Back in January I had friends over for dinner; it was my turn to host our rotating monthly dinner group. I don't remember what the meal was, because the star of the evening was the chocolate babka I made for dessert. It was enormous, swirly, and chocolatey. One of the guests is a good friend who doesn't cook at all but is a big fan of my cooking. I like cooking for her, since the praise is a nice reward, and she's always willing to help with dishes. A few weeks after the dinner, she asked if she could pay me to bake a babka for her mother's birthday.
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| Raw babkas rising on the ledge above my sink |
I'd already bought the vegetables and was excited to invent something new, so I asked if she wanted a chocolate babka and a savory babka, and she said sure. So I got to spend half the day kneading and rolling dough. Which was actually a little stressful since I wanted to also revise a work-related article I'm writing, but I got it done. And the babka came out great. The chocolate one is extra beautiful, though I made it a little bit too much less sweet.
Doesn't it look amazing? One friend said it looks like a giant cinnamon raisin bagel. The vegetable one is slightly less beautiful, but despite the laughter, it actually tastes better than the chocolate!
Vegetable Babka
Dough:
3/4 cup Soy Milk (or any kind of milk)5 tbsp Earth Balance (or butter or margarine)
1 package active dry yeast
1 1/2 Tbsp sugar
2 leggs
3/4 tsp Salt
4 cup Flour, white
Filling:
1 1/2 onions, chopped4 cloves garlic, whole
olive oil
2 cups broccoli, chopped very small
3 cups spinach, chopped
1 Tbsp soy sauce
2 tsp sesame oil
1 Tbsp nutritional yeast
Heat the milk and earth balance in a small saucepan. Turn off just as milk almost comes to a boil. If the butter is not fully melted, don't worry, it will continue melting. Let sit for 10 minutes to cool.
Mix the yeast and sugar with 1/4 cup lukewarm water and let sit. It should get puffy after 5 minutes - if not, your yeast is dead. Add the warm milk to the yeast, along with the eggs and salt, and mix with a wooden spoon. Add in the flour one cup at a time, stirring well. When it starts to come together into a ball, turn it into a floured surface (e.g. a very clean countertop) and knead it while mixing in more flour until it is no longer sticky. Pour just a bit of oil into the bowl and put the ball of dough back in. Cover with a cloth and let sit for 2 hours.
Pour about a tsp olive oil into a frying pan and heat on very low heat. Put in the onions and whole cloves and stir occasionally until they are golden all over. Yum! This takes about half an hour. Transfer the onions to a bowl. Put a little more oil in the pan and add the broccoli. Add a half cup water and cover with a lid so it will steam. When the water is evaporated, add soy sauce, sesame oil, and the spinach. Stir and cover again. When spinach is wilted, sprinkle nutritional yeast over it and stir again.
Re-clean your countertop, sprinkle more flour, and put the dough back on it. Put half the dough aside. using a rolling pin, roll out into a large rectangle. I think mine was about 6" x 18". Spread half the onions and half the green vegetables evenly across it. The garlic will be soft enough to break apart with your fingers so you can distribute it more. Roll the dough up from the long edge into a long tube. Put the two ends of the tube together to make a circle. (If you can hold the two ends and twist before bringing them together, this will look a bit prettier. See the chocolate babka above, where I did that.) Put into a greased pie pan. Repeat with the other half of the dough and filling. Let rise again for an hour.
If you'd like, you can glaze with sesame or olive oil before baking.
Preheat oven to 375 and bake for 50 minutes.




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