Sourdough Babka Recipe: How to Make a Chocolate Babka (2024)

Published By Natasha KrajncCategorized as Sourdough Bread Recipes

I’ve been dreaming about babka for a long time. So today I would like to share the recipe for sourdough chocolate babka. I will talk about how to make the most yummy sourdough babka with chocolate.

Sourdough Babka Recipe: How to Make a Chocolate Babka (1)

Table of Contents

  • Sourdough Babka with Chocolate
    • Ingredients for the Sourdough Babka
    • How to Bake the Sourdough Babka
  • Sourdough Babka FAQs

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Sourdough Babka Recipe: How to Make a Chocolate Babka (2)

Sourdough Babka Recipe

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  • Total Time: 22 hrs 39 mins
  • Yield: 2 medium-sized babkas 1x

Ingredients

Scale

Starter

  • 80 g white wheat flour (bread flour)
  • 20 g brown sugar
  • 25 g active mother sourdough starter
  • 35 g water

Dough

  • 350 g white wheat flour (bread flour) (100%)
  • all of the above starter (appr. 160g) (42%)
  • 2 eggs (appr. 100 g) (28%)
  • 50 g brown sugar (12%)
  • 85 g unsalted softened butter (24%)
  • 7 g salt (2%)
  • 110 g milk (31%)

Chocolate Filling

  • 130 g melted dark chocolate (I used 70%)
  • 120 g melted butter
  • 10 g cocoa powder
  • 10 g powdered brown sugar
  • 50 g roughly chopped chocolate or chocolate chips (optional)

Instructions

  1. In the morning, prepare your sourdough starter. The starter will be stiff, more like a dough. Leave it to ferment until doubled in volume. This may take from 4-12 hours, depending on the environment temperature and strength of your mother starter. If your starter doubles very fast but you are not ready to make the dough, put the jar in the fridge.
  2. In the late afternoon mix the dough. I used mixer to knead the dough. In a large mixing bowl put milk, starter, sugar, eggs, flour and salt. Mix everything together. If the dough feels dry, don’t be tempted to add too much of additional liquid – mixing in the butter in the following phase will soften the dough (experiment with the softness of the dough) – but do add the liquid if you can’t incorporate all the flour. Knead the dough for 3-4 minutes and then leave it to rest for 15-20 minutes.
  3. Next, knead in half of the butter quantity. Once completely integrated, add and knead in the other half. Knead the dough for 8-10 minutes (it is advisable to use mixer) until smooth and elastic – check how transparent can the dough be if you stretch it. If you feel the gluten is not developing well, leave the dough to rest for 15 minutes and you will be able to notice the change. Shape the dough into ball and place it into clean bowl. Cover with plastic wrap and leave to ferment at the room temperature for 2 hours, then put the bowl into the fridge overnight.
  4. In the morning, first prepare the filling. Mix together melted chocolate and melted butter, cocoa powder and powdered sugar. The batter will be runny. Put the filling to a fridge for at least half an hour or until the batter starts to thicken up and feel spreadable (like Nutella for example).
  5. Also, prepare two tins and line them with parchement paper. I used one 25 cm (9.8 in) long and other 18 cm (7 in) long.
  6. When the filling is ready, take the dough out of the fridge and place it on slighlty floured surface. Roll the dough into sqaure measuring approximately 45×45 cm (appr.18×18 in) and to be 4-5 mm thick. When done, spread the filling across the dough, leaving 1-1.5 cm (half inch) edge. If you want, sprinkle some roughly chopped chocolate or chocolate chips across the dough. Tightly roll the dough into log. Trim the ends if necessary.
  7. Next, take a sharp knife and cut the log in half lengthwise all the way through – see the photo below. To shape the babka, take one half and place it over the other and than simply braid these two halves. Cut the braided dough to fit your tins.
  8. Leave the babkas to rise until approximately doubled in volume. Final rise may take 4-7 hours, it’s temperature depending. My needed 5 hours. When the babkas are almost risen, preheat the oven to 220°C/428°F. Put in the oven and bake for 10 minutes at 220°C/428°F, then decrease to 200°C/392°C and bake for another 30-40 minutes or until nicely baked.
  9. When baked, take the babkas from the tins and leave them to cool on a cooling rack. If eaten fresh, the babka will literally melt in your mouth, it’s so soft.

