halva — the one made with tahini & natef

Everyone knows and loves halva. Well, perhaps not everyone loves halva but most people know it, the tahini one that is. Still, despite halva being fairly common now, few people know how it’s made. And I have to admit that I didn’t except for the one time, many many years ago, when I made  it following a recipe from Leslie Kenton’s  Raw Energy, and after I nearly broke my food processor trying to grind the sesame seeds, I ended up with a halva that bore no resemblance to any  I ever had — there are other types of halva but more on that in future posts. In any case, it wasn’t until a few years ago that I finally saw halva being made, and what a revelation that was. I was being taken round the old souks of Aleppo by a wonderful character and a friend now, Hassan Khoja who is the burly man in the first video below, when we stopped at the shop of a friend of his, Omar Akesh, who sells tahini and halva which he produces in a sprawling and rather medieval space behind and above his shop. The only thing I knew then was that shirsh al-halaweh (meaning the root or vein of sweetness in Arabic, or plain soapwort root in English) was used in the making of halva (it is listed as one of the ingredients) although I wasn’t quite sure how. So here is what I found out.

http://www.vimeo.com/6714556

First you need tahini, and to make tahini, sesame seeds have to be roasted, soaked, hulled and pressed, all of which are done by Omar’s men in the upstairs room. Then the soapwort roots have to be boiled to produce a brown liquid which when beaten miraculously turns into a brilliant white foam (because of the saponin). This foam is then mixed with sugar syrup to produce a meringue-like dip called natef, which is also served with karabij halab, a crumbly  ‘cookie’ filled with pistachio nuts. In fact, the natef that goes with the karabij is slighly different from the natef that is used in halva but I can’t remember the proportions now — somewhere I have notes telling me the ratios. The natef is made in a kind of tin machine/beater (sadly the only part of the process which I didn’t manage to photograph or film) and once it’s ready, it is mixed with the tahini. The mixture is then processed in three different stages. First it is churned as you can see in the video above. Once the halva maker judges it ready to be beaten, he attaches a huge wooden pestle to an automated arm which will drop it into and lift it from the mixture at a regular pace, while he goes on scraping the halva from the sides and pestle to ensure perfect blending.

http://www.vimeo.com/6714660

And now comes the final stage, which is the kneading of the halva. The mixture is transferred into a beautiful large metal bowl with a round bottom so that it can be rocked back and forth, and the halva maker kneads the mixture until it is smooth before portioning it out and packing it in plastic boxes.

http://www.vimeo.com/6714805

At Omar Akesh, and elsewhere, you can buy halva plain, or you can choose the more expensive version with pistachio nuts. The nuts are usually pressed on the outside of the halva cake but there is a more luxurious version with more pistachio nuts that are kneaded into the mixture. Here is a close-up of  soapwort as well as a few shots of the sequence of events in the making of halva.

shirsh el-halaweh 3 copy

halva 1 copy halva 2 copy halva 4 copy halva 7 copy halva - kneading 1 copy halva - kneading 2 copy halva - kneading 3 copy halva - kneading 4 copy

halva - weighing & packing copy

9 Responses to “halva — the one made with tahini & natef”

  1. David says:

    Anissa, up until now I have no idea how halva was produced. I have recently been given some in chocolate and coffee flavours!

  2. Gastro1 says:

    Anissa fascinating post tahnks you so much for sharing the information and videos.

    Pistachio Halva is a truly wonderful sweet (in moderation) and after reading this post I need to get some quick !

  3. mayssam says:

    I almost never buy halva. You see, I live alone and I love it so much that I would probably eat the whole thing in one sitting! :) So I avoid it until I go to my parents’ house, then I have some with my dad, right after dinner, with some pita bread and butter; yum! I do wish I had some right now.

  4. dianabuja says:

    Thanks for this, Anissa. I love halva, and always wondered the sequence of its production.

  5. Victoria says:

    Dear Anissa, I trust that you returned from your trip already and that it went really well. I look forward to your stories! This post was very enjoyable. I love halva, and it is interesting to look inside the process a bit.

    As for shirsh al-halaweh, I am yet to locate it, but I really want to find it to make karabij as well as an Uzbek sweet called nishalda. Here is a post from a livejournal I found online where you can see Uzbek nishalda as it is sold in Tashkent markets.
    http://community.livejournal.com/stalic_kitchen/355317.html#cutid1
    The article is in Russian, but the 5th and 6th photos are of nishalda. Looks luxurious!

    By the way, my cookbook collection now has your “Moroccan Cafe,” a lovely addition. I am planning to try something from it this weekend.

    Victoria

  6. anissa says:

    thanks victoria. i should be able to send you some shirsh el-halaweh soon as i will be setting up an online store for specialist ingredients in the near future. let me know how your moroccan dish works out. the trip was great. will write up something soon.

  7. anissa says:

    i forgot to say thanks for the link. v interesting.

  8. Victoria says:

    Anissa, what wonderful news! I am very excited to hear about these plans for a store. Please let me know when it starts functioning.
    I can share my recipe for nishalda, if you are curious. I have a feeling that it is not very different from natef. As a child, I loved it, but I have not had it in 10 years or so. I am looking forward to recreating it. :)

  9. anissa says:

    i would love to have the recipe victoria. would be v interested to see how it’s made there.

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