
Whenever the holy month of Ramadan comes around, various images come to our minds, like Ramadan decorations, lanterns, meals, and desserts like konafeh, qatayef and baklava, which are some of the main dishes with a long history. These desserts were always on the tables of kings, princes, and caliphs in the older eras. It is said that these dishes were specifically made to impress princes and satisfy them.
Konafeh dates back to the Umayyad dynasty. There are many stories concerning when they began. It was said that the people of Belad Al-Sham came up with these dishes to be served during suhoor (meal before fasting) to Muâawiya bin Abi Sufyanâthe first caliph of the Umayyad dynastyâas he wanted a dish to satisfy his hunger during fasting hours.
Abi Sufyan was a food lover who complained to his doctor about the hunger he felt during the day, so his doctor advised him to ear complex carbs, high-value sugars, and fats, which are not quickly digested and reduce hunger pans, therefore Konafeh was created for him.
It is said that the palace chef once made a liquid paste, then a scoop fell into the bowl of dough in thin threads on the stove which impressed the chef so he decided to dip it in margarine and then heated it until it became red, then he poured honey over it and served it to the caliph who liked it a lot.
Some say that Abi Sufyan was the first to come up with konafeh and that it was known for a while as âMuâawyaâs konafehâ.
It then became a habit to eat konafeh in Ramadan and became a food that the rich and poor equally love, making it a popular dish.
In another story, konafeh was made especially for Soliman bin Abdelmalek Al-Amawy. It is said that it dates back to the era of Mamluks who ruled Egypt during the period from 1250-1517 AH.
Islamic history scholars say that konafeh dates back to the Fatimid period which extended from 969 AH to 1172AH. They ruled Egypt, Morocco, and Belad Al-Sham. They say that konafeh appeared in Egypt then spread to Belad Al-Sham. This coincided with Caliph Al Moez Leldein Allah Al-Fatimi entering Cairo during Ramadan. The people went out to receive him, racing to present gifts to him after iftar, including Konafeh.
The first kind of konafeh is called âshaarâ (hair) which looks like threads of hair, and it is called âmachine konafehâ. The second is âhand konafehâ, which mainly depends on a traditional method with a pan that has holes. It is called âpopular konafehâ.
Even though technology has taken over the making of konafeh, there are still konafeh makers who go by the traditional methods of making konafeh.
Over time, making konafeh has become a science taught at universities and it remains today one of the most favourite dishes in the east. Each country has its own unique way of making and stuffing konafeh. The people of Belad Al-Sham stuff it with cream, the people of Mecca stuff it with cheese and no salt. The people of Nablus are famous for their amazing cheese konafeh.
As for âqatayef,â it is said that their name is derived from âqateefaâ which means âvelvetâ because âqatayefâ feel like the soft velvet. It is believed that âqatayefâ dates back to the Mamluk era and was served as a stuffed pie for guests to eat.
Some believe that âqatayefâ was older than âkonafehâ as sweet makers were competing to make the most delicious dessert dish and to serve it beautifully. In Ramadan the importance of âqatayefâ and âkanafehâ persists.
As for âbaklava,â historians differ on the origin of the dish and whether it emerged from the Turkish or Greek culture.
âBaklavaâ is a type of sweet made from thin paste chips and has sugar and margarine added to it. It is then stuffed with nuts.
It is said that Turkey learned about the dish for the first time in the ear of Mohamed the fourth as he used to love is wife âMah Yaraâ who was known as âRabaaâ. He would not eat food made by anyone but her, so she invented a new dish for him, which was âbaklava,â and when he tasted it for the first time, he said it was not like anything he has tasted before, so the name was then used.
As for the relevance of âbaklavaâ to Ramadan, according to the book âThe Ottoman Empireâ by Donald Quataert, the emergence of âbaklavaâ was in the late 17th century in the second half of Ramadan. During Ramadan at the time of iftar, the sultans would visit Topkapi Palace where the mantle of the Prophet was kept, and would distribute âbaklava.â It is a tradition that has been followed until the era of Sultan Abdelhameed.
The making of âbaklavaâ moved to Syria and the first person to introduce it was Fareeg from Istanbul. He lived in Halab and opened a shop for âbaklavaâ in Ramadan.
âBaklavaâ is one of the reasons there is a dispute between Turkey and Cyprus because of the brochures distributed in Austria on the Europe Celebration day where âbaklavaâ was stated as a dessert from Greek Cypriots.