Notes

  • The dough for the babka was mixed in the late afternoon, left to rise for 2 hours at room temperature, put in the fridge overnight, shaped in the morning, left to rise for couple of hours and baked in the afternoon of that day.
  • Baker’s percentages are put in brackets if you would like to scale up or down the formula.
  • Please feel free to add more liquid (steps of 10 g), if you feel the dough is too stiff and all the flour is difficult to incorporate. Don’t be tempted to add a lot of liquid as you add butter in the second stage of dough mixing which softens the dough.
  • Author: Natasha Krajnc
  • Prep Time: 21 hrs 49 mins
  • Cook Time: 50 mins
  • Category: dessert

I just realized I’ve only been posting sweet breads lately, but today I will talk about how to make the most yummy sourdough babka with chocolate.

It must be I’m compensating for something I’m missing in my life or just pure challenge and yumminess of the sweet dough. Whenever I can, I dream about soft, buttery dough and melting rich dark chocolate between shreadable layers.

I’ve been dreaming about babka for a long time. And I’ve tried my luck couple of times, but I wasn’t quite happy with the result. It was either too dry, to hard or not sweet.

Last week I was really amazed by all of your comments, kind words and your ideas on what you would like to try and bake in my last post. Some of you wrote you would like to bake babka. I was intrigued!

I tried it again this weekend and it came out perfectly. So today I would like to share the recipe for sourdough chocolate babka. The secret here is that I used very soft brioche dough that I also used for sourdough hot cross buns. What I find important is that one type of dough can be used for so many purposes. If you find one that works, stick to it 🙂

Hop on this sourdough babka trip with me! Only sweet, delicious, chocolaty and buttery things ahead.

Sourdough Babka with Chocolate

Yields: 2 medium-sized babkas

The dough for the babka was mixed in the late afternoon, left to rise for 2 hours at room temperature, put in the fridge overnight, shaped in the morning, left to rise for couple of hours and baked in the afternoon of that day.

Ingredients for the Sourdough Babka

Note: Baker’s percentages are put in brackets if you would like to scale up or down the formula.

Needed for the Sourdough Starter

  • 80 g white wheat flour (bread flour)
  • 20 g brown sugar
  • 25 g active mother sourdough starter
  • 35 g water

Needed for the Dough

  • 350 g white wheat flour (bread flour) (100%)
  • all of the above starter (appr. 160g) (42%)
  • 2 eggs (appr. 100 g) (28%)
  • 50 g brown sugar (12%)
  • 85 g unsalted softened butter (24%)
  • 7 g salt (2%)
  • 110 g milk (31%)*

*Please feel free to add more liquid (steps of 10 g), if you feel the dough is too stiff and all the flour is difficult to incorporate. Don’t be tempted to add a lot of liquid as you add butter in the second stage of dough mixing which softens the dough.

Needed for the Chocolate filling

  • 130 g melted dark chocolate (I used 70%)
  • 120 g melted butter
  • 10 g cocoa powder
  • 10 g powdered brown sugar
  • 50 g roughly chopped chocolate or chocolate chips (optional)

How to Bake the Sourdough Babka

Sourdough starter

  • In the morning, prepare your sourdough starter. The starter will be stiff, more like a dough. Leave it to ferment until doubled in volume. This may take from 4-12 hours, depending on the environment temperature and strength of your mother sourdough starter.
  • If your starter doubles very fast but you are not ready to make the dough, put the jar in the fridge.

