The Fresh Loaf

A Community of Amateur Bakers and Artisan Bread Enthusiasts.

Sourdough Challah

Benito's picture
Benito

Sourdough Challah

Two of our close friends have birthdays this month. We decided to host a brunch for them, in part to give me an excuse to bake a challah loaf again. I thought I’d make a couple of changes to Maggie Glezer’s SD challah. Mostly I thought it needed more egg, so I increased the egg from 3 to four and reduced the water to compensate for the 72% of the egg which is water. I needed the challah to make a peach and blueberry strata. Basically this is a type of French toast that you bake in a pan using cubes of the challah. This makes for an easy meal that you prepare the night before and then bake the morning of the brunch.

I decided to coat only three of the strands of this six stranded challah for a different look.  It didn’t quite turn out the way I thought it might.  I started with the seeded vs unseeded strands in alternating positions.  I wonder if I’d started them three seeded on the left and then three unseeded on the right if it might have ended up looking more random.  I’ll have to try that next time and find out.

Procedures

 

 

  1. The night before baking, mix the starter and ferment it at 76°F for 8-12 hours.
  2. In the morning, in a large bowl or the bowl of a stand mixer, dissolve the starter in the water, then mix in the 4 eggs, salt, honey and oil until completely combined.
  3. Mix in all the bread flour until it forms a shaggy mass.
  4. Knead the dough on the bench or in a stand mixer until it is smooth and there is moderate gluten development. (Add small amounts of water or flour to achieve the desired consistency, better if you do not have to) The dough should be quite firm.
  5. Transfer the dough to a lightly oiled bowl and cover it tightly. Ferment for about 2 hours. It may not rise much.
  6. To make one loaf, divide the dough into two equal portions, and divide each portion into the number of pieces needed for the type of braiding you plan to do, so divide each by 3 to make 1 six strand braided loaf.
  7. Form each piece into a ball and allow them to rest, covered, for 10-20 minutes to relax the gluten.
  8. Form each piece into a strand about 14” long. (I like Glezer’s technique for this. On an un-floured board, flatten each piece with the palm of your hand. Using a rolling pin, roll out each piece to about ¼ inch thickness. Then roll up each piece into a tight tube. Using the palms of your hands, lengthen each piece by rolling each tube back and forth on the bench with light pressure. Start with your hands together in the middle of the tube and, as you roll it, move your hands gradually outward. Taper the ends of the tube by rotating your wrists slightly so that the thumb side of your hand is slightly elevated, as you near the ends of the tube.)
  9. Braid the loaves. Braiding somewhat loosely, not too tight.
  10. Place each loaf on parchment paper on cookie trays. Cover well with plastic wrap or place the pans in a food grade plastic bag, and proof at room temperature until the loaves have tripled in volume. In my oven with the light on and door cracked open, it takes 4-6 hours, be patient.
  11. If it’s almost tripled and when poked the dough only springs back a little, preheat the oven to 180°C/350°F. Gauge the dough again. Stick a finger lightly in the dough. If it makes an indentation that doesn’t spring back, the dough is ready to be baked. If not, wait a bit more.
  12. Pre-heat the oven to 350ºF with the rack in the lower third of the oven about 30 mins before final proof is complete.
  13. Brush each loaf with an egg and some milk, lightly beaten with a pinch of salt.
  14. Optionally, sprinkle the loaves with sesame seeds and/or poppy seeds.
  15. Bake until done – 25-40 minutes rotating half way, shield from above to slow browning… If baking as one large loaf may take a bit longer, bake until sounds hollow or reaches 190ºF in the middle.
  16. Cool completely before slicing.

My index of bakes.

Comments

Benito's picture
Benito

Oh I should add, this is just a tiny touch under fermented as you can see by the small amount of tearing between the strands as it baked.  I need to be just a bit more patient with my challah final proof LOL.  Below you can see how the dough blew the top of my aliquot jar so the rise was probably over 150% at the time of baking and it still really would have benefitted from another 15-30 mins of fermentation.

Benito's picture
Benito

Here’s the crumb.  This turned out really well, the crumb is sooooo soft and fluffy exactly how it should be.  Love the extra egg flavour, it will make a great strata tomorrow.

JonJ's picture
JonJ

What a gift to share with friends. Challah French toast is just the best, and can only imagine and dream of your strata.

I struggle with sourdough challah, in that from yeasted challah I expect to see some definition between the braids, and the problem is that 4-6 hours for final proof means that they fuse into each other. To my eye that crumb looks proofed "just right".

Benito's picture
Benito

Thanks so much Jon.  I know what you mean, over fermented challah will certainly lose the definition between the strands.  I have yet to try making a commercial yeast challah, all of mine have been sourdough.  With the large amount of prefermented flour these ferment pretty quickly so I haven’t been tempted by the speed of commercial yeast. 

Benny 

Isand66's picture
Isand66

This one came out excellent Benny.  I’m not crazy about the last one I made and was looking for a new formula.  Will have to try this one soon.

Happy baking!

Ian

Benito's picture
Benito

Thank you Ian, I really appreciate that.  I’ll be interested in hearing what you think of it when you try it, hope you post it.

Happy Canadian Thanksgiving (a day early)

Benny

Benito's picture
Benito

Here’s a video I just uploaded showing the shaping of this loaf.

trailrunner's picture
trailrunner

Did you use this for the peach and blueberry strata? It also does make amazing burger buns or sliders! c

Benito's picture
Benito

Yes I used this loaf for the strata, so much better than store bought of course.  I’ll have to try making this in buns too.

Benny 

HeiHei29er's picture
HeiHei29er

Excellent bake Benny!  I kind of like the sectioned look but agree it would be interesting to see how it changed based on the starting position of the strands.

It sounds like you nailed the texture on this one.  Do you think that was from the extra egg or the fermentation?