Bready or Not: Harvest Apple Challah
Welcome autumn with this big beautiful Harvest Apple Challah, packed with fruit and spice.
This recipe might look intimidating, but let me assure you, it’s not. The cutting stage is supposed to be messy.
Take comfort that this is not a loaf that is supposed to look tidy. The end goal is rustic–and delicious.
Challah is an enriched dough. Eggs and honey add extra richness plus soft texture.
The final result is best served warm with an additional dollop or drizzle of honey. Use the good stuff here! I found that using the toaster oven for 5 to 7 minutes was about perfect for thick slices of bread.
I also found that this bread was great to freeze in slices. Pull out frozen pieces to thaw overnight, and breakfast is quick, convenient, and delicious the next morning!
Modified from a recipe at King Arthur Flour.
Bready or Not: Harvest Apple Challah
This big round of rustic-looking sweet bread is laden with apple chunks and beautiful to behold--and eat! This kind of bread is traditionally served at Rosh Hashanah along with some honey, but it's so good, it's worth baking all year long. Modified from a King Arthur Flour recipe.
Course Bread, Breakfast, SnackKeyword apple, yeast bread
Author Beth Cato
Equipmentdeep 9-inch round cake pan or casserole dishbench knifekitchen thermometer
IngredientsDough1/2 cup lukewarm water6 Tablespoons vegetable oil1/4 cup honey2 large eggs room temperature4 cups all-purpose flour1 1/2 teaspoons salt1 Tablespoon instant yeast or active yeastFilling2 medium apples1/2 teaspoon cinnamon1/4 cup white sugarTopping1 large eggcoarse sugar optionalhoney for serving optional
InstructionsMake the doughMix together the dough ingredients by hand or using a mixer with dough hook, until well-incorporated and not stiff. Place dough in a greased bowl to let rise about 2 hours, or until puffy; if poked with a finger, the dent in the dough should remain and not bounce back.Prepare a deep round cake pan or casserole dish (at least 4 inches) by greasing thoroughly.Also lightly grease a large stretch of counter top or table. Gently deflate dough and transfer to the surface, and flatten dough to an 8x10-inch rectangle.Prepare the fillingCore the apples but leave on the peels. Chop apples into chunks about 1/2 to 3/4-inch in size. Should equal about 3 cups total. Toss pieces in cinnamon and sugar.Assemble the breadSpread half the apples in the center of the dough. Fold one short edge over the apples to cover them, and press down the edge to seal them inside.Place the remaining apples on top of the existing apple-dough mound. Cover these apples with the other flap of dough, patting again to seal. It's okay if it is bulging and messy!Use a bench knife or paring knife to cut the dough down the middle, long-ways. Then cut again along the long side, edge to edge, to create a series of broad, messy stacks of dough with apples overflowing onto the surface.Start transferring pieces of dough and scattered apples into the prepared pan, forming a bottom layer, then keep stacking more dough and fruit on top until everything is in the pan.Cover loosely with plastic wrap, and let rise for another hour, until it is puffed again.Preheat oven at 325-degrees, with a rack in the lower third of the oven.Uncover the dough. Brush the top with an egg beaten with a tablespoon of water. If desired, sprinkle coarse sugar all over the top.Bake for 55 to 65 minutes, until the top is deep brown. As the dough is so thick, if a kitchen thermometer is available, use it to test the middle; bread should be at least 190-degrees.Set pan of bread on a rack to cool for 10 minutes. Carefully remove bread from pan.Serve challah warm, ideally with extra honey drizzled on top. Store covered at room temperature up to 4 days. Bread can also be sliced and frozen.OM NOM NOM!