Maison Aleph’s Sesame-Halvah 1,001 Feuilles

Updated Oct. 11, 2023

Maison Aleph’s Sesame-Halvah 1,001 Feuilles
Gentl and Hyers for The New York Times. Food stylist: Maggie Ruggiero. Prop stylist: Rebecca Bartoshesky.
Total Time
About 4½ hours
Prep Time
1 hour
Cook Time
3 hours 30 minutes
Rating
4(67)
Notes
Read community notes

This sweet straddles East and West. Its name plays on French mille-feuille (mille-feuille means 1,000 leaves), but its structure follows the lines of Middle Eastern baklava. It’s got layers of buttered and sugared phyllo dough and a filling made with tahini and vanilla halvah. The mixture is similar to frangipane, but not like any I’ve ever tasted — it’s completely original and wonderfully good. A word on the phyllo: If the sheets are smaller than 12-by-17-inches, don’t worry — the dessert will bake the same way, but the middle layer will be slightly thicker and the yield will be less. For the most delicious pastry, use clarified butter: Bring the butter to a boil in a medium saucepan. Lower the heat and simmer until most of the solids fall to the bottom of the pan; the bubbling will have subsided. Slowly pour the butter through a coffee filter or a strainer lined with cheesecloth; discard the solids and reserve the liquid. You can make the butter weeks ahead and keep it refrigerated. —Dorie Greenspan

Featured in: A New Pastry Layers Tastes of France and Syria

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Ingredients

Yield:About 35 squares

    For the Filling

    • ½cup/113 grams unsalted butter (1 stick), at room temperature
    • cup/120 grams vanilla halvah
    • Scant ⅓ cup/75 grams tahini (stir before measuring)
    • 1cup/120 grams confectioners’ sugar
    • tablespoons cornstarch
    • ½teaspoon fleur de sel (or ¼ teaspoon fine sea salt)
    • 3large eggs, at room temperature
    • cup/50 grams toasted white sesame seeds

    For the Layers

    • 28sheets phyllo dough (12 inches by 17 inches), thawed
    • cups/360 milliliters clarified butter (from 4 sticks/452 grams)
    • About 1½ cups/180 grams confectioners’ sugar
    • 2tablespoons white sesame seeds, for topping
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (35 servings)

222 calories; 15 grams fat; 8 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 5 grams monounsaturated fat; 2 grams polyunsaturated fat; 18 grams carbohydrates; 1 gram dietary fiber; 9 grams sugars; 2 grams protein; 110 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Make the filling: Working with a mixer (preferably fitted with a paddle attachment), beat the butter, halvah and tahini together on medium speed for about 3 minutes. Add the confectioners’ sugar, cornstarch and salt, and mix on low for 2 minutes more. Add the eggs one by one, beating for a minute after each goes in; you’ll have a thick, smooth, shiny mixture (think mayonnaise). Stir in the sesame seeds. Scrape the filling into a bowl, cover and refrigerate for 1 hour (or for up to 2 days; longer is better than shorter).

  2. Step 2

    Build the layers: Lay the phyllo out on a piece of plastic wrap, and cover with a damp kitchen towel. Always keep the towel moistened: The dough dries in a flash.

  3. Step 3

    Brush the interior of a rimmed baking sheet (12 inches by 17 inches) with clarified butter. Place a sheet of dough in the pan, brush with butter and dust lightly with confectioners’ sugar (use about 2 tablespoons of sugar per sheet). Continue until you have made 14 layers. Spread the filling evenly over the top, and then continue making layers with the remaining dough, buttering and sugaring each layer (you’ll have some butter left; hold on to it). Refrigerate the setup for at least 30 minutes (or cover and refrigerate for up to 1 day).

  4. Step 4

    Center a rack in the oven, and heat it to 350 degrees. Using a pizza cutter (best) or a sharp knife, trim the edges (don’t remove them), then cut as many 2-inch squares as possible, cutting all the way through the layers. Scatter the sesame seeds over the top.

