A field guide · 🇹🇷

Turkish & Mediterranean desserts

Turkish and Mediterranean sweets — Greek, Cypriot, Maltese, North African — share an Ottoman inheritance: baklava in many variants, halva, lokum (Turkish delight), kataifi, kazandibi, and the broad family of syrup-soaked sponges and semolina cakes. The pantry runs on nuts (pistachios, walnuts, almonds), honey, tahini, orange-blossom water, mahleb, and mastic, the resinous gum from Chios that flavours so many Greek and Turkish sweets.

Many of the canonical desserts cross national lines under different names: revani and basbousa share a recipe; loukoumades, lokma and luqaimat share a recipe; baklava is contested between Turkey, Greece, Syria and Lebanon and each country has reason for its claim. The shared root is Ottoman court cuisine and the long sugar-and-pastry tradition that preceded it.

The signature finish is almost always syrup at the moment of serving: a sponge or pastry poured with hot or cold syrup so the contrast between warm flake and cold sweetness is sharp.

All 4 recipes