Knafeh (also kanafeh, kunefe) is the great pastry of the Levant — shredded wheat pastry soaked in clarified butter, layered with white cheese or cream, baked until golden, drenched in sugar syrup and rose water, finished with crushed pistachios. It appears throughout Jerusalem, Nablus, and the broader Levant as both street food and celebration pastry. The syrup technique follows the same rule as Turkish baklava: hot syrup on hot pastry, or cold syrup on cold pastry — never mixing temperatures.
The syrup application in knafeh follows the same physical principle as baklava: when hot syrup meets hot pastry, the pastry absorbs only the amount it needs and the remainder pools as sauce; when temperatures are mixed, the pastry either absorbs too much or resists absorption, producing either a soggy or dry result.
Knafeh succeeds through contrast: the crunch of the baked pastry against the yielding, melted cheese; the sweetness of the syrup against the slight salt of the cheese; the rose water perfume against the browned butter nuttiness of the pastry. All four contrasts must be present simultaneously, which is why it must be eaten immediately.
- Hot syrup on hot pastry: bake the knafeh until deep golden, then immediately pour hot syrup over it — the simultaneous high temperature allows controlled absorption - The syrup must be scented with rose water and optionally orange blossom water — added off heat to preserve the volatile aromatics [VERIFY: add after removing from heat] - The cheese layer must be a low-salt, high-moisture white cheese — Nabulsi cheese is traditional; mozzarella or akkawi are common substitutes. Salted cheeses must be desalted by soaking [VERIFY soaking time] - Serve immediately — knafeh that sits loses its textural contrast as the pastry absorbs all the syrup
OTTOLENGHI JERUSALEM — Technique Entries OT-01 through OT-25