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Abigailjoy31
July 18, 2019
I just made my first sourdough chocolate babka yesterday! I’ve been on a sourdough adventure lately, and finally branched out when I saw a YouTube video about this dessert bread called Babka. I was curious about its history, so I googled it and found this article. Thanks for the article! The Seinfeld thing cracked me up!
Yonatan A.
May 22, 2019
I live in Israel, and I've never heard the word "babka" before. Like you wrote, here it's called krantz cake and you can find it in almost every bakery. It's only made with chocolate, never cinnamon etc... Also, there's no butter in it, if you don't brush it with egg on top it's actually vegan. I've found this article because I was curious about the name of krantz cake in English, and the whole "babka" thing was pretty shocking. This is the most popular cake in Israel, and every child grew up eating it.
Elaine S.
December 18, 2018
Sarah,
I am on a quest to find what I consider the best babka. In my first attempt, I made the dough from the recipe from Smitten Kitchen Better Babka. One half of the dough, I filled and formed exactly as instructed in the recipe, The other, I filled and formed with the filling from Mrs. London Babka Almond paste, cake crumbs etc, plus a chocolate layer that contained some confectioners sugar, chocolate chips, cocoa and butter. The one from Londons rose after about 11/2 hour and baked up beautifully. The SK one did not look like it was totally risen after 2.5 hours but I finally baked it and it was significantly less risen than the London one. The baked dough looked like it had been underproofed. I am in a quandry to figure out why this happened. Could the heavy layer of chocolate directly on top of the yeast dough have inhibited the rise? Could it have something to do with the shaping?Russian braid as opposed to just twisting.
I am on a quest to find what I consider the best babka. In my first attempt, I made the dough from the recipe from Smitten Kitchen Better Babka. One half of the dough, I filled and formed exactly as instructed in the recipe, The other, I filled and formed with the filling from Mrs. London Babka Almond paste, cake crumbs etc, plus a chocolate layer that contained some confectioners sugar, chocolate chips, cocoa and butter. The one from Londons rose after about 11/2 hour and baked up beautifully. The SK one did not look like it was totally risen after 2.5 hours but I finally baked it and it was significantly less risen than the London one. The baked dough looked like it had been underproofed. I am in a quandry to figure out why this happened. Could the heavy layer of chocolate directly on top of the yeast dough have inhibited the rise? Could it have something to do with the shaping?Russian braid as opposed to just twisting.
Cookie
May 8, 2018
At Gjusta in Venice, CA last week, I had a slice of the most amazing cinnamon babka. Absolutely not like any babka I've ever had. Purists would be appalled. It was beyond delicious, Like a cross between the best croissant and brioche. I can't find a recipe for it. It was ethereal.
Ed A.
April 29, 2018
Searching high and low, it seems all Babka today is made with PALM OIL. About the world's worst oil, implicated in deforestation as well as loss of animal habitat. Not to mention what it does to your arteries. That said, is there are babka out there worth eating?
Ed A.
April 29, 2018
Searching high and low, it seems all Babka today is made with PALM OIL. About the world's worth oil, implicated in deforestation as well as loss of animal habitat. Not to mention what it does to your arteries. That said, is there are babka out there worth eating?
Lori F.
March 10, 2017
Current babkas seem more candy'like than the ones I remember from my youth. We lived around Hartford, but NY relatives would visit, always toting a babka, usually cinnamon - I can tell you that we kids were slightly disappointed, as it used to be a dryer, not-too-sweet loaf, and we favored sweeter cookies and such. It was a nosh for adults to enjoy with coffee or tea. Today, they seem designed to cram in the maximum sweet filling. There has got to be a happy medium!
Windischgirl
March 5, 2017
Made the apple babka from Uri Scheft's "Breaking Breads." There are some problems with the recipe (glad I bake every week or I'd be in trouble) but the final product was yum! I made three mini-babke and they are so cute...
Windischgirl
March 6, 2017
First, order of adding ingredients to make the dough...made for a very lumpy dough and needed extra machine kneading to get it smooth. Then after the machine kneading the recipe said to do essentially what are slap-and-folds to build the gluten...but the flour recommended was pastry flour, which is going to naturally have less gluten. I did machine kneading all the way and gluten development was adequate. Making the apple filling: all the other ingredients were by weight (yay!) except the apples (?), and the instructions for cooking the apples said to make a caramel and then cook the apples in the caramel...but room temperature apple chunks caused the hot caramel to clump...until the apples released their juices and eventually melted the caramel. I think an inexperienced baker might give up at that point. Other errors: called for 2 3/4 cups sliced almonds to top 2 standard loaf pans...way too much, as I used 3/4 cup and that was plenty; bake time was stated as 20 minutes but my mini-babke took 40 and standard size took an hour. That said, the filling is delicious although could use more of it, and the bread not too sweet. I will make it again, but it's not a recipe for a newbie.
