Here is a bread that is as much a pleasure to look at as it is to eat. Check out that braiding! And the way it practically glows on the table! Slice yourself a piece and cherish the pillow-soft interior, simultaneously rich and slightly sweet. Challah is a bread that should be in everyone's repertoire. For celebrating everything from Hanukkah to Sunday supper, challah is the just the bread for the job.
At its root, challah is a very straightforward bread to make. The dough is enriched with eggs and oil, while a few tablespoons of sugar add some sweetness. It doesn't require any fussy techniques and can be made from start to finish in the space of an afternoon.
The real magic comes in braiding the loaf. Even a simple three-stranded braid is impressive, though a four- or six-stranded braid (as shown below) will bring the house down. For major celebrations, like the Jewish high holidays, you can also coil the long braided loaf into a circle. A simple brushing of egg white is all you need to make that loaf shiny and magnificent.
We all know that leftover challah should go directly into a frying pan to make French toast. I also love it in bread puddings and even for sandwiches. It might sound a little strange, but challah piled high with thin-cut roast beef is pure heaven.
For celebrations big and small, there is nothing better.

How to Make Challah Bread
Makes 1 loaf (about 20 slices)What You Need
Ingredients
2 teaspoons active dry or instant yeast
1 cup (8 ounces) lukewarm water
4 - 4 1/2 cups (20 - 22 ounces) all-purpose flour
1/4 cup (1 3/4 ounces) white granulated sugar
2 teaspoons salt
2 large eggs
1 large egg yolk (reserve the white for the egg wash)
1/4 cup (2 ounces) neutral-flavored vegetable oil
Equipment
Standing mixer (optional)
Large mixing bowl
Bench scraper or sharp knife
Baking sheet
Parchment paper
Instructions
1. Dissolve the yeast. Sprinkle the yeast over the water in a small bowl, and add a healthy pinch of sugar. Stir to dissolve the yeast and let stand until you see a thin frothy layer across the top. This means that the yeast is active and ready to use. (If you do not see this or if your yeast won't dissolve, it has likely expired and you'll need to purchase new yeast.)
2. Mix the dry ingredients. Whisk together 4 cups of the flour, sugar, and salt in the bowl of a standing mixer (or in a large mixing bowl if kneading by hand).
3. Add the eggs, yolk, and oil. Make a well in the center of the flour and add the eggs, egg yolk, and oil. Whisk these together to form a slurry, pulling in a little flour from the sides of the bowl.
4. Mix to form a shaggy dough. Pour the yeast mixture over the egg slurry. Mix the yeast, eggs, and flour with a long-handled spoon until you form a shaggy dough that is difficult to mix.
5. Knead the dough for 6-8 minutes. With a dough hook attachment, knead the dough on low speed for 6-8 minutes. (Alternatively, turn out the dough onto a floured work surface and knead by hand for about 10 minutes.) If the dough seems very sticky, add flour a teaspoon at a time until it feels tacky, but no longer like bubblegum. The dough has finished kneading when it is soft, smooth, and holds a ball-shape.
6. Let the dough rise until doubled. Place the dough in an oiled bowl, cover with plastic wrap, and place somewhere warm. Let the dough rise until doubled in bulk, 1 1/2 to 2 hours.
7. Separate the dough and roll into ropes. Separate the dough into three or six equal pieces, depending on the type of braid you'd like to do. Roll each piece of dough into a long rope roughly 1-inch thick and 16 inches long. If the ropes shrink as you try to roll them, let them rest for 5 minutes to relax the gluten and then try again.
8. Braid the dough. Gather the ropes and squeeze them together at the very top. If making a 3-stranded challah, braid the ropes together like braiding hair or yarn and squeeze the ends together when complete. If making a 6-stranded challah, the directions are as follows:
Braiding 6-Stranded Challah - The name of the game here is "over two, under one, over two." Carry the right-most rope over the two ropes beside it, slip it under the middle rope, and then carry it over the last two ropes. Lay the rope down parallel to the other ropes; it is now the furthest-left strand. Repeat this pattern until you reach the end of the loaf. Try to make your braid as tight as possible. Your braid will start listing to the left as you go; it's ok to lift it up and recenter the loaf if you need to. Once you reach the end, squeeze the ends of the ropes together and tuck them under the loaf.
