
Hanini is the date-rich sweet I make when I want something warm, spiced, and filling without building a layered dessert. This version bakes into a sturdy brown-flour mixture, then gets broken into small pieces for serving.
The ingredient list is bold: dates, brown flour, powdered milk, turmeric, black pepper, sugar, butter, water, and baking powder.
For arabic hanini, that means noticing texture changes instead of blindly trusting the timer. I write the steps this way because those small cues are what save a batch in a real kitchen.
Why I keep coming back to this
- Dates give deep sweetness and body.
- Brown flour makes the dish hearty.
- Powdered milk adds a rounded dairy note.
- Turmeric gives color and earthy warmth.
- Black pepper keeps the sweetness lively.
- It can be served plain, with honey, or with butter.
What you need (and what each one is doing)
- 2 tablespoon turmeric powder.
- 2 teaspoon black pepper.
- 3 cup water.
- 4 cup brown flour.It gives structure; I measure it carefully so the texture does not turn heavy.
- 50 pitted dates.
- 1/2 cup sugar.It sweetens, but it also affects browning and how the finished dish holds together.
- 100 gram melted butter.It brings richness, and I watch the temperature because butter changes texture fast.
- 1 1/2 cups powdered milk.It adds moisture and a little tang, which keeps the recipe from tasting one-note.
- 2 tablespoon baking powder.This is small but important for lift, so I check the date on the container.
How I make it
Step 1 — Blend the date mixture
I check the dates for pits, then blend them with sugar, melted butter, turmeric, and black pepper until the mixture is as smooth as my processor will make it.
Step 2 — Whisk the dry bowl
In a large bowl, I whisk brown flour, powdered milk, baking powder, and water. I add the water steadily so powdered milk does not hide in clumps.
Step 3 — Combine everything
I scrape the date paste into the flour mixture and stir with a wooden spoon until the color is even and no dry flour sits at the bottom.
Step 4 — Bake until set
I grease the pan, pour in the batter, and bake at 170°C for 25-30 minutes, until the top is golden and the center no longer wobbles.
Step 5 — Cool and break apart
When it is cool enough to handle, I break the Hanini into small pieces with a fork. That rough texture is good with a little honey or butter.
Tips from my kitchen
- Check the dates.Hidden pits are easy to miss.
- Whisk powdered milk well.It clumps if ignored.
- Grease the pan generously.Date-heavy batters can stick.
- Cool before crumbling.Hot Hanini smears instead of breaking.
Small details I watch
This is the part of arabic hanini that never fits neatly in a short recipe card. I pay attention to temperature, texture, and timing because those are the things that change from one kitchen to another. A cold ingredient, a crowded pan, or fruit that is wetter than usual can make the same written recipe behave differently. I do not treat that as failure; I adjust and keep going.
I also try to clean as I move through the recipe. That sounds unrelated, but it keeps me from rushing at the end when the food needs attention. If a bowl can be rinsed, a counter can be wiped, or a knife can be put away during a quiet minute, I do it. Then I can focus on the final cue, whether that is a golden edge, a thickened filling, a chilled bar, or a smooth blend.
- Texture tells me a lot.I look for the point where the mixture changes from separate ingredients into one cohesive batter, dough, filling, or drink.
- Smell matters.Toasty, buttery, fruity, or spiced aromas usually show up before the timer ends.
- I avoid rushing the finish.Cooling, chilling, or resting often decides whether the recipe slices, scoops, or pours cleanly.
- I write down changes.If I swap fruit, dairy, nuts, or sweetener, I note it so the next batch is easier.
What I would check before serving
Before I call arabic hanini done, I take one last practical look. I check whether the texture matches the way I want to serve it, whether the seasoning or sweetness needs a small correction, and whether the food needs a few quiet minutes before anyone digs in. That final pause is not fussy; it is how I avoid cutting too early, pouring too thick, or serving something before the flavors have settled.
If something looks a little off, I make the smallest fix first. A splash of liquid, a pinch of salt, a longer chill, a few more minutes in the oven, or a sharper knife often solves the problem without changing the recipe. I like recipes that leave room for those normal kitchen adjustments.
Variations I have actually tried
- Honey finish:drizzle warm honey over the bowl.
- Cardamom:add 1/2 teaspoon ground cardamom.
- Less sweet:reduce sugar when dates are very soft.
- Nutty topping:add toasted walnuts or sesame seeds.
- Dairy-free:use vegan butter and plant-based milk powder.
Storing and reheating
I store cooled Hanini in a covered container in the refrigerator for up to 4 days. It firms as it chills because of the dates and flour.
To reheat, I microwave a small portion in short bursts or warm it covered in a low oven. A little butter, water, or honey stirred in brings back softness.
How I like to serve it
I serve Hanini warm in small bowls with Arabic coffee or tea. It is rich enough that a modest serving is plenty, especially with honey on top.
Frequently asked questions
Can I make Hanini without sugar?
Yes. Reduce it or leave it out if the dates are very sweet.
Can I use almond flour?
You can, but it will not bake the same. Almond flour needs liquid adjustments.
Is it served warm or cool?
I like it warm because the date and spice aroma is stronger.
Can I make it dairy-free?
Use vegan butter and a plant-based milk powder if available.
Why break it apart?
The rustic pieces soak up honey or butter better than neat slices.
If you make this Hanini, tell me whether you kept the spices bold.
One last note from my kitchen: I try not to rush the resting, cooling, or chilling steps even when the recipe looks finished. That short pause gives flavors time to settle and makes slicing, scooping, or serving much cleaner. It is the kind of small patience that does not show in an ingredient list, but it shows at the table. When I repeat a recipe, I pay attention to the one detail that felt awkward the time before, because that is usually where the next batch improves.

Arabic Hanini
Description
A warm Arabic Hanini made with dates, brown flour, powdered milk, turmeric, black pepper, sugar, and melted butter, baked at 170°C and broken into rustic pieces.
Ingredients You’ll Need
Instructions
- Blend sugar, pitted dates, melted butter, turmeric powder, and black pepper in a food processor until mostly smooth.
- In a large bowl, whisk brown flour, powdered milk, baking powder, and water until evenly combined.
- Pour the date mixture into the flour mixture and stir until no dry pockets remain.
- Grease a baking pan. Preheat the oven to 170°C, pour in the mixture, and bake for 25-30 minutes, until golden and set.
- Cool until easy to handle, then break into small pieces with a fork. Serve warm with butter or honey if desired.
Nutrition Facts
Servings 4
- Amount Per Serving
- Calories 286kcal
- % Daily Value *
- Total Fat 20g31%
- Saturated Fat 13g65%
- Trans Fat 0.8g
- Cholesterol 54mg18%
- Sodium 787mg33%
- Potassium 41mg2%
- Total Carbohydrate 29g10%
- Dietary Fiber 1g4%
- Sugars 25g
- Calcium 452 mg
- Iron 1.1 mg
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
Note
Check the dates. I look for hidden pits first.
Whisk well. Powdered milk needs attention.
Serve warm. The spices taste fuller.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. Reduce it or leave it out if the dates are very sweet.
You can, but it will not bake the same. Almond flour needs liquid adjustments.
I like it warm because the date and spice aroma is stronger.
Use vegan butter and a plant-based milk powder if available.
The rustic pieces soak up honey or butter better than neat slices.