Chocolate Babka Recipe (2024)

Chocolate Babka Recipe (1)

I think it was the first week of the lockdown. My doorbell rang. I hadn’t ordered anything, so I opened the door with caution. Turns out a friend of mine had bought Easter breads (flavored with mastic & mahlab) for her close-knit group of friends from a favorite bakery of mine in İstanbul, called Üstün Palmie. And I was one of those lucky recipients. It came to my door still warm from the bakery and I’ve been obsessed with baking the best version of it at home ever since. More on that later.

The obsession started with that bread–actually, sweetened and flavored breads are called çörek (pronounced “chö-wreck”) in Turkey–and continued with this wonderful Chocolate Babka, drenched in a dark caramel syrup.

Chocolate Babka Recipe (2)

For those who will be baking a babka for the first time, I highly recommend using a stand mixer. The dough is quite wet and sticky in the beginning and becomes smooth and much easier to work with after a 10-minute beating in the mixer.

Chocolate Babka Recipe (3)

Once the dough is done, the rest is a breeze. I chill both the risen dough and the chocolate filling briefly, which makes it much easier to roll out the dough and spread the filling evenly.

Chocolate Babka Recipe (4)

Once the logs are done, I prefer to chill them again until firm–this time in the freezer for 5-10 minutes–so that the layers don’t squish when you cut into the logs.

Chocolate Babka Recipe (5)

The recipe makes two babkas. One is for you and the other one is for someone who you feel needs some love during these unsettling times. I wish I could have gifted my second babka to my friend who brightened my day with her thoughtful gesture, but as soon as travel restrictions were lifted she took off to her house in Selimiye–a small fishing village located on the mountainous Bozburun Peninsula, where the Mediterranean sea meets the Aegean sea and the days are always bright, with or without a babka.

Chocolate Babka Recipe (6)

Classic recipes call for a simple sugar syrup, but I thought why bother with “simple” when you can drench these beauties in dark caramel? Of course I was right. Almost anything in the world is better with caramel.

For this syrup, you start by making a dry caramel, which means there’s no need to add water in the beginning. As soon as the sugar turns dark amber brown, you hold the saucepan at arm’s length and add the water. You have to be very carefully–as soon as you add the water, the caramel will bubble up vigorously and hot steam will rise. To avoid any mishap, I recommend adding the water using a soup ladle. This way, your hand won’t get anywhere near the hot steam.

Once the caramel syrup has cooled, you brush it generously over the hot babkas. And they look like this:

Chocolate Babka Recipe (7)

And then the exhausting wait starts. You must let them cool completely before slicing. It will be hard, but your patience will be richly rewarded.

Chocolate Babka Recipe (8)

Here are my favorite bittersweet (70% cocoa solids) chocolates and unsweetened cacao powder to use in this recipe:

BEST BITTERSWEET CHOCOLATES: Valrhona Guanaja, Valrhona Manjari, Guittard Organic Bittersweet, Callebaut 70-30-38, & Scharffen Berger Bittersweet.

BEST COCOA POWDERS: Valrhona Cocoa Powder, Guittard Cocoa Powder, Cacao Barry Cocoa Powder.

Enjoy!

CHOCOLATE BABKA

Makes 2 loaves

Ingredients

Dough

  • 4 1/4 cups (595 g) all purpose flour, plus more for rolling and pans
  • 2 1/2 teaspoons (10 g) instant yeast
  • 7 tablespoons (3.5 ounces/100 g) unsalted butter, plus more for bowl and pans
  • 3/4 cup plus 3 tablespoons (225 g) whole milk
  • 1/2 cup (100 g) granulated sugar
  • 1/2 teaspoon (4 g) fine sea salt
  • 3 large eggs

Chocolate Filling

  • 6 ounces (170 g) bittersweet (%70 cacao) chocolate, roughly chopped
  • 9 tablespoons (4.5 ounces/125 g) unsalted butter, cut into 1-inch cubes
  • 1/2 cup (80 g) confectioner’s sugar
  • 1/2 cup (50 g) Dutch-processed unsweetened cocoa powder
  • 1/4 teaspoon (2 g) fine sea salt

