Kunafa vs Baklava: The Ultimate Middle Eastern Dessert Showdown
Kunafa and baklava are both beloved Middle Eastern desserts, but they are fundamentally different in construction, texture, and flavor. Here is how they compare — and which one wins in Dubai chocolate.
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Kunafa vs Baklava: The Ultimate Middle Eastern Dessert Showdown
If you have gotten into Dubai chocolate, you have encountered kunafa — the shredded pastry that gives those chocolate bars their signature crunch. But you may be wondering: how is kunafa different from baklava, that other famous Middle Eastern pastry dessert?
They are both syrup-soaked, nut-laden pastries from the same region. But that is where the similarities end. Let us break down these two iconic desserts across every dimension.
The Basics
What Is Kunafa?
Kunafa (also spelled knafeh, kanafeh, or kunafe) is a dessert made from shredded phyllo dough (called kataifi) or a semolina-based dough, layered with cheese or cream, baked until golden, and soaked in sugar syrup.
Key characteristics:
- Shredded, thread-like pastry texture
- Traditionally filled with sweet cheese (Nabulsi or akkawi) or clotted cream
- Soaked in rosewater or orange blossom sugar syrup
- Topped with crushed pistachios
- Served warm
What Is Baklava?
Baklava is a layered pastry made from thin sheets of phyllo dough, brushed with butter, filled with chopped nuts, baked until crispy, and drenched in honey or sugar syrup.
Key characteristics:
- Paper-thin layers of phyllo sheets
- Filled with chopped walnuts, pistachios, or almonds
- Each layer brushed with melted butter
- Drenched in honey-based or sugar syrup after baking
- Served at room temperature or cold
- Cut into diamond or triangle shapes
Head-to-Head Comparison
| Feature | Kunafa | Baklava |
|---|---|---|
| Pastry type | Shredded phyllo (kataifi) | Layered phyllo sheets |
| Texture | Crunchy threads, chewy center | Crisp, flaky, shattering layers |
| Primary filling | Cheese or cream | Chopped nuts |
| Sweetener | Sugar syrup (rose/orange blossom) | Honey or sugar syrup |
| Serving temp | Warm (best fresh) | Room temperature |
| Shape | Round or rectangular slab | Diamonds, triangles, squares |
| Origin region | Levant (Palestine, Lebanon, Syria) | Ottoman Empire (Turkey, Greece) |
| Shelf life | 1-2 days (cheese filling) | 1-2 weeks (nut filling) |
Taste Profiles
Kunafa Flavor Journey
- First bite: Crunchy, buttery, caramelized pastry exterior
- Middle: Stretchy, mild, slightly salty cheese or rich cream
- Finish: Sweet syrup with rose water or orange blossom perfume
- Aftertaste: Buttery, floral, comforting
The magic of kunafa is the contrast between hot, crunchy pastry and warm, melting cheese. It is fundamentally a savory-sweet experience.
Baklava Flavor Journey
- First bite: Shattering, paper-thin crispness
- Middle: Concentrated nut flavor — earthy, roasted, slightly bitter
- Finish: Honey sweetness with butter richness
- Aftertaste: Sticky, nutty, intensely sweet
Baklava is about layered crunch and concentrated nuttiness, with sweetness as the dominant note.
Historical Origins
Kunafa's History
- Dates to at least the 10th century Fatimid era in Egypt
- Some scholars attribute it to the Umayyad Caliph Muawiya I (7th century)
- Became the signature dessert of Nablus, Palestine — where Nabulsi cheese kunafa is considered the gold standard
- Spread throughout the Levant, Egypt, Turkey, and eventually the Gulf states
- Became the key ingredient in viral Dubai chocolate
Baklava's History
- Origins debated between Turkey, Greece, and the broader Ottoman Empire
- The oldest known recipe appears in a 13th-century Arabic cookbook
- Turkish Topkapi Palace records show baklava served to Janissaries in the 15th century
- Greeks claim ancestry through placenta cake and gastrin from ancient times
- Became a symbol of Ottoman luxury and celebration
Both desserts have passionate regional advocates who claim their version is the original and the best — a debate that has been running for centuries.
Regional Variations
Kunafa Variations
- Nabulsi kunafa: Nabulsi cheese filling, considered the most traditional
- Cream kunafa: Filled with ashta (clotted cream) instead of cheese
- Mafroukeh: Uses coarse semolina dough instead of kataifi
- Dubai chocolate kunafa: Pastry layered inside chocolate bars — the modern innovation that went viral (check our recipes)
- Turkish kunafe: Often topped with kaymak (buffalo milk cream)
Baklava Variations
- Turkish baklava: Typically uses walnuts or pistachios, thin syrup
- Greek baklava: Heavier on honey and cinnamon, often uses walnuts
- Lebanese baklava: Lighter, may use cashews or pine nuts, rose water syrup
- Iranian baklava: Uses cardamom and saffron in the syrup
- Rolled baklava (burma): Rolled into cylinders instead of layered flat
Which Works Better in Dubai Chocolate?
This is the question Dubai chocolate fans really want answered. And the answer is clear: kunafa wins for chocolate applications.
Here is why:
Why Kunafa Works in Chocolate:
- Thread-like structure creates air pockets that stay crunchy even when enclosed in chocolate
- Butter-toasted flavor complements chocolate beautifully
- Neutral flavor lets the pistachio cream and chocolate shine
- Consistent texture throughout the bar — every bite has the same crunch
- Does not compete with the pistachio cream for attention
Why Baklava is Harder to Use in Chocolate:
- Layered phyllo sheets become soggy when enclosed in chocolate (no air circulation)
- Nut filling competes with the pistachio cream layer, creating flavor confusion
- Honey residue can interfere with chocolate tempering
- Irregular texture — some bites might be all nuts, others all pastry
- Too sweet — baklava plus chocolate plus pistachio cream is sugar overload
That said, some chocolatiers have created "baklava-inspired" chocolate bars that use elements of baklava (honey, walnut, cinnamon) without the full phyllo construction. These can be excellent in their own right — just different from true Dubai chocolate.
Can You Use Both in Desserts?
Absolutely. Here are some creative crossover ideas:
- Baklava-topped kunafa: Traditional kunafa with a crunchy baklava-style nut and honey layer on top
- Kunafa baklava rolls: Rolled baklava filled with kunafa cream instead of chopped nuts
- Dubai chocolate baklava bites: Small baklava pieces dipped in tempered chocolate with pistachio cream
- Hybrid gift box: Package both kunafa-style Dubai chocolate bars and baklava pieces together — see our gift guide
Nutritional Comparison
Per 100g serving (approximate):
| Nutrient | Kunafa | Baklava |
|---|---|---|
| Calories | 350-400 | 400-450 |
| Fat | 15-20g | 20-25g |
| Sugar | 25-35g | 30-40g |
| Protein | 8-12g | 6-10g |
| Fiber | 1g | 2g |
Kunafa is slightly lighter calorically due to its cheese or cream filling versus baklava's dense nut content. Neither qualifies as a health food, but that is not why we eat them. For more on the health angle, see our Dubai chocolate nutrition breakdown.
The Verdict
Kunafa and baklava are both masterpieces of Middle Eastern pastry arts, but they serve different purposes:
- Choose kunafa when you want contrast (crunchy vs creamy), warmth, and the authentic Dubai chocolate experience
- Choose baklava when you want intense nuttiness, honey richness, and a shelf-stable treat
For Dubai chocolate specifically, kunafa is the clear winner — its shredded structure was practically designed to exist inside a chocolate shell.
Want to work with kunafa yourself? Start with our beginner recipes or learn the foundation with our chocolate tempering guide.
Featured Products

