Thursday, April 23, 2026

Post Pesach/Passover Back to Making Challah Rolls

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.


This year Passover ended rather late in the week, so with all the post Pesach chores, there was no way I could manage a batch of challah rolls. And for whatever reasons I couldn't find the time and energy the following week. Also my husband had bought enough rolls to suffice a second week. So this week I knew that I had to bake some.

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

2 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

Instructions

  1. in a large bowl add almost all of the dry ingredients; just leave out some of the flour
  2. add the water and oil
  3. mix well, and then cover and leave until it rises (doubles in size)
  4. then add more flour until the dough is "dry" enough to handle without it sticking to your hands
  5. 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.
  6. Once you've kneaded it, coat it top and bottom with some oil, then cover again until it rises again.
  7. Once it rises, pound it down, cover and let it rise again.
  8. When it doubles, "take challah" according to these instructions or from another site, family or friend. 
  9. Finally cover your baking pan with special baking paper, prepare a raw egg for "painting the challah."
  10. Shape your challah or rolls, and place on the paper far enough apart so they won't get attached when baking.
  11. "Paint" with the raw egg, and then let rise until close to double.
  12. 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.
  13. 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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