I must admit that I don't bake challah every week, though we do eat my challah rolls pretty much every week. That's because I bake batches that last sometimes even two months, depending on how many invitations we get and how many rolls in the most recent batch.
I took down my simple recipe from the fridge and made sure I had enough flour. I prefer a very fine 70% whole wheat. It's "almost white" but much healthier.
Ingredients
Instructions2 heaping tablespoons of dehydrated yeast
4 cups of warm water
1 cup vegetable oil of your choice
1 cup of sugar
pinch of salt
2 kilo (4.4 lbs) flour
- in a large bowl add almost all of the dry ingredients; just leave out some of the flour
- add the water and oil
- mix well, and then cover and leave until it rises (doubles in size)
- then add more flour until the dough is "dry" enough to handle without it sticking to your hands
- then knead, pound, keep turning over for over five minutes-- Yes, I do it by hand and don't have a mixer. If you have a mixer, make sure it can handle yeast dough and the quantity you're making. You may have to half or quarter the recipe.
- Once you've kneaded it, coat it top and bottom with some oil, then cover again until it rises again.
- Once it rises, pound it down, cover and let it rise again.
- When it doubles, "take challah" according to these instructions or from another site, family or friend.
- Finally cover your baking pan with special baking paper, prepare a raw egg for "painting the challah."
- Shape your challah or rolls, and place on the paper far enough apart so they won't get attached when baking.
- "Paint" with the raw egg, and then let rise until close to double.
- Bake in hot oven. Start at 180 C until brownish, and then lower to 160C until they look ready and there's a "hollow" sound if you tap.
- Turn off the heat and then cool.
Yes, there are lots of different recipes. I used to bake with eggs and less water, but I changed it to what I wrote here. Enjoy, and tell me how they come out.
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