Windischgirl
March 3, 2017
Now look what you've started! :-)
http://luckypeach.com/recipes/collections/three-sandwich-babkas/
http://luckypeach.com/recipes/collections/three-sandwich-babkas/
Corduval
February 20, 2017
What's with this argument about cinnamon or chocolate? Obviously, it should have both cinnamon and chocolate ..why not try some Mexican chocolate?
rf
February 20, 2017
As a daughter of a Jewish baker who was a daughter of a Jewish baker, I wouldn't give bapkes for this style of babka. I remember Sunday mornings, waking to warm cinnamon babka which we thickly sliced and then topped with freshly stewed blueberries. Never too sweet, never too rich. Only the fresh yeasty bread and simply cooked fruits.
Windischgirl
February 20, 2017
About 4-5 Christmases ago, I made some 'Christmas Roses' which I now realize were savory Babke. An enriched yeast dough, left to retard in a cool place overnight, were filled with either a basil pesto or a sun dried tomato spread. Roll up, cut in half, twist each half around its twin, like a traditional Babka. Then the loaf was coiled to form a circular 'rose.' I'll hunt around to see if hubby still has the photos and post on Not Recipes.
Windischgirl
February 20, 2017
Nancy, I waded thru photo after photo and couldn't find it on my computer. Bet it's on hubby's, and he won't be home till Friday. Please stay tuned!
Windischgirl
February 28, 2017
If it helps, I used this recipe:
http://www.thefreshloaf.com/node/31325/rose-christmas
I did make one with a tomato pesto (modified the ingredients a bit) and another one with basil pesto. One vanished during Christmas Eve dinner, and the other disappeared during Christmas brunch. Important to let the dough chill overnight to improve handling (the chill makes dough magically less sticky) and enhance flavor.
http://www.thefreshloaf.com/node/31325/rose-christmas
I did make one with a tomato pesto (modified the ingredients a bit) and another one with basil pesto. One vanished during Christmas Eve dinner, and the other disappeared during Christmas brunch. Important to let the dough chill overnight to improve handling (the chill makes dough magically less sticky) and enhance flavor.
Rahel
February 20, 2017
But what about Green's Babka sold at Zabars and Fairway since forever? Still the best, and not at all meh.
Nancy
February 20, 2017
Rahel - happy to hear that Zabars or Fairway babka are "the best." Didn't mean all babka were meh. Just that I recognized the dried-out old version available jn many places.
Windischgirl
February 20, 2017
I was introduced to Babka at a previous job by a Jewish co-worker with NYC roots. Any time she'd take a trip to the city, or her NYC-based son would come to visit, there would be Green's Babka. And there would always be a debate--which is better: cinnamon or chocolate?
Sarah J.
February 20, 2017
There's a great 2013 piece on Green's here! http://www.grubstreet.com/2013/11/greens-babka-empire.html. It's made without butter (and without partially hydrogenated oil, too—they use palm oil), so it's parve!
Nancy
February 19, 2017
Fun story. I, too, remember the dried out meh-tasting babkas (Toronto), nothing like what's being offered now. The rise, expansion, enrichment and (maybe) fall of babka reminds me of those charts that show the historical debut, use, overuse, abandonment of certain words.
Fashion and trends, yes, but does the word or the food survive? And/or is it forever changed?
Fashion and trends, yes, but does the word or the food survive? And/or is it forever changed?
miranda
February 18, 2017
Y'all need to come down to DC and try the chocolate pecan babka at Bread Furst (available only on Thursdays) and then we can talk.
Gloria
February 18, 2017
Great article!! It has me running through all my books now to see what I want to make!! Thanks - and love all the great pics!
Windischgirl
February 17, 2017
I've made the 'Kranz Cake' from Ottolenghi's "Jerusalem" several times. In fact, my recipe for poppy filling resulted from a babka experiment a couple of years ago.
I'll post the picture on Not Recipes!
I'll post the picture on Not Recipes!
Steve
February 17, 2017
The shiny, twisted ones that have chocolate wound in it are not called Babka. In Israel, where it is EVERYWHERE, we call it simply "Yeast Cake" (עוגת שמרים). You can usually get it in chocolate or cinnamon. It's available dairy (with butter) or "parve" (I cringe... made with MARGARINE).
We don't get the streusel-topped ones that I have seen in the States at Flakowitz, in FL (amazing, BTW). Trader Joe's sells one... it's a bit on the sweet side, and they are calling it "Brooklyn" cause I guess it's a HIPSTER Babka. It's also not FULLY BAKED (I have tried 3).
We don't get the streusel-topped ones that I have seen in the States at Flakowitz, in FL (amazing, BTW). Trader Joe's sells one... it's a bit on the sweet side, and they are calling it "Brooklyn" cause I guess it's a HIPSTER Babka. It's also not FULLY BAKED (I have tried 3).






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