KitchenAid Artisan 5-Qt Stand Mixer
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ChocoVision Rev 2B Chocolate Temperer
Professional-grade chocolate tempering machine for home use. Automatically tempers up to 1.5 lbs of chocolate with precise temperature control. Essential for achieving glossy, snappy Dubai chocolate bars without hand-tempering.

FDKYOEK 6-Cavity Silicone Chocolate Bar Mold Kit
Professional-grade silicone mold for making perfectly shaped Dubai chocolate bars at home. Deep enough for pistachio cream filling and kunafa layer. Easy release, dishwasher safe.

OXO Good Grips 5-Pound Food Scale with Pullout Display
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365 by Whole Foods Market Organic Ground Cardamom (1.87oz)
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Crafti Ceremonial Grade Organic Matcha Powder (30g Uji Kyoto)
Premium ceremonial-grade matcha from Japan, perfect for Matcha Dubai Chocolate Bars and matcha-infused ganaches. Its vibrant green color and smooth umami flavor elevate any chocolate creation.

Valrhona Caraïbe 66% Dark Chocolate Feves
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Rose Water (Food Grade)
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Fiddyment Farms Creamy Pistachio Butter
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Terrasoul Superfoods Organic Medjool Dates 2 lbs
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Bronte Sicilian Pistachio Cream
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Cerez Pazari Kataifi Shredded Phyllo Dough 1.1 lb
Authentic shredded phyllo dough perfect for creating the signature crunchy layer in Dubai chocolate bars. Widely available, freezer-friendly, and consistently good quality.

Dubai Fix Dessert Chocolatier Bar
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ThermoWorks Thermapen ONE Instant-Read Thermometer
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Gusto ETNA Pistachio Flour 8.8oz (Italian, Gluten-Free)
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Ghirardelli 60% Bittersweet Chocolate Chips (10oz)
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Pistachio Butter (Unsweetened)
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