Caramel Syrup

  • 1/3 cup plus 1 tablespoon (80 g) granulated sugar
  • 1/3 cup (80 g) water

Method

  1. To make the dough, in the bowl of a stand mixer, stir together the flour and yeast.
  2. In a medium saucepan over medium heat, melt the butter. Add the milk, sugar, and salt and whisk until the sugar dissolves. Remove the pan from the heat and let the mixture cool for 10 minutes.
  3. Whisk the eggs into the cooled milk mixture and pour it over the dry ingredients. Stir with a silicone spatula until the flour is absorbed.
  4. Attach the bowl and the dough hook onto the mixer and beat at medium speed until the dough pulls away from the sides and becomes elastic and smooth, for about 10 minutes. Halfway into the beating, a portion of the dough may stick to the sides of the bowl and separate from the main dough. In that case, stop the mixer, scrape the sides of the bowl with the spatula and combine the stuck dough with the main dough, then continue beating. The dough will be smooth, sticky, and elastic. Scrape the dough into a generously buttered large bowl, cover tightly with lightly buttered plastic wrap, and let rise at room temperature until doubled in size, 60-75 minutes. After the first rise is complete, transfer the dough with the bowl to the refrigerator and chill for 30 minutes.
  5. While the dough chills, make the chocolate filling. In a medium saucepan over medium-low heat, melt the chocolate and butter, stirring occasionally with a wire whisk. Remove the pan from the heat, add the rest of the ingredients and whisk until smooth. Transfer the filling to a bowl and chill, uncovered, until it is thick enough to spread easily, about 15 minutes.
  6. Generously butter the bottom and sides of two 9-inch (23-cm) loaf pans. Dust the pans with flour and tap out the excess.
  7. Remove the dough and filling from the refrigerator.
  8. Turn the chilled dough out onto a lightly floured work surface. Deflate the dough by pressing down in the center with your palm and roughly shape it into a small rectangle with your hands. Lightly flour the dough and roll it out into a 16-by-24-inch (40-by-60-cm) rectangle. Gently stretch out the rounded corners occasionally to make a neat rectangle, taking care not to tear the dough.
  9. Using a metal offset spatula, spread the chilled chocolate filling over the surface of the rectangle in an even layer, leaving a 3⁄4-inch (2-cm) border all around. Starting at the long end of the rectangle that is closest to you, roll up the dough tightly and pinch the seam between your fingers to seal. You will have a log that is 24 inches (60 cm) long. Cut the log in half crosswise into two 12-inch (30-cm) logs. Transfer the logs to a cutting board and freeze, uncovered, until firm enough to cut without squishing the layers, 5-10 minutes.
  10. Using a large heavy serrated knife, cut each of the logs in half lengthwise, exposing the layers. Place two log halves on the cutting board with the cut sides facing up and overlap the top end of one half over the other and pinch the ends together. Working your way down, fold the halves over each other as if you are braiding them until you reach the bottom ends. Pinch together the bottom ends and place the braided dough in one of the prepared pans. Gently arrange the dough so that the top is level and the ends touch the pan on both ends to ensure an even rise. Repeat the same steps for the other two log halves. Cover the pans loosely with plastic wrap and let them rise in a warm spot until they are almost doubled in size and reach 1/2 inch above the top of the pan, 60-75 minutes.
  11. At least 30 minutes before baking, set a rack in the middle of the oven and preheat the oven to 350°F (180°C).
  12. Bake the babkas next to each other until the tops are well browned and a wooden tester inserted into the center goes in without any resistance and comes out without any dough clinging to it, 30-35 minutes.
  13. Right after you start baking the loaves, make the caramel syrup. Put the sugar in a medium heavy-bottomed saucepan and shake the pan to level the sugar. Set the pan over medium-high heat and start cooking without stirring. After the sugar liquefies and then starts to brown around the edges, lower the heat to medium. Push the caramel from the edges to the center with a silicon spatula and gently shake and swirl the pan to moisten the rest of the sugar. Once there are no visible lumps of sugar, stop stirring and cook until the caramel turns a very dark brown and starts to foam, about a minute or two. Immediately take the pan of the heat and, holding it at arm’s length, pour in the water at once using a soup ladle. Be careful; the caramel will bubble up vigorously and hot steam will rise. Stir the syrup with a spatula to make sure the caramel has completely melted and set aside to cool.
  14. Remove the pans from the oven, set them on a wire rack and let cool for 5 minutes. Brush the caramel syrup evenly all over the babkas and let them cool until they are barely warm. Unmold the babkas directly onto the rack and invert onto the serving platters.

