Mother’s Day 2.0 – Baking Chocolate Babka!

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My mother wasn’t big on what she called Hallmark holidays. She believed that everyday should be mother’s day, just as much as she believed everyday should be children’s day and father’s day for that matter. If you think about it, she was right. Why celebrate someone you love only one day a year? Aren’t they special everyday? Do we need a card company to remind us to be nice to our mothers? I’m not suggesting bringing your mother flowers everyday, or making her breakfast in bed in every spare moment, and having dinners out every Sunday, but when you really think about it, it’s not that difficult just to do something nice for those we love.

What does this have to do with babka? Well, everything. I don’t like gifts on “mother’s day” – flowers yes, gifts not so much. I like spending time with my family; that’s my gift. This past Sunday, not the “official mother’s day” was my mother’s day. My son Ethan titled it Mother’s Day 2.0 – an upgraded version so to speak! We didn’t all sit down to breakfast together, I wasn’t served breakfast in bed, and yes, I did the dishes! What made it my day was that everyone did something with me and planned a day for us to be together. This started with making babka with my older son Jarred. I’m pretty sure he will be the one to carry on the family recipes and for that I’m extremely glad.

Babka is an Eastern European sweet yeast bread that is classified as a coffee cake. If you live in the northeast or you’re a Seinfeld fan you know there are 2 kinds of babka – a chocolate babka and a cinnamon babka. Check out this clip from Seinfeld with Jerry and Elaine, it’s truly a classic! Chocolate babka is the more popular of the two. In the show, they describe the cinnamon babka as the lesser babka, which in all honesty I don’t necessarily agree with. Chocolate is my favorite so we decided to try that one first. I have always thought it was difficult to make – turns out, the toughest part is waiting for the dough to rise! My friend Marcy makes babka all the time and now I know why! So here’s the recipe and be patient; enjoy a nice cup of coffee while you’re waiting.

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Recipe for the Yeast Dough (makes two 8″ loaves)

1/4 cup warm water plus 1 teaspoon sugar (around 110 degrees)
1  1/2 tablespoons active dry yeast (or 2 packages)
1/4 cup sugar
2  1/2 cups all-purpose flour
3/4 teaspoon salt (I used pink sea salt)
1 stick butter melted
2 extra large eggs (at room temperature)*
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
1 large egg for the egg wash (this will be brushed on before the streusel is added)

*eggs should always be room temperature when baking. You can put them in warm water for about 5 minutes if you forget to take them out ahead of time. Doing this will help the eggs blend well with the room temperature butter.

In a measuring cup add 1/4 warm water and 1 teaspoon sugar. Sprinkle in the yeast and stir. Set aside for about 5 minutes until the yeast has bubbled and created a foam on top.

While the yeast is blooming you can put the dough together. In a medium size mixing bowl add all the dry ingredients and stir with a fork to combine. In a separate bowl mix the eggs, butter and vanilla. Add the wet ingredients to the dry including the yeast. I kneaded the dough in the bowl for just a couple of minutes to combine. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and place it in a warm spot to rise until double in size (about 1 hour or maybe a little more).

While the dough is rising, put together the filling and streusel topping below.

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Chocolate Filling

1 stick butter softened (not melted)
1/4 cup cocoa powder
1/2 cup sugar
pinch of salt

2/3 cup good quality mini chocolate chips

In a small bowl, sift the cocoa into the sugar and salt. Mix in the butter until well blended, cover and set aside. The chips will be sprinkled on top of the filling. Please note: If the mixture is too soft, put it in the fridge to firm up. It should be the consistency of easy to spread peanut butter.

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Streusel Topping

1/3 cup butter melted
1/2 cup all-purpose flour
1/3 cup sugar
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon pure vanilla extract (or almond extract)
1/4 teaspoon baking powder
1/4 teaspoon salt

In a small bowl, sift all the dry ingredients together. Add the melted butter and extract, stir with a fork until combined and crumbs form. Cover with plastic wrap and set aside.

Once the dough is doubled in size, punch it down, take it out of the bowl and place on a well floured surface. Split the dough into two pieces using a knife or dough scraper. Make sure you have enough flour on the board so that when you roll out the dough it doesn’t stick. Roll out one piece of dough into an 8″ x 12″ rectangle, it should be about 1/8″ thick.

With a spatula, spread 1/2 the chocolate filling mixture and then sprinkle 1/3 of the miniature chips on top.

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Starting at the bottom edge, roll the dough into a tight log. There are many ways to form a babka, you can fold the log in half and twist it, you can cut it into pieces and place them on top of each other, or even make it like monkey bread. For my first time out, I thought simple was best and kept it in a log. Place the log into an 8″ x 4″ aluminum loaf pan that has been buttered generously or sprayed with canola oil. Repeat this process with the second piece of dough. Now they are ready for their second rising. Place plastic wrap on top and place in a warm place for another hour or more.

