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My Favorite Challah

Total Time
1 minutes
Rating
5(534)
Comments
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Ingredients

Yield:2 challahs
  • packages active dry yeast (1½ tablespoons)
  • 1tablespoon plus ½ cup sugar
  • ½cup vegetable oil, more for greasing bowl
  • 5large eggs
  • 1tablespoon salt
  • 8 to 8½cups all-purpose flour
  • Poppy or sesame seeds for sprinkling
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Cooking Newsletter illustration

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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    In a large bowl, dissolve yeast and 1 tablespoon sugar in 1¾ cups lukewarm water.

  2. Step 2

    Whisk oil into yeast, then beat in 4 eggs, one at a time, with remaining sugar and salt. Gradually add flour. When dough holds together, it is ready for kneading. (You can also use a mixer with a dough hook for both mixing and kneading.)

  3. Step 3

    Turn dough onto a floured surface and knead until smooth. Clean out bowl and grease it, then return dough to bowl. Cover with plastic wrap and let rise in a warm place for 1 hour, until almost doubled in size. Dough may also rise in an oven that has been warmed to 150 degrees then turned off. Punch down dough, cover and let rise again in a warm place for another half-hour.

  4. Step 4

    To make a 6-braid challah, either straight or circular, take half the dough and form it into 6 balls. With your hands, roll each ball into a strand about 12 inches long and 1½ inches wide. Place the 6 in a row, parallel to one another. Pinch the tops of the strands together. Move the outside right strand over 2 strands. Then take the second strand from the left and move it to the far right. Take the outside left strand and move it over 2. Move second strand from the right over to the far left. Start over with what is now the outside right strand. Continue this until all strands are braided. For a straight loaf, tuck ends underneath. For a circular loaf, twist into a circle, pinching ends together. Make a second loaf the same way. Place braided loaves on a greased cookie sheet with at least 2 inches in between.

  5. Step 5

    Beat remaining egg and brush it on loaves. Either freeze breads or let rise another hour in refrigerator if preferred.

  6. Step 6

    To bake, preheat oven to 375 degrees and brush loaves again. (If freezing, remove from freezer 5 hours before baking.) Then dip your index finger in the egg wash, then into poppy or sesame seeds and then onto a mound of bread. Continue until bread is decorated with seeds.

  7. Step 7

    Bake in middle of oven for 35 to 40 minutes, or until golden. Cool loaves on a rack.

Ratings

5 out of 5
534 user ratings
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Comments

Your illustration shows light bands of crust between the golden dark patches of crust. This comes from the rising in the oven revealing surfaces that had no egg wash. If you want that uniform brown crust, remove the loaf after 15 Minutes in the oven and reapply eggwash to the light areas that have appeared.

I love this recipe but made a few teaks that make it a little richer and sweeter with a more yellow inside:
change the 1.5 tbsp of yeast to 2 tbsp
sub honey for sugar (better color and flavor)
change the 4 eggs used in the dough to 3 yolks + 1 whole egg

Guys, your cooking instruction that this takes one minute is not true. It also appears as the only information about this recipe in every preview platform one wishes to share it on, like Facebook. This reflects badly on me as well as you. Can you correct this, please?

I substituted about 1.5 cups of rye flour and replaced all the sugar with honey - it turned out great!

I love this recipe. I did use saffron infused water and for rosh hashonah I added honey to the egg wash. Absolutely beautiful and delicious.

I don't have much experience baking challah and I'm about to try this recipe for the first time. ONE TABLESPOON of salt sounds like a lot! Is it necessary? Will the finished loaf taste salty? Also, I'd like to add raisins to the dough. At what point do I add them? Thanks for your feedback.

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