Storage: Babka is best the day it is made, but it will keep, wrapped airtight, at room temperature for up to 3 days or in the freezer for up to a month.

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Chocolate Babka Recipe (9)SallyBR

    Oh, the idea of caramel to coat the surface… BRILLIANT!

    love everything about it, this is really a beautiful post…. for a beautiful babka…

    Reply

  2. Chocolate Babka Recipe (10)Nick Malgieri

    I’ve been impressed by seeing this type of babka for a while now but I never trusted any of the recipes I saw until now. Thank you, Cenk!

    Reply

    • Chocolate Babka Recipe (11)Cenk

      Thank you, Nick!

      Reply

  3. Chocolate Babka Recipe (12)Maria

    Thankyou ! Very happy to know you are alive and well. Keep up the good work you are doing and gifting to all of us.

    Reply

  4. Chocolate Babka Recipe (13)Katy Linkjendal

    Thanks for the lovely post. I haven’t received one for quite some time and it was lovely to see it pop up.

    Reply

  5. Chocolate Babka Recipe (14)Chiara

    My goodness Cenk! I had forgotten how much I loved you… stay well!

    Reply

  6. Chocolate Babka Recipe (15)Rose

    this belongs on the cover of your next book! it is one of the most stunning baked goods i’ve ever seen!

    Reply

    • Chocolate Babka Recipe (16)Cenk

      Thank you, Rose!

      Reply

  7. Chocolate Babka Recipe (17)janet

    Thank you for sharing. I have made yeasted Babka in the past. Look.forward to trying your recipe. Have a wonderful.day.

    Reply

  8. Chocolate Babka Recipe (18)Ada

    Jummy!
    Cafe Fernando is one of the best blogs.

    Reply

  9. Chocolate Babka Recipe (19)Brian Grant Evans

    I made this yesterday, first time ever making or trying babka. Thank you. It came out beautifully.

    Reply

    • Chocolate Babka Recipe (20)Cenk

      Happy to hear! Enjoy!

      Reply

  10. Chocolate Babka Recipe (21)Jessica

    We missed you! Love this recipe.

    Reply

  11. Chocolate Babka Recipe (22)Lindsey

    I’ve never made babka before, but when I saw you used a caramel syrup I knew this had to be the recipe I attempted first. Ended up with a few changes due to my own mistakes: accidentally used active dry yeast instead of instant (thankfully it still rose perfectly), had to refrigerate overnight before the second rise due to underestimating the amount of time I had to make the bread, and used a bundt pan to make a wreath instead of two separate loaves. Even with these changes, it turned out incredible. My partner has been asking me to make a chocolate babka for some time now and he was thrilled with the results. Thank you for a great recipe!

    Reply

    • Chocolate Babka Recipe (23)Cenk

      Glad you liked it! Bon appetit.

      Reply

  12. Chocolate Babka Recipe (24)Ashley

    I just took these out of the oven and am so excited to try them. They smell and look amazing! I’ve been wanting to make one but it seemed so hard. Your recipe was awesome and easy to follow. Thanks!

    Reply

  13. Chocolate Babka Recipe (25)Ersi

    Dear Cenk, Greetings from Greece. I just received your wonderful cookbook and immediately I started cheking out some reicpes (almost burned my lunch reading it!!) It looks great. I am currently making yr lemon meringue tart. Unfortunately, you don’t mention anywhere in yr book or blog what type of oven we should use – traditional or fan? PLease specify, at least for the pie-tart doughs. I believe that it does make a difference.
    Thank you in advance for your insight and I am really looking forward to trying yr recipes.

