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This Baklava Cheesecake is such a fun twist on the traditional Greek dessert. With all the flavors of cinnamon, honey and walnuts, it’s a fun way to mix together two delicious desserts into one!
So if you follow on instagram or twitter, you may have noticed that I was at a food blogging conference over the weekend. It was a ton of fun! It was great to see old friends and meet new ones, and of course I always learn so much and leave feeling renewed.
Well normally hotel sleeping is all good for me but this weekend I struggled a bit. See I wake up regularly at night to go to the bathroom. At least once, often twice. It’s annoying, but true. Well this weekend that didn’t go so well for me. There was a little piece of wall that you had to walk around to get from the beds to the bathroom and one night when I was walking back to my bed, I left the bathroom, tried to avoid the wall…and walked straight into it. Like face planted in the wall. #fail
So the next night when I woke up and was going back to bed from the bathroom, I tried to avoid the wall by leaving plenty of space. Too bad there was luggage on the floor. Guess who walked right into it and fell over completely, landing on all fours and sounded a bit like a dying animal? That’s right. This girl. A shining moment, my friends. Hotel nighttime bathroom trips and I did not get along this weekend. Fortunately I survived.
Please tell me I’m not the only one who’s had this problem. 🙂
Baklava is one of those desserts that I didn’t grow up on but as an adult I’m definitely a fan. I tried it for the first time a few years ago and totally fell in love. The honey and cinnamon is totally up my alley.
Shortly after trying it for the fist time, I turned it into a Baklava Poke Cake. And since I love taking some of my favorite desserts and creating fun twists of them, I’ve now got a cheesecake version for you.
To start, I used phyllo dough for the crust. It’s the same stuff that’s used in actual baklava, so I thought it’d be fun to incorporate it. Plus, having it stick up over the edges of the cheesecake is kinda nifty and pretty. I totally dig it, but if you’d rather not go through the trouble I totally understand. You could replace it with your favorite kind of cheesecake crust – perhaps graham crackers or vanilla wafers. Another option would be to use the phyllo dough sheets, but not have them stick up over the edge of the pan.
Making the crust is not actually hard, but it is a bit time consuming. Much like when making baklava, the sheets of phyllo dough are layered with melted butter. The trick with phyllo dough is to keep it from drying out while you are working with it. You want to keep a damp cloth over the rolled out dough. Grab one piece of the dough at a time and add it to the cheesecake pan, being sure to spread a little melted butter between each piece. The dough sheets aren’t individually big enough to fully cover the pan, but you can use a few to get full coverage, add some melted butter and then add another layer with a few more sheets. To keep the phyllo from over-baking, it isn’t pre-baked.
The filling of the cheesecake is your standard cheesecake with a bunch of baklava walnut filling in the middle. It’s a simple mixture – walnuts, cinnamon, melted butter and honey. Those are all tossed together and added to the middle of the cheesecake.
Once the cheesecake is baked and cooled, it’s topped with a little whipped cream and a little more walnut filling. That really is the best part of baklava in my opinion, so it isn’t lacking at all from this cheesecake. You’ll want to handle the cheesecake with a bit of care once it’s baked, since the phyllo dough is pretty thin and can break easily.
If you love baklava, this cheesecake should be a hit! It’s got all the essential flavors and really isn’t hard to make. Yay for twists on classics!
You might also like:
Baklava Poke Cake
Cinnamon Roll Cheesecake
Cinnamon Sugar Swirl Cupcakes
Mini Cinnamon Roll Cheesecakes
Overnight Cinnamon Apple Baked French Toast Casserole
Baklava Cheesecake
- Yield: 14-16 Slices
- Category: Dessert
- Method: Oven
- Cuisine: American
Description
With a phyllo dough crust, creamy cheesecake filling, and honey walnut topping, Baklava Cheesecake is a fun twist on the traditional Greek dessert. Sweet and tangy, this unique dessert is sure to become a favorite.
Ingredients
CRUST
- 4 tbsp butter, melted
- Phyllo dough (about 20 sheets)
CHEESECAKE FILLING
- 2 8-ounce packages cream cheese, softened
- 2/3 cup sugar
- 2 tbsp all purpose flour
- 3 eggs
- 2/3 cup sour cream
- 6 tbsp honey
- 1 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
WALNUT FILLING AND TOPPING
- 3 3/4 cups finely chopped walnuts
- 3 tsp cinnamon
- 6 tbsp butter, melted
- 10 tbsp honey
Instructions
Nutrition
- Serving Size: 1 Slice
- Calories: 456
- Sugar: 26.5 g
- Sodium: 140.3 mg
- Fat: 29.6 g
- Carbohydrates: 44.7 g
- Protein: 8.2 g
- Cholesterol: 58.2 mg
Filed Under:
Enjoy!
would love to make this for the holidays. Can this be frozen and if so what time frame will work?
I haven’t frozen this, so I’m not really sure. The cheesecake is itself would be fine, I’m just not sure how the crust would hold up. If you want to freeze it, maybe consider a graham cracker crust.
Can I make it the day before?
Definitely!
Found on Pinterest, baklava isn’t just Greek, it’s also middle eastern dessert- substitute a few ingredients. But I’m pinning this and will make it soon thank you for this recipe!
Has anyone used salted pistachios ?
I will be making the Baklava Cheesecake for Christmas and wondered if you ever tried it with Greek yogurt instead of sour cream. I have made that switch in most of my other cheesecakes and it worked fine. I only have one shot at getting this one right, so if there is a reason not to use Greet yogurt , I will stick with the sour cream.
I haven’t ever tried it (I prefer the flavor of the sour cream), but I’m pretty sure others have and it’s been fine.