Greek Halva Recipe | Greek Dessert which is also dairy free pudding! | TheoCooks (2024)

9th April 2015

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Greek Halva Recipe | Greek Dessert which is also dairy free pudding! | TheoCooks (1)

I’ve slightly adapted my Greek Halva recipe which is a dairy free pudding, in this to include lots of crushed walnuts which I think adds a little extra texture and flavour to the Greek Halva and besides the crunch this is also a dairy free pudding which is great!

In saying that, if you like walnuts you gotta try my other Greek dessert recipe.. Sweet, sticky and dairy free! Super easy to make and a delicious sweet bite that’s great to have around the house (if it lasts long enough)!

Anyway, want to know a fabulous Greek Halva recipe (dairy free pudding)? Well here it is!

There are a lot of Greek desserts that follow a similar path of cooking; something that seems to be quite dense (most likely the use of semolina opposed to flour in many of the Greek desserts) and then drowned in a deliciously sweet syrup of some kind. My Greek Walnut cake (karidopita) or my Greek semolina cake also known Kalo brama are typical examples of Greek desserts that fit that profile and are extremely moreish…

I’ll run through the general rules of making Greek Halva and you can find the proper Greek halva recipe at the bottom of this post.

Greek Halva Recipe (dairy free pudding):

Ingredients – filling:

1/2 cup olive oil

1 cup semolina

18 walnut halves crushed quite fine

Syrup:

1 1/2 cups sugar

1/2 cup honey

3 cups water

3 cinnamon sticks

1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon

5 cloves

Pinch of salt

1 tablespoon lemon juice

Greek Halva Recipe Method:

Start with the syrup; add all the ingredients together with boiling water and pop into a saucepan on the stove bring to a light simmer and don’t touch it.

Don’t stir it, don’t even look at it – it’s very self conscience this syrup and will go grainy at the mere thought that someone has stuck a spoon in it!

While your syrup is discretely warming through make your filling.

Add the olive oil to a saucepan and get hot enough that when you drop a few grains of semolina into it they start to fry on the surface. Pour in all the semolina and stir it.

The filling is not self-conscience and is in fact an extrovert that demands constant attention! Keep stirring…

Keep stirring for about 5-10 minutes until it starts to turn colour, add the crushedwalnuts and keep stirring until you get a nice deep golden colour (don’t let it burn it will go bitter).

Remove from the heat and let it cool for a few moments.

This is the bit to be careful with. Slowly start to pour in all the syrup. Did I say be careful? Because it is hot, surface-of-the-sun hot, hot like flowing lava from a volcano! It will bubble but let it settle for a moment and start stirring.

Keep stirring for about 25 minutes and it will suddenly start to thicken. Keep going and don’t stop – you want this really thick, to the point your hand hurts and when you push the spoon around the mixture stays put.

Once you’ve reached a point that it is super thick let it cool and pour into a dish (or moulds) and leave to cool for a few hours. If you want pretty ones like in my picture; I poured the halva mixture into a baking tray and used a pastry cutter to cut out little portions.

You can sprinkle some chopped nuts on top or even a tiny little pinch of sea salt flakes.

Goes well with a decent Greek coffee (or an espresso if you must)!

Greek Halva Recipe (dairy free pudding)

9th April 2015

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Greek Halva Recipe - Greek dessert

By: Theo

Greek Halva Recipe | Greek Dessert which is also dairy free pudding! | TheoCooks (2)

Ingredients
  • Greek Halva Recipe Ingredients - filling:
  • 1/2 cup olive oil
  • 1 cup semolina
  • 18 walnut halves crushed quite fine
  • Syrup:
  • 1 1/2 cups sugar
  • 1/2 cup honey
  • 3 cups water
  • 3 cinnamon sticks
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 5 cloves
  • Pinch of salt
  • 1 tablespoon lemon juice
Directions
  • Step 1 Syrup:
  • Step 2 Add all the ingredients together with boiling water and pop into a saucepan on the stove bring to a light simmer and don’t touch it.
  • Step 3 Don’t stir it, don’t even look at it – it’s very self conscience this syrup and will go grainy at the mere thought that someone has stuck a spoon in it!
  • Step 4 While your syrup is discretely warming through make your filling.
  • Step 5 Filling
  • Step 6 Add the olive oil to a saucepan and get hot enough that when you drop a few grains of semolina into it they start to fry on the surface. Pour in all the semolina and stir it.
  • Step 7 The filling is not self-conscience and is in fact an extrovert that demands constant attention! Keep stirring…
  • Step 8 Keep stirring for about 5-10 minutes until it starts to turn colour, add the crushed walnuts and keep stirring until you get a nice deep golden colour (don’t let it burn it will go bitter).
  • Step 9 Remove from the heat and let it cool for a few moments.
  • Step 10 This is the bit to be careful with. Slowly start to pour in all the syrup. Did I say be careful? Because it is hot, surface-of-the-sun hot, hot like flowing lava from a volcano! It will bubble but let it settle for a moment and start stirring.
  • Step 11 Keep stirring for about 25 minutes and it will suddenly start to thicken. Keep going and don’t stop – you want this really thick, to the point your hand hurts and when you push the spoon around the mixture stays put.
  • Step 12 Once you’ve reached a point that it is super thick let it cool and pour into a dish (or moulds) and leave to cool for a few hours. If you want pretty ones like in my picture
  • Step 13 I poured the halva mixture into a baking tray and used a pastry cutter to cut out little portions.
  • Step 14 You can sprinkle some chopped nuts on top or even a tiny little pinch of sea salt flakes.
  • Step 15 Goes well with a decent Greek coffee (or an espresso if you must)!