Dough

  • In the late afternoon mix the dough (I used mixer to knead the dough). In a large mixing bowl put milk, starter, sugar, eggs, flour and salt. Mix everything together. If the dough feels dry, don’t be tempted to add too much of additional liquid – mixing in the butter in the following phase will soften the dough (experiment with the softness of the dough) – but do add the liquid if you can’t incorporate all the flour. Knead the dough for 3-4 minutes and then leave it to rest for 15-20 minutes.
  • Next, knead in half of the butter quantity. Once completely integrated, add and knead in the other half. Knead the dough for 8-10 minutes (it is advisable to use mixer) until smooth and elastic – check how transparent can the dough be if you stretch it. If you feel the gluten is not developing well, leave the dough to rest for 15 minutes and you will be able to notice the change. Shape the dough into ball and place it into clean bowl. Cover with plastic wrap and leave to ferment at the room temperature for 2 hours, then put the bowl into the fridge overnight.
  • In the morning, first prepare the filling. Mix together melted chocolate and melted butter, cocoa powder and powdered sugar. The batter will be runny. Put the filling to a fridge for at least half an hour or until the batter starts to thicken up and feel spreadable (like Nutella for example) – see photos below.
  • Also, prepare two tins and line them with parchment paper. I used one 25 cm (9.8 in) long and other 18 cm (7 in) long.
  • When the filling is ready, take the babka dough out of the fridge and place it on slightly floured surface. Roll the dough into squares, measuring approximately 45×45 cm (appr.18×18 in) and to be 4-5 mm thick. When done, spread the filling across the dough, leaving 1-1.5 cm (half inch) edge. If you want, sprinkle some roughly chopped chocolate or chocolate chips across the dough. Tightly roll the dough into log. Trim the ends if necessary.
Sourdough Babka Recipe: How to Make a Chocolate Babka (3)
  • Next, take a sharp knife and cut the log in half lengthwise all the way through – see the photo below. To shape the babka, take one half and place it over the other and than simply braid these two halves. Cut the braided babka dough to fit your tins.
  • Leave the babkas to rise until approximately doubled in volume. Final rise may take 4-7 hours, it’s temperature depending. My needed 5 hours. When the babkas are almost risen, preheat the oven to 220°C/428°F. Put in the oven and bake for 10 minutes at 220°C/428°F, then decrease to 200°C/392°C and bake for another 30-40 minutes or until nicely baked.
Sourdough Babka Recipe: How to Make a Chocolate Babka (4)
  • When baked, take the babkas from the tins and leave them to cool on a cooling rack. If eaten fresh, the babka will literally melt in your mouth, it’s so soft.
Sourdough Babka Recipe: How to Make a Chocolate Babka (5)

Don’t forget to share the experience if you try this sourdough babka – tag me with @yourdailysourdoughbread on Instagram or let me know in the comment below 😉

For other sweet treats, I’ve got the sourdough recipes for you:

  • Best Sourdough Brioche Buns

Sourdough Babka FAQs

What is babka cake made of?

The exact ingredients and preparation method of babka may vary depending on the specific recipe, but the following are some common ingredients used to make babka cake: flour, yeast, sugar, eggs, butter, milk, salt, and filling. Once baked, babka cake is often dusted with powdered sugar or drizzled with a sweet glaze.

What makes a babka a babka?

The defining characteristic of a babka is its distinctive swirled shape, which comes from the layers of dough and filling that are twisted together. The combination of sweet yeast dough, swirled filling, twisted shape, and loaf pan baking is what makes a babka a babka.

Related Articles:

Wild Garlic Sourdough Using Khorasan Wheat and 100% Whole Grain WheatBest Sourdough Brioche Buns – Chocolate Hazelnut Rolls RecipeSourdough Oatmeal Bread: Delicious and Healthy Bread RecipeBaked Sourdough Pumpkin Muffins RecipeSourdough Dinner Rolls That Are Super Soft And Super Delicious!

Sourdough Babka Recipe: How to Make a Chocolate Babka (11)

By Natasha Krajnc

Hi! My name is Natasha and I'm specialized in home sourdough bread baking and currently based in Slovakia - a very small country in Central Europe.My bread baking story began in 2011 when I decided to give up commercial yeast. I felt tired all the time (especially after eating bread and other foods made with yeast), I wasn’t motivated to do anything, had trouble concentrating throughout the day, my abdomen was bloated and I was like a trumpet on steroids – basically, I was quite a wreck. I was a big bread lover (and still am) and having to stop eating bread was quite hard at that time but I felt I was on a right way to give my body a chance to heal itself.

