Challah, Sweet Round Raisin - pareve
Posted by : Lita Lotzkar
From: A Treasury of Jewish Holiday BakingŠ
by Marcy Goldman
The sound of the shofar, the ram's horn that trumpets in the New Year at
synagogues everywhere, is the unique sound of Rosh Hashanah. It stirs the
soul. A freshly cut wedge of this challah, liberally dipped in new autumn
honey, stirs the taste buds. Substitute dried cranberries or sour cherries
and make up a batch of miniatures to offer in a Rosh Hashanah gift basket.
Rich bread doughs like this one really put yeast to the test. Make sure you
use a highly tolerant yeast (such as fermipan) for best results.
1 1/2 cups dark or yellow raisins, plumped
1 3/4 cups warm water
2 tablespoons dry yeast
pinch sugar
1/3 cup sugar
1/3 cup light honey
3 1/2 teaspoons salt
1/2 cup oil
3 eggs
2 egg yolks
6-7 cups approximately, bread flour
Egg wash:
2 tablespoons water
2 teaspoons sugar
1 egg
1 yolk
In a large mixing bowl stir together the yeast, water, and pinch of sugar.
Let stand five minutes to allow yeast to swell and dissolve.
Briskly stir in remaining sugar, honey, and salt. Then add oil, eggs, yolks
and about five cups of the flour. Stir into a shaggy mass. Let stand 10-20
minutes to absorb flour. Knead, by hand or with a dough hook, adding
remaining flour as required to make a soft and elastic dough (about 10-12
minutes). Dough should leave sides of the bowl. If it is sticky, add small
amounts of flour until dough is soft but no longer sticks. (Note: if you
find dough too bulky for your mixer, divide in two. Knead one portion at a
time).
Let dough rest on a lightly floured board ten minutes, then flatten and
press in raisins as evenly as possible into the dough, folding dough over
raisins to "tuck" them in. Place dough in a greased bowl and either cover
with greased plastic wrap and a damp tea towel or cover with a damp tea
towel and place entire bowl inside a large plastic bag. Let rise in a draft
free place until doubled and puffy looking, anywhere from 45 to 90 minutes.
(If you are doing an overnight, cool rise, place dough in a large, lightly
greased bowl and insert this in a large plastic bag. Refrigerate overnight.
If you see the bread rising too quickly, open the bag, deflate dough, and
reseal. Next day, allow dough to warm up then gently deflate and proceed.)
Divide dough in two. For 'faigele' or turban-shaped New Year's challah,
shape each section into a long rope (about 12-14 inches long) which is
thicker at one end and coil it, starting with the thicker end first, tucking
the end in on top to "lock". Or, you can divide each dough section into
three ropes, around 14 inches long and make a traditional challah braid.
Place on cornmeal dusted baking sheet. In a small bowl, whisk together egg
glaze ingredients. Brush loaf with egg wash and sprinkle with sesame seeds.
Let rise until puffy, around 20-30 minutes. Preheat oven to 400 degrees F.
Bake bread 12 minutes then reduce heat to 350 Degrees F and bake another 25
minutes or until bread is evenly browned.
Makes one large or two medium loaves. Can be frozen baked or unbaked. If
freezing unbaked, let bread rise slowly, overnight in the fridge. Bring to
room temperature before baking.
Baker Boulanger
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