Classroom lesson · Food · 🇵🇸 Palestine

Knafeh

The golden cheese pastry soaked in sweet syrup

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Knafeh is one of the most famous sweet dishes in the Middle East, and Nablus in Palestine is considered its home city. It is a warm dessert made of fine shredded pastry on top of stretchy white cheese, all soaked in a fragrant sugar syrup flavoured with orange-blossom water. It is sweet, salty, cheesy, and crunchy all at once.

Tell me more

The pastry on top of knafeh is called kataifi — a fine, thread-like shredded dough that looks a bit like pale golden noodles. It is pressed into a round tray, layered with the fresh, mild white cheese called Nabulsi cheese, and baked until the top turns a deep amber colour. The moment it comes out of the oven, hot sugar syrup is poured over the whole tray and it sizzles and steams.

Nabulsi cheese is made specially for knafeh — it is mild, slightly salty, and melts into a stretchy layer when warm. When you cut a piece and lift it, the cheese pulls into long, satisfying strings. The contrast between the crunchy pastry and the gooey cheese is what makes knafeh so extraordinary.

In Nablus, knafeh is serious business. The city has huge knafeh shops with trays as wide as a dining table. Vendors serve it on small plates with a piece of plain bread alongside — the bread helps balance the sweetness. Early mornings are the best time to find it, still piping hot and fresh from the oven. Families treat a trip to the knafeh shop as a celebration.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Knafeh is sweet and salty and crunchy and soft all at the same time. Can you think of other dishes that combine opposite flavours or textures?
  2. 02Nablus is so famous for one dish that people travel there just to eat it — is there a food your town is known for?
  3. 03Why do you think eating something warm and sweet in the morning might be a celebration in some cultures?
Try this

Classroom activity

Taste-texture adventure! Make a class chart with two axes: sweet–savoury (left to right) and soft–crunchy (bottom to top). Place familiar foods on the chart as dots. Where does knafeh land? Now find the empty corners — invent an imaginary dish to fill each corner!