Make Ahead

Jessica Fechtor's Five-Fold Challah

September  9, 2015
5
16 Ratings
Photo by Bobbi Lin
  • Prep time 19 hours
  • Cook time 20 minutes
  • Makes two loaves
Author Notes

This all might sound like a lot to keep track of, but I am a person who has a special impatience, and even I found this to require very little of me—no more than a half hour of paying attention overall. Plus, all the timing prescriptions are flexible: "Sometimes I'm giving my kids a bath and I'll do one fold in 45 minutes, the next one in 20 minutes," Fechtor told me. She's even skipped the overnight rise in the fridge, adding a couple extra folds to compensate, then chilling only enough to make the dough easier to work with.

"I've played really fast and loose and it's always come out great." I too have forgotten to set my timer more than once and the bread has apparently