View all of Natasha Krajnc's posts.

Sourdough Babka Recipe: How to Make a Chocolate Babka (2024)

FAQs

How to get more layers in babka? ›

Now as you roll up the dough, from the longest edge into a very tight spiral, be sure to gently pull back to create an even tighter log. If you do this you will get a well formed Babka with many lovely spiraled layers of chocolate filling peaking through after baking.

What is chocolate babka made of? ›

Sweet Dough – The recipe starts with a fabulous dough that includes sugar, eggs, and butter for the ultimate in richness. Chocolate Filling – Finely chopped chocolate is mixed with cinnamon, sugar, and then butter is cut in to make a chocolate crumble of sorts that melts beautifully into swirls in the finished bread.

How do you keep chocolate babka fresh? ›

To hold longer than 5 days, wrap the packaged babka in aluminum foil and freeze for up to 1 month. To defrost, remove from the freezer, recycle the aluminum foil and thaw at room temperature. If desired, reheat the defrosted babka by baking at 350F for about 5-8 minutes. Kept your babka past its prime?

What is the original babka? ›

Babka originated in the Jewish communities of Eastern Europe in the early 19th century. Part bread, part cake, the name is thought to derive from a popular Easter cake made in Poland called “baba” which means “grandmother” in Polish.

Why won't my babka rise? ›

Add more yeast, blend in the starter, or knead in more flour to help initiate rising. Dough that has expired yeast, too much salt, all-purpose or cake flour, or antifungal spices like cinnamon might have trouble rising.

How do you know when a babka is done? ›

To be extra sure that your babka loaf has finished baking, you can use an instant-read thermometer to check if the internal temperature has reached 190°F. This method is also great if you don't have a long enough toothpick to get to the middle of the loaf. Don't skip the sugar syrup at the end.

Why do Jews eat babka? ›

Like many Jewish-American specialties, babka originated in Eastern Europe – Poland and Ukraine in particular – in the early 1800s. As a way to use extra challah dough, Jews there would roll up the dough with cinnamon or fruit jam and bake it alongside the challah.

Do you need to refrigerate babka? ›

Babka can be freezed for up to a month. Store in the fridge or room temperature. If serving by the slice, warm up in the microwave for 10 seconds or warm up the whole loaf for 7 mins in a preheated 325 degree oven.

Is babka served warm or cold? ›

Homemade babka is best when served slightly warmed up, or at room temperature. Is brioche and babka the same? Brioche and babka are very similar. A babka is often filled with chocolate, cinnamon, or other sweet fillings and shaped into a loaf, while brioche is twisted and baked into a knot.

Why is my babka dough so sticky? ›

Why is my dough so sticky? Your dough can become sticky when you add too much water or the flour isn't suitable for the type of dough you are making. Over proofing or fermenting the dough can also result in the gluten structure weakening causing sticky dough.

Can I freeze a chocolate babka? ›

You can freeze your babkas for up to 30 days after they're baked. Allow them to cool completely, then wrap in both plastic wrap and aluminum foil. To defrost, take them out of the freezer and remove the foil. Let sit for about two hours at room temperature, covered in plastic wrap to help wick away excess moisture.

Why did my babka sink in the middle? ›

Do NOT underbake your loaves. I recommend checking them with a thermometer to make sure they're done. If you pull them out too early, the babka will sink in the middle and be doughy (it's happened to me before and it's a total bummer).

How to eat a chocolate babka? ›

Aside from eating babka on its own, you can also use it to make French toast, bread pudding, or even as a base for a decadent ice cream sundae. You can also slice it and toast it, then spread it with butter or your favorite jam. Can babka be paired with any beverages? Babka pairs well with a variety of beverages.

What holiday do you eat babka? ›

Babka Cake

In Poland, Albania, Macedonia and Bulgaria, Babke Cake is usually baked to be eaten on Easter Sunday, although it's also enjoyed during other celebrations too.

Why has my babka sunk in the middle? ›

Do NOT underbake your loaves. I recommend checking them with a thermometer to make sure they're done. If you pull them out too early, the babka will sink in the middle and be doughy (it's happened to me before and it's a total bummer).

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