Friday, October 26, 2012

Birthday Treat (Anyone still there?)

I promise I'm still around, haverim.  Things have just been a little challenging lately.  We're dealing with some major transitions at Beit Stein, including the start of my doctoral program among others.  We promise, we're still around and still making challah.

But we've just been so uncreative lately.  With the craziness of the holidays and starting a PhD program, plain, basic, delicious regular old challah is all that's been acceptable in our house.  Any ideas for some new recipes?  Request for clarifications on old favorites?  It's TOUGH to make a new recipe every week... failing a few times has taught me NOT to just make new recipes for the heck of it, but make them because I truly want to get creative with challah.

So, bear with us.  Stay tuned.  Don't take us out of your Google Reader yet.  We're still here.  Today is The Hazz's birthday.  Besides a cake and mac n'cheese (which I think he agreed to partially because I like it), he gets sprinkle challah.  Because he's just that awesome.
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Shabbat Shalom from our bayit to yours!

Sunday, September 30, 2012

Sukkot 5773

We just barely got our sukkah up this year, so I'm so sorry no new recipes as of yet.  I'll work on one for Shabbat Sukkot!
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For the first two days, we have Basic Half Batch and Pumpkin. I had about a quarter of a bag left of Trader Joe's pareve chocolate chips (boooooooo, no longer pareve), so they got added to the pumpkin this year!
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Hag Sukkot Same'ah from our sukkah to yours!
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Friday, September 28, 2012

View of Shabbat | Shabbat HaAzinu

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Basic Small Batch and one with chocolate chips and cinnamon chips kneaded in! We still do round challot until Simchat Torah. What is your custom in YOUR home?
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Friday, September 21, 2012

View of Shabbat | Shabbat Shuvah 5773

Pssst... make sure to check out our post on the history and a how-to for spiral challot.  Today, we're having a basic (with extra honey).  And The Hazz made a delicious mixed herb with olive oil... all herbs from our garden!
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Shabbat Shalom from our Bayit to yours!

Rosh Hashanah 5773 | Making the Perfect Round Spiral Challah

I know, I know, Rosh Hashanah has passed, but I still put it in this title.  In our family, we make round-shaped challot all the way through Shabbat Shuvah, Sukkot, and Simchat Torah.  Personally, I think that the braided round (tutorial from last year) is really the loveliest of round challah shapes, and the Croatian star is one my most commonly hit pages here.  However, for certain recipes, the simple spiral challah is the perfect shape.

The round spiral is known by a few names, apparently.  I was surprised to read it referred to as a "turban challah," which to me brings up all sorts of funny visions of Maimonides (Rambam, Moshe ben Maimon, however you want to to call him).

{Source: medievalists.net}
Another name for the spiral is a Faigele which is Yiddish for "little bird." This website gives a good description for this name...
According to the Encyclopedia Judaica, the New Year's spiral is a shape with a Ukrainian origin, originally a bird shape with the center of the spiral culminating in a bird's head: "The bird's head symbolizes the phrase in Isaiah 31:5 'As birds hovering, so will the Lord of Hosts protect Jerusalem'" — which helps to explain why this spiral shape would be called a faigele, "little bird" in Yiddish.
Regardless of what you call it, it's lovely.  The following technique is a great way to make a really nice, smooth round challah shape.  It works equally for plain challah and for stuffed challah, so I've given you a set of pictures from both methods.

Start out with your dough on a flour surface.  With a rolling pin, roll the dough out smoothly and flat into a long, oblong rectangle about 1/4 inch thick. Next, coil up the challah, trying to keep as many of the bubbles out as possible. The resulting strand should be about the size you would normally use to braid challah.
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For a stuffed apple challah (or any filling), the process is the same, however you add your apples! I keep my apple pieces very small, flour them, and keep a consistent amount throughout the coil, which helps prevent air pockets. Also, keep them away about an inch or two from the ends to get a good seal.
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Once you have your long strand, use your palms to length it if desired. When coiling, start by making the small central point and then switch to bring the long tail around the center (I learned this from an elderly woman at my synagogue... I'm not sure quite why, but it seems to make a more successful shape.)
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If you like your round challah to be tall, keep the strands nice and tight together with each other. The result will be that, as the challah bakes, the center will be pushed up for a nice tall loaf.
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Conversely, if you want your challah to be flatter, try to keep a bit of air in between the coils. The key is just a tiny bit otherwise your challah won't fuse enough. I always try to do this method, because I like my round challot flatter. Below is my crowning achievement in round challot... no other loaf has been quite as pretty as this one.  And perhaps that is the key... accepting that your challot are beautiful no matter what, even if they're a little extra tall like the one above.
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Wishing you a Shabbat of rest and of peace and a very meaningful fast this Yom Kippur. From our bayit to yours.

Sunday, September 16, 2012

Shanah Tovah from The Challah Blog!

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From our bayit to yours, may this new year be filled with peace, blessings, and only good things.

Friday, September 14, 2012

The Power of Food

I don't do this very often, but allow me a moment this Shabbat to talk about something a little more personal.  Recently, my husband and I suffered a loss of a beloved family member, my husband's father.  Truly, words cannot express what a loving, kind, devoted father, husband, and mentsch that he was.  The world has truly lost one of it's great souls.

Through it all, I am overcome by the outpouring of support and love that we have felt from our extended family, our friends, and the broader community.  Truly, the food in the shiva house overflows the freezers.  And back home, we have received so many offers for dinners and food, especially with the holidays approaching and this busy time.

While my husband remains with his mother and brothers, I spent some time today with my own mother, grateful for her love, support, and strength through this difficult time.  Together, we baked challah for Rosh HaShanah.
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Thank you to all of you who have reached out to my family during this difficult time.  We'll be back to more regularly scheduled blogging after Yom Kippur.