    Reply

    • Chocolate Babka Recipe (26)Cenk

      I use a fan-assisted oven. Happy baking!

      Reply

  14. Chocolate Babka Recipe (27)Mirna

    Hej Cenk, i like your recipes i tried your recipe babka many times and it was so good!!!, at home we appreciate it, your chocolate cakes ar delicious, Aven have tried your recipes att work.
    Thank you for your guide and tips

    Greetings from Sweden,

    Reply

  15. Chocolate Babka Recipe (28)Shira

    Absolutely beautiful and delicious. I am new at baking and the instructions were clear and these came out incredible! My friends and family loved it!

    Reply

  16. Chocolate Babka Recipe (29)Sofia

    This is an AMAZING recipe, thank you so much for sharing! I wish I could show you a picture of how the turned out 🙂

    Reply

  17. Chocolate Babka Recipe (30)Cennet

    Dogum hediyesi olarak esim bana kitchen aid mutfak sefi alir almaz ilk denedigim tarcinli corek ve babka oldu cunku kendim asla bu hamurlari yoguramazdim. Su an babkami yerken size yaziyorum:) o kadar mutluyum ki anlatamam:)) ne kadar basitmis aslinda dedim. Yani sizin tarifleriniz hep uzun oluyor ama tane tane anlatildigi icin oyle. Bazen arkadaslarim tart/quiche vs yapinca tarifini istiyor hamurun:) kitaptan sayfalarin fotografini cekip atinca hepsi vazgeciyor:((( uc sayfa gorunce sanirim ama okumaarsa nasil anlasilcak. Ben tariflere bakmiyiorum bile artik o hamurlar icin. o kadar basit ki aslinda hepsi. Babkanin da bu kadar basit cikmasina sevindim. Kucuk bir bebekle bile yapabildim dusunun:))) ama sadece karamele cesaret edemedim normal surup yaptim. O da nazar boncugu olsun:) boyle de co*k guzel oldu. Agziniza ve emeginizr saglik:))

    Reply

Önemli:Bloguma bıraktığınız yorum, tarafımdan onaylandıktan sonra yayımlanacaktır. Yorum bıraktığınız yazı ne kadar eski olursa olsun, yorumunuzu gözden kaçırmam mümkün değildir. Yorumunuz soru içeriyorsa; yanıt verebilmek için yazıyı incelemem gerekebileceği için yayımlanması biraz gecikebilir. Sorunuzu sormadan önce lütfen aynı veya benzer bir sorunun daha önce sorulup sormadığını önceki yorumları tarayarak emin olunuz.

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Chocolate Babka Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is chocolate babka made of? ›

Sweet Dough – The recipe starts with a fabulous dough that includes sugar, eggs, and butter for the ultimate in richness. Chocolate Filling – Finely chopped chocolate is mixed with cinnamon, sugar, and then butter is cut in to make a chocolate crumble of sorts that melts beautifully into swirls in the finished bread.

Why didn t my babka dough rise? ›

If you have too much sugar in your dough, it could gobble up almost all of the food the yeast needs, leaving you with dry, ineffective yeast. To counteract this, allow sweet doughs, like the kind used to make cinnamon rolls or babka, plenty of time to rise.

Why do Jews eat babka? ›

Like many Jewish-American specialties, babka originated in Eastern Europe – Poland and Ukraine in particular – in the early 1800s. As a way to use extra challah dough, Jews there would roll up the dough with cinnamon or fruit jam and bake it alongside the challah.

How long will chocolate babka stay fresh? ›

Our babkas are baked daily and, if you can resist eating them, will stay delicious for up to 5 days after purchase. To hold longer than 5 days, wrap the packaged babka in aluminum foil and freeze for up to 1 month. To defrost, remove from the freezer, recycle the aluminum foil and thaw at room temperature.