Filed Under: Desserts, Greek, Recipes

Tags: dairy free pudding, dessert, greek, greek halva recipe

Greek Halva Recipe | Greek Dessert which is also dairy free pudding! | TheoCooks (2024)

FAQs

What is Greek halva made of? ›

The common ingredients for the flour halva are flour, semolina with butter, oil or ghee, water and sugar. These ingredients are a must for flour halva. Alternatively, nut-based halva is made with sesame seeds or sunflower seeds and formed into a paste that's mixed with hot sugar syrup to form a bar.

Can you get halva in Greece? ›

Halva is a delicious, tasty snack that can be eaten at any time of the day and a traditional dessert served all over Greece.

What is a Greek dessert that starts with AP? ›

The name “portokalopita” is derived from the Greek word “portokali,” which means orange. This dessert is made from dried up phyllo dough that you fold into a creamy, orange-flavored custard. In the final step, you drizzle the pastry with a sweet syrup that is infused with orange juice, cinnamon, and cloves.

Does halva contain dairy? ›

"This is possibly the most nutritious sweet treat in the world.

What is the Greek traditional delight halva? ›

Halva is a Greek sweet made out of ground sesame seeds, honey or sugar, and various additions such as nuts and chocolate. It is usually eaten at the end of a meal with coffee or spirits, or as an energy giving snack, or during easter, at the break of a fast.

What is the oldest Greek dessert? ›

Loukoumades don't take much to make. All you need is all-purpose flour, dry active yeast, salt, and water. And, of course, honey. In Greece, they are the oldest recorded dessert, with the Greek-Sicilian poet Archestratus describing deep fried donuts soaked in Enkrides (a honey syrup) in the 4th century BCE.

Why do Greeks give free dessert? ›

"It's to make sure everyone enjoys the meal," she says. "It completes your meal because the dessert is considered another course." It rounds out the eating experience, and, as Loi points out, allows you to enjoy it from start to finish—meaning the Greeks really care about how you feel about their food.

Why is halva so expensive? ›

The price of the Halva is efected directly by the ingredients we use to make it. We use the best Tahini (cost 5 times more then an avarage one), we use real Belgian chocolates, we use the best green pistachio in the market, and we do so also with all of the other ingredients.

What are the two types of halva? ›

Halva can come in two forms: one is flour-based, the other nut-based. The one I've been interested to try is the latter and made of sesame seeds. It's basically sesame paste that's mixed with hot sugar syrup to form a candy or confection.

Do Jews eat halva? ›

Halva can be found in ethnic Indian, Jewish, Arab, Persian, Greek, Balkan, and Turkish community stores and delicatessens. It is increasingly offered by upscale restaurants in some areas.

What is Ekma Greek dessert? ›

In Turkey, the dessert is simply Ekmek, a bread pudding soaked in syrup and topped with Kaimak (Kaimaki), a sweetened clotted cream. The Greek take on this dessert consists of a kataifi pastry base/bottom, a semolina cream center and a topping of whipped cream.

What is a Greek dessert that starts with E? ›

Ekmek kataifi is an all-weather Greek dessert made with layers of kataifi dough baked until crispy and golden, bathed in lemon scented syrup, topped with creamy thick custard and whipped cream and garnished with cinnamon and pistachios…

Is there a Greek god of desserts? ›

Baklava: The Greek God of Desserts - The Cornell Daily Sun.

Is Greek halva healthy? ›

While halva contains some nutritious items, it's a candy that's high in sugar and may not make the healthiest choice. But can serve as a sweet treat on a healthy, balanced diet.

What are the benefits of Greek halva? ›

It helps in the fight against cholesterol, in the proper functioning of the immune system and in the treatment of cataracts and diabetes. Analogue products based on sesame seeds, such as tahini and Pasteli, exhibit similar advantages.

Is halva full of sugar? ›

Anyway, keep in mind that halva should be used moderately due to its high sugar content.

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