  5. Step 5

    Bake for about 40 minutes, rotating the pan after 20 minutes, until the top is beautifully golden. Transfer to a cooling rack, and lightly brush with some of the reserved butter. Place a piece of parchment or foil over the surface, top with another baking pan and press evenly and firmly to compact the layers. Recut the squares, so they’ll be easy to lift out. Let sit for 2 to 3 hours before serving (discard or nibble the trimmed edges). Stored tightly covered, the squares will keep at room temperature for about 2 days.

Ratings

4 out of 5
67 user ratings
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Private Notes

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Cooking Notes

Do you purchase the halvah or make it yourself? If you make it, what recipe do you recommend?

None. Use the clarified butter. The filling is in the middle. I didn't see it at first either but after I read the recipe several times, I saw it. It's like making a baklava, only instead of the walnuts, you're using the tahini mixture. As soon as Passover ends, I'm making this!

Buy the halvah loose in a good Middle Eastern bakery where they will cut it for you. Do not use the packaged brands. Also, use a loose Israeli tahini like Soom (available on Amazon). Do not use the cement like Joya tahini sold in supermarkets. Good luck! This is very rich.

Some of us don't live in places where halva's available. I've had luck making it though: for the most basic recipe you'll need equal volumes weights sugar and tahini. Heat the sugar plus half as much water until it gets to hard ball stage (~250 F). Take off heat, stir in tahini. Pour into a greased or parchment pan, refrigerate over night. That's basically it.

You won't succeed in making halvah - you need to be a pro for that. Buy the halvah.

I'm counting this recipe as a birthday present to myself! Can't wait to make it and take that first bite! The best way to spend a rainy afternoon in the Pacific NW.

Phyllo sheets are made in several thicknesses. If a choice of thickness is available, what is preferable?

I used Golchin halva, purchased on Amazon, and it was delicious. I used Achva tahini, which was not as easy as Soom, but still good. I’m going to try Zahav’s recipe for halva.

Do you think this could be assembled and frozen, and baked on a later date?

Some of us don't live in places where halva's available. I've had luck making it though: for the most basic recipe you'll need equal volumes weights sugar and tahini. Heat the sugar plus half as much water until it gets to hard ball stage (~250 F). Take off heat, stir in tahini. Pour into a greased or parchment pan, refrigerate over night. That's basically it.

Great recipe. Only my bottom layer stuck to the pan, despite the generous preemptive layer of butter I applied. Perhaps a slightly shorter baking time would have helped.

I put a piece of parchment paper on the bottom... no problems at all.

I'm counting this recipe as a birthday present to myself! Can't wait to make it and take that first bite! The best way to spend a rainy afternoon in the Pacific NW.

What number phyllo should I use? Here in Astoria I can buy 4, 7, or 10; higher number is thinner.

Phyllo sheets are made in several thicknesses. If a choice of thickness is available, what is preferable?

Halvah and tahini? doesn't make sense. When I lived in Silver Spring MD I could buy halvah, don't know where to get it in TN.

I found vanilla halvah on Amazon. I can source locally, but my friend in TN asked the same question

I'm going to try this filling in place of frangipane in a tart -- it sounds delicious!

About how much of the filling do you use for each layer?

None. Use the clarified butter. The filling is in the middle. I didn't see it at first either but after I read the recipe several times, I saw it. It's like making a baklava, only instead of the walnuts, you're using the tahini mixture. As soon as Passover ends, I'm making this!

Do you purchase the halvah or make it yourself? If you make it, what recipe do you recommend?

You won't succeed in making halvah - you need to be a pro for that. Buy the halvah.

Buy the halvah loose in a good Middle Eastern bakery where they will cut it for you. Do not use the packaged brands. Also, use a loose Israeli tahini like Soom (available on Amazon). Do not use the cement like Joya tahini sold in supermarkets. Good luck! This is very rich.

For those who don't have a middle eastern grocery handy, NYTimes Cooking has a recipe you could try: https://cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/1017732-halvah Read the Most Helpful notes first.

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Credits

Adapted from Myriam Sabet, Maison Aleph, Paris

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