberries and their syrup are folded through with broken strokes (leaving streaks, not blended); the unmacerated berries are scattered over; the meringue is crushed in last; everything assembles in messy layers. Eaten within 10 minutes, meringue softens fast.

Desserts 45 minutes Serves4
Fatayer Sabanikh

Fatayer Sabanikh

A soft yeasted olive-oil dough rises for 45 minutes. The filling: spinach wilts briefly in salted water and is squeezed bone-dry; chopped onion massages with salt to soften and weep; the two combine with sumac, lemon juice, pomegranate molasses, olive oil and toasted pine nuts. The dough divides into 12 balls; each rolls into a 12 cm disc; a spoon of filling sits in the centre; the disc folds into a tricorn (three corners pinched up to meet at the top). Baked at 220°C 15-18 minutes until deep gold.

Palestinian 1 hour 38 minutes Serves4
Ghriba (Moroccan Almond Shortbread)

Ghriba (Moroccan Almond Shortbread)

Ground almonds, icing sugar, salt mix together. Beaten eggs, orange-flower water and a touch of melted butter bind. Dough chills for 30 minutes (the egg sets up; the dough firms enough to handle). Rolls into walnut-sized balls; each ball coats heavily in icing sugar (no half measures); places on a parchment-lined tray. Bakes at 170°C 12-15 minutes, the bake is gentle; ghriba shouldn't brown, just dry and crack on top.

Desserts 1 hour 5 minutes Serves24
Greek Baklava

Greek Baklava

A 30 × 22 cm tin is built in layers: 8 buttered filo sheets on the bottom; walnut-cinnamon filling; 4 buttered filo sheets; more walnut; 4 more filo; walnut; finally 8 more buttered filo on top. The top is scored into squares; a clove is pressed into the centre of each. Baked for 45 minutes at 180°C till amber. Syrup of honey, sugar, water, lemon and cinnamon stick simmers separately. The COOL syrup is poured over the HOT baklava. Rested overnight, non-negotiable.

Desserts 1 hour 35 minutes Serves20-24
Green Beans Amandine

Green Beans Amandine

Trimmed green beans blanch in heavily salted boiling water for 3-4 minutes until just tender (still bright green and slightly crisp). Drained but not refreshed if serving immediately, the residual heat is wanted; if making ahead, refresh in ice water to stop cooking. Butter melts in a wide pan; flaked almonds toast in the butter until both go gold-amber together (the butter browns to beurre noisette / hazelnut butter). The blanched beans toss in the butter-almond pan over high heat for 1 minute; finished with a squeeze of lemon, a grind of pepper, optional Dijon mustard or garlic, and chopped parsley.

Sides 13 minutes Serves4
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