At this point place your loaf is fairly long and skinny. If you'd like to make a celebration ring, stretch the loaf a little longer and pull the ends toward each other to create a circle. You can either squeeze the ends together, or if you're feeling adventurous, braid them into a continuous circle.
If you're making a regular loaf (as pictured), you need to "plump" it a little to tighten the ropes into more of a loaf shape. Place your left palm at the end of the braid and your right palm at the top, and gently push the two ends toward each other, just like plumping a pillow in slow motion. Then slip your fingers under the dough along either side and gently lift the dough while cupping it downwards. (This isn't a vital step, so don't worry if you're not sure you did it correctly.)
9. Let the challah rise. Line a baking sheet with parchment and lift the loaf on top. Sprinkle the loaf with a little flour and drape it with a clean dishcloth. Place the pan somewhere warm and away from drafts and let it rise until puffed and pillowy, about an hour.
10. Brush the challah with egg white. About 20 minutes before baking, heat the oven to 350°F. When ready to bake, whisk the reserved egg white with a tablespoon of water and brush it all over the challah. Be sure to get in the cracks and down the sides of the loaf.
11. Bake the challah. Slide the challah on its baking sheet into the oven and bake for 30-35 minutes, rotating the pan halfway through cooking. The challah is done when it is deeply browned and registers 190°F in the very middle with an instant-read thermometer.
12. Cool the challah. Let the challah cool on a cooling rack until just barely warm. Slice and eat.
Additional Notes:
• Substituting Butter: If you don't need to keep a kosher table, you can substitute melted butter for the oil in this recipe.

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(Images: Emma Christensen)




















Elizabeth Apron fro...

This may be a silly question, but I've learned my lesson with bread making (as in, the directions are always super-specific). Do you add the yeast/water mixture at the same time as the oil/egg mixture?
I use instant yeast, so I just mix together the dry ingredients, add the eggs, water, and oil, and turn the mixer on.
For the six stranded braid, I prefer a different technique: Strand 2 (second from left) to the far right, strand 1 to the middle; then strand 5 to the left, 6 to the middle. (Hard to explain, easy to see: the second strand goes to the other side, then the furthest to the middle.) Result looks like 2 stacked braids and is higher. This is the shape you generally see in bakeries. If you google, somewhere is a very nice video of Maggie Glezer demonstrating it.
@amber77 -- Yup, you add the yeast mixture along with the eggs and oil. I'll make this more clear in the recipe!
@Emma - thank you! I can't wait to give this a try. It's so beautiful!
Wait, slicing?
People CUT this bread? *boggle/wink*
We love challah here! My braided strands like to pull apart in the middle instead of staying tight and pretty. Any thoughts?
Wow, I can't believe how "perfect" your bread is. Each step looks like it's out of a food magazine. Super impressive.
We love challah and I make it often with my kids. My favorite recent variation was this recipe from Sassy Radish, with chocolate chunks and flaky salt: http://www.sassyradish.com/2012/09/chocolate-chunk-and-sea-salt-challah/. Decadent and delicious!
Dammit, challah looks a lot like tsoureki, which means I'm now craving tsoureki. And I don't know anything else that uses mahlab in it so it's not like I can just go eat something else to satisfy the craving!
if i make this they day prior to serving, is it still yummy? any storage suggestions?
This is going to sound like a stupid question, but by half turn do you mean 180 degree turn? Or 90 degree turn?
If I wanted to do most of the prep in advance and then freeze it before the final baking, how would I modify the recipe? I love the idea of fresh-baked challah for a Shabbat dinner, but somehow, Fridays are always too hectic for bread-making!
