Spoiler Alert: This BABKA is off the hook amazing 😉
I’ll spare you the love letter I could dedicate to this babka and just tell you straight up – I’m a girl in love. In love with chocolate. In love with butter. And in love with large amounts of both of them baking up into an awesomely intense chocolate overload of a bread.
Have you had chocolate babka? If not – clear your weekend schedule and gather your chocolate and butter, friends. Oh, and sign up for an extra intense bootcamp calorie burning session next week. You’ll thank me later.
On to the topic of my love babka. After some inspiration from this episode, finding a chocolate babka recipe from Martha, and seeing said recipe backed up by the beautiful Deb over at Smitten Kitchen – making chocolate babka was an easy sell. I mean… Smitten kitchen, Seinfeld, and Martha all buzzing about chocolate bread cake? This had to be good.
It was glorious. It was addicting. It was nibbled on endlessly for every meal imaginable. But calling this babka just good would be the understatement of the year. After my third slice, I swore surely there must be babka served in heaven. #fingerscrossed
As for the workload: this is not a quick, cheap, whip of your whisk and you’re done kind of recipe. It’s a labor of love. It’s a project. It’s a commitment.
The good news? In the end you’ll be rewarded for all your efforts. Rewarded with soft, fluffy, gooey, chocolatey babka.
The actual process of making and forming the dough is a simple, but complex process that took me from start to finish 6 (!!!) hours. The cost alone for butter and chocolate had me shaking my pockets for change. And can we not even talk about the calories a slice of this buttery dense chocolate glory contains? Let’s not. Instead, I want to talk about how worth it this is. How every cent, calorie, and second spent on making and baking this babka will disappear the minute you sink your teeth into your very first bite. Not making this would be cheating yourself, and we just can’t have that!
This recipe makes 3 hefty loaves. They freeze well in the pan pre-baked or flash frozen right after – I’ve done both – but I can assure you anyone would adore you for a lifetime if you gifted one of these loaves upon them.
Seriously – they get snatched up fast; make sure you save yourself a slice!
Chocolate Babka
Ingredients
For the Streusel Topping:
- 1 and 2/3 cups confectioners' sugar
- 1 and 1/3 cups all-purpose flour
- 12 tablespoons (1 1/2 sticks) unsalted butter, room temperature
For the Chocolate Babka:
- 1 and 1/2 cups warm milk, 110 degrees
- 2 (1/4 ounce each) packages active dry yeast
- 1 and 3/4 cups (plus a pinch) granulated sugar
- 3 large eggs, room temperature
- 2 large egg yolks, room temperature
- 6 cups all-purpose flour, plus more for work surface
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1 and 3/4 cups (3 1/2 sticks) unsalted butter, cut into 1-inch pieces, room temperature, plus more for bowl and loaf pans
- 2 and 1/4 pounds semisweet chocolate, very finely chopped
- 2 and 1/2 tablespoons ground cinnamon
- 1 tablespoon heavy cream
Instructions
For the Streusel Topping:
- In a large bowl, combine sugar, flour, and butter. Using a fork, stir until fully combined with clumps ranging in size from crumbs to 1 inch.
For the Babka:
- Pour warm milk into a small bowl. Sprinkle yeast and pinch of sugar over milk; let stand until foamy, about 5 minutes.
- In a bowl, whisk together 3/4 cup sugar, 2 eggs, and egg yolks. Add egg mixture to yeast mixture, and whisk to combine.
- In the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, combine flour and salt. Add egg mixture, and beat on low speed until almost all the flour is incorporated, about 30 seconds. Change to the dough hook. Add 2 sticks butter, and beat until flour mixture and butter are completely incorporated, and a smooth, soft dough that's slightly sticky when squeezed is formed, about 10 minutes.
- Turn dough out onto a lightly floured surface, and knead a few turns until smooth. Butter a large bowl. Place dough in bowl, and turn to coat. Cover tightly with plastic wrap. Set aside in a warm place to rise until doubled in bulk, about 1 hour.
- Place chocolate, remaining cup sugar, and cinnamon in a large bowl, and stir to combine. Using two knives or a pastry cutter, cut in remaining 1 1/2 sticks butter until well combined; set filling aside.