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Preheat your oven to 350 degrees with your baking rack in the center of the oven. After the second rising it should be almost double in size. Now it’s ready to brush with egg wash, do this very lightly as you don’t want them to deflate. Sprinkle each with 1/2 the streusel mixture and place in preheated oven. Bake for 30 to 35 minutes or until lightly brown on top. If they are browning too much, place a piece of foil on top.

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Happy Mother’s Day! Cooking with my Mother

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Sherri Lerner Glickstein happily baking in her Ohio kitchen in 2014!
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Edith Goodman Lerner happily baking in her Florida kitchen in 1994

Quite a resemblance right? I was told my whole like that I looked just like my mother. Even as I walked down the aisle at my wedding I heard a cousin say “oh my God, she looks just like Edie” and she was right, I did. My mother passed away April 7, 1997. I miss her every single day. She is the woman who gave me my beginning in life. She is the one who slept in my room after watching the scary movie Carrie with Sissy Spacek. She is the one who went out with me on a Saturday night when I didn’t have a date. She is the person I spoke to 10 times a day after I had gave birth. She is the person who sang to my son Jarred on the phone so that I could take a shower! She is the reason I love to bake and cook. That was her passion, her calling. If she couldn’t sleep at night, she would wake up and bake something! Who does that at 3 o’clock in the morning? I am proud to say my mother did, that’s who!

My blog is dedicated to my mother “Edie” and her passion for cooking which I luckily inherited. I recently wrote a cookbook for my niece that included many of her recipes and gave it to her at her bridal shower. When I got married 23 years ago (this coming May 23rd is my anniversary 23/23) she hand wrote me a small cookbook that included about a dozen recipes. Being newly married, I often called her for cooking advice and recipes and as she gave them to me I would type them up and glue them into the back of the book. She didn’t work off a recipe, it was all in her head so I’m glad I took the time to do that. I encourage you to do that as well sooner then later if you haven’t already. Being a graphic designer, I didn’t stop there. I decided to document as many of her recipes as possible and make little cookbooks for her and my sisters. That was 20 years ago so I thought how wonderful to create her recipes, photograph them and write a cookbook.

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My wedding day… May 23, 1991

Fast forward 23 years and what started out as what I thought would be 20 or so recipes ended up including 70 recipes in a 134 page book with more waiting to be included. The odd thing is that there were originally 71 recipes in the book but one of them gave me such a difficult time and kept making all the other pages re-wrap so I omitted the recipe and figured I would add it back when I finish it this summer. It’s odd because my mother passed away at the age of 71 and I didn’t set out to include a particular number of recipes. It just happened organically. I’m sure this was her way of making sure I would have to keep writing.

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First off, how beautiful is my niece? She was so happy that day, as she is everyday. The book I ended up giving her is only a draft as I had so many more things to include and honestly, you can’t write a book in 4 months without having to fix a few things. Plus, there are more stories and recipes waiting to be written. She was expecting a little cookbook that I made 20 years ago. When she opened it, her eyes filled with tears. At the last minute I put my parents wedding photo on the back cover; it was the perfect ending. This is the book that got me started on writing a blog. I enjoyed writing stories about her recipes, our family and her. She was a very funny lady. You never really knew if she realized that or not. She had an enormous database of funny sayings and idioms that when writing the book found that they were unique to her.

Researching where or why she made them opened dialog with my sisters; both excellent cooks by the way! We reminisced about so much. It turns out I’m the keeper of the flame, like my mother, I just love to cook. I cooked each of the recipes and took photos of them. Of course I found out that I should have taken them vertically, but live and learn! I realized that even though she wrote them down, her measurements weren’t always correct so I had to tweak them a little. It was a learning process and spiritually connected to her on a whole different level. A lot of her recipes left me questioning. Why did she rewrite them so many times? Why did she rename the same recipe? Where is her recipe for beef stew? And why after 2 tries already doesn’t her cookie pie crust turn out well? All the questions have me searching for my own cooking voice.

My mother ended every written recipe with the simple word “Enjoy” that’s all she wanted. She wanted you to just enjoy! Enjoy her cooking, Enjoy her baking, Enjoy life! She didn’t believe in what she called Hallmark card holidays. She said everyday is mother’s day and everyday is children’s day; life is too short to celebrate only one day a year. So today on the official Mother’s Day, whether you are a mother, grandmother, or great grandmother, take this day and Enjoy! Thanks mom, I love you.