LONG time challah baker reporting in. @fabricwench, perhaps your dough is too dry and floury when you braid, also, make sure your braid has risen enough before you bake it. @splitty you don't need to modify the recipe to freeze braided raw dough, just leave it on a parchment paper-lined pan in the freezer until firm and then wrap the frozen loaf for freezer storage. When you are plan to bake, just put the loaf on a greased or lined pan, paint with egg wash and let it fully thaw and rise. Bake as usual. Having said that, I'm not satisfied with the results, as the baked loaf tends to have a blistery appearance but it's a big help on short Fridays.
I have never been able to attempt a 6 braid challah, only 3 braid ones. Thank you so much for the picture post. This makes a whole lot more sense now!
Ditto what @Fairfax said!
Also, @meliz88 - I mean rotate the pan 180 degrees. This way it bakes evenly on all sides if there are hot spots in your oven.
@JBayly - Yes, the challah is still very good the next day! I usually just wrap it loosely in a plastic bag and leave it on the counter. You can also warm it up for about 10 minutes in a 300°F oven just before serving.
@Emma - using butter doesn't make challah unkosher, it makes it a dairy recipe. Those who observe kashrut would then not be able to eat it at a meal served with meat, but they might make a meal of the challah all by itself! :)
The mention of six strand braiding frightened me but, when I saw the pictures I thought to myself I could do it. The pictures are great! I love a thick slice of fresh challah with Nutella smeared on it.
http://www.finecooking.com/videos/braiding-challah.aspx
:)
Can you give a weight measurement for the flour? Measuring flour by cups usually results in getting either way too much or way too little flour into the recipe, so I prefer to weigh mine.
@LDMark - Thanks for the explanation!
@Charlotte - Sure thing. I'll update the recipe asap.
Vegans, take note: you can easily veganize this with egg replacer (Ener-G, etc). My standard challah recipe only calls for one egg, not two, but I've made two-egg challot with egg replacer as well, and it's just as fabulous. Egg replacer won't work for the egg wash on top, but I always just skip it and it's still perfect.
There is nothing like freshly-baked challah made at home. Even the best store-bought challah never truly compares, despite hard crusts, wonky braiding, or scraggly strands.
I highly recommend Deb's recipe for fig, olive oil, and sea salt challah once you've mastered this basic recipe. The fig one is absolute dynamite and is really just the thing for a special occasion (e.g., Rosh Hashanah). Here's the link.
But honestly, ANY homemade challah is cause for celebration!
could i sub in bread flour for the AP or would that mess things up? i've got loads of white bread flour but no AP (go figure)
@MissJulia - With bread flour, your challah will turn out more chewy and a touch more dense, but it will still make a beautiful loaf!
After I read this post, I left work early and raced home to bake a challah. Perfect results, this was wonderful!
Made this for a dinner party last night. The braiding instructions didn't work for me at all, but I tossed it all into a loaf pan and called it a day. The texture and flavor were lovely, and it was gobbled down in about 5 minutes. Thanks!
thanks, Emma! i went out and got AP and made a double batch. they are HUGE and BEAUTIFUL. thank you so much for sharing this recipe. i was always really intimidated by baking challah-- the yeast! the braid!-- but this was a very simple, well-written recipe. the photos showing how to braid were really helpful. this is why i love the Kitchn!
So excited to try this for the holiday season! And thanks for making the 6 stranded braid a little less intimidating. I had never been brave enough to attempt it before, but I'm going to give it a go now!
Can someone provide some tips on how to get your bread to rise in a cool new england apartment during the winter? I am somehow missing a key element or have a bad run of luck with yeast. I've tried setting the oven to the very base setting and leaving the door open just to give it a slightly warmer environment (although sometimes it gets too warm and start to cook/dry around the edges of the bowl). My water temp is lukewarm, not boiling so I shouldn't be killing the yeast.... And I tried a recipe that said to leave the bread in the fridge over night...once I beat it down in the morning in never rose again! Oh bread, why are you beyond my baking talents?!
This looks amazing. I've never made challah before, and I'm so excited to try this! I think this will be especially good for French toast :)
i make it thank you
http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10151421717963501&set=oa.437245456343664&type=1&theater
http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10151423752033501&set=oa.437245456343664&type=1&theater
Can I double this recipe?