Babka
Babka is different from most other breads that I make. For starters, the recipe makes 6 loaves of bread at once. Great for gift giving in those quantities. Babka also uses so much less flour than most of my bread recipes. Only 8 cups of flour for the 6 loaves. I often use close to 8 cups of flour for just 2 loaves in other bread recipes. The bread dough is really a batter- so sticky you have to oil up your hands to divide the dough into the bread pans. This very tiny amount of dough rises to fill 9×5-inch bread pans. The result is a bread that is very light, with a crunchy exterior and tender interior. I can’t say where I got this recipe. I still have the original handwritten recipe, but it isn’t handwriting I recognize. I made it for a baking class the other night and people seemed to really like it. I hope you do, too. I add raisins to my Babka, but you can all sorts of dried fruits, grated chocolate or nuts. I sometimes drizzle a powdered sugar glaze on finished Babka.
Babka
3 packets active dry yeast
1 c. warm water
1 c. sugar
8 c. bread flour
1 t. salt
5 large eggs
1 stick butter
2 T. oil
Grated rinds of an orange and a lemon
2 c. warm milk
1 c. raisins
1 egg mixed with 2-t. milk
In bowl combine yeast, water, sugar, 1 c. flour, and salt. Allow to stand 10 minutes. Beat in eggs, butter, oil and grated rinds. Add remaining flour alternately with milk, beating a total of five minutes. Stir in raisins. Dust a large bowl with flour and put in dough. Cover and allow to rise until doubled, about 2 hours. Generously grease loaf pans. This recipe will fill 6 standard loaf pans – 9×5 – inch. Lightly oil hands and divide dough into portions, smoothing tops as you place dough in pans. Cover and allow dough to rise until more than doubled, about 1 hour. Brush loaves with egg and milk mixture. Bake in a preheated 325 degree oven for 1 1/2 hours or until bread is well browned and sounds hollow inside when tapped. Mine is normally done at about an hour and 15 minutes. Cool a few minutes in pans before removing to racks to cool. Babka in great eaten warm from the oven. They can be frozen, too.