Is babka served warm or cold? ›

Homemade babka is best when served slightly warmed up, or at room temperature. Is brioche and babka the same? Brioche and babka are very similar. A babka is often filled with chocolate, cinnamon, or other sweet fillings and shaped into a loaf, while brioche is twisted and baked into a knot.

What flavor is traditional babka? ›

Babka is a traditional Eastern European Jewish sweet loaf. It is a yeasted cake-bread that is typically filled with chocolate or cinnamon (but the possibilities are endless).

What to do if dough doesn't rise enough? ›

But almost as good as a proofing box is taking a Mason jar filled halfway up with water, microwaving it for two minutes, then putting your bowl of dough into the microwave with the jar to rise. The other thing you can do is place your lidded container or bowl of dough into a second, larger bowl of warm water.

How to get more layers in babka? ›

Roll it up: starting with the rectangle closest to you, roll it up from the bottom along the longer edge, working evenly side to side and pulling back with your fingertips to make the roulade as tight as possible. Repeat for the second rectangle. The tighter the roulade, the more layers of chocolate you'll have.

Why has my babka sunk in the middle? ›

Do NOT underbake your loaves. I recommend checking them with a thermometer to make sure they're done. If you pull them out too early, the babka will sink in the middle and be doughy (it's happened to me before and it's a total bummer).

What is a fun fact about babka? ›

Babka, which means “l*ttle grandmother” in Ukrainian, Russian, and Eastern European Yiddish is very popular where those languages are spoken. Babka used to be filled with scraps of Challah and seeds or nuts. It wasn't until Eastern European Jews arrived in New York that they decided to put chocolate in the bread.

What does babka mean in Yiddish? ›

It started when Jews on Shabbat took leftover challah and twisted it with seeds and nuts, such as poppy seeds and walnuts. The word 'babka' means grandmother, referring to the grandmothers on Shabbat who made this out of the leftover challah. Chocolate wasn't added to babka until Jews arrived in New York.

What is the difference between babka and Paska? ›

While they are both yeasted, sweet, enriched breads, paska tends to be wide and round with dough shaped on top to form religious symbols or decorative shapes. Ukrainian babka is a tall cylinder that sometimes contains raisins and/or citrus zest, and can have icing on top.

How much is a chocolate babka? ›

Trader Joe's describes this as "a sweet rich pastry layered with chocolate." An 18-ounce babka costs $4.99.

How do you know when babka is done? ›

Transfer to oven and bake until a tester goes into the cakes without any rubbery resistance and comes out clean, 40 to 50 minutes. The cakes will also sound hollow if you unmold them and tap on the bottom. An instant-read thermometer will read between 185 and 210 degrees.

Can I freeze babka? ›

Babka thaws surprisingly well after being frozen! To freeze a loaf of babka, let it cool completely on your counter before wrapping it in a few layers of plastic wrap. Then wrap it in a layer of tin foil and put it in your freezer. It'll keep for up to a month this way.

What type of cake is babka? ›

Hailing from Eastern Europe, babka is a yeasted cake typically filled with chocolate, cinnamon, or fruit (though we find it lends itself well to almost any filling, sweet or savory).

What are some fun facts about babka? ›

Babka, which means “l*ttle grandmother” in Ukrainian, Russian, and Eastern European Yiddish is very popular where those languages are spoken. Babka used to be filled with scraps of Challah and seeds or nuts. It wasn't until Eastern European Jews arrived in New York that they decided to put chocolate in the bread.

What does babka smell like? ›

When I think of Babka, I think of a soft brioche like yeast cake, filled with a juicy chocolate, cinnamon or nutty filling, that almost drips on your fingers as you eat a bite. The smell is heavenly of yeast with chocolate or cinnamon and you almost peel the dough a part while eating.

Is babka made from challah dough? ›

The dough for this babka recipe is Holly's Challah with the addition of orange zest and vanilla: After you mix the dough, let it rise till it doubles in volume: Once doubled, divide the dough into two equal portions; then roll each portion out into a 12X15-inch rectangle.

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