- Generously butter three 9-by-5-by-2 3/4-inch loaf pans; line them with parchment paper. Beat remaining egg with 1 tablespoon cream; set egg wash aside. Punch back the dough, and transfer to a clean surface. Let rest 5 minutes. Cut into 3 equal pieces. Keep 2 pieces covered with plastic wrap while working with the remaining piece. On a generously floured surface, roll dough out into a 16-inch square; it should be 1/8 inch thick.
- Brush edges with reserved egg wash. Crumble 1/3 of the reserved chocolate filling evenly over dough, leaving a 1/4-inch border. Refresh egg wash if needed. Roll dough up tightly like a jelly roll. Pinch ends together to seal. Twist 5 or 6 turns. Brush top of roll with egg wash. Carefully crumble 2 tablespoons filling over the left half of the roll, being careful not to let mixture slide off. Fold right half of the roll over onto the coated left half. Fold ends under, and pinch to seal. Twist roll 2 turns, and fit into prepared pan. Repeat with the remaining 2 pieces of dough and remaining filling.
- Heat oven to 350 degrees. Brush the top of each loaf with egg wash. Crumble 1/3 of streusel topping over each loaf. Loosely cover each pan with plastic wrap, and let stand in a warm place 20 to 30 minutes.
- Bake loaves, rotating halfway through, until golden, about 55 minutes. Lower oven temperature to 325 degrees. Bake until babkas are deep golden, 15 to 20 minutes more. Remove from oven, and transfer to wire wracks until cool. Remove from pans and serve.
I have been wondering.. where was THAT post that made me obsessed about chocolate swirl type of bread… it was you!
Guilty 🙂
I have never eaten a Babka before. With the amount of butter it must have such a great taste. I’m a chocolate lover, I think I would not stop eating this.
It’s pretty hard to just have one slice 🙂 And yes, the butter definitely adds to the amazing taste.
I’ve never had Babka before but now I’m very alert on this special sweets. This looks good, I blame myself I’m not a baker who just starts whipping this up as soon as seeing this post. I really wish. I am really intimidated unless I make it with someone else. I just want one small slice of this…or else I know I’ll be finishing everything with no doubt. 1 week of boot camp won’t be enough… Beautiful post and Babka…I’m trying to find it somewhere…
Thanks, Nami! I wish I could make it with you… I would totally take the other loaves off your hands 🙂
OMG good!! wow, this is something I must bake! My coworkers will go crazy over this!!
Yay, Linda! I hope you do make it; your co-workers will be singing your praises 🙂
Your babka looks absolutely fantastic, better than the ones I get from the bakery! I wish had a big slice to pull apart and devour!
I think the freshness of having it baked right in your kitchen is what really sets it apart from bakery babkas. And it fills your house with the most amazing smell for days!
Oh, I so wish you had lied and said it was super easy to whip up – and only took an hour… because then I would be making it RIGHT NOW. But alas, that is not to be… not yet anyways. I seriously wish you could mail me some.
If I had any left I would!! xx
oh dear.
I’m ruined.
This has to be done. Sigh.
Yippee 🙂 You’ll love love love it!! xx
Mercy. Forget the chicken noodle soup (thanks so much for your sweet offer), THIS is what will make me whole! Think about this: I come over and we bake together. Brilliant, yes?? We can wait until I’m finished with the whole cough-up-a-lung business, but not a second longer. I’m certain the WH can hold down the fort while I’m gone. I’ll leave him a chicken. 🙂
Brilliant! Love this idea 🙂
Hope you’re all better now?!
This looks amazing. Maybe breakfast worthy for my birthday next week 🙂 Thanks for stopping by my blog…looking forward to exploring yours, it’s beautiful!
Thank you, Anna! And Happy Birthday in advance; I think a breakfast babka is definitely in line 🙂
xx
Anything with such amounts for chocolate and butter in it must be delicious 🙂 I love the Callebaut chocolate pic – I want to eat that chocolate by itself! Your have such gorgeous step-by-step pictures here, and the babka looks mouthwatering!
It took great amounts of self control to stop myself from eating that 2 and 1/2 pound block of chocolate straight up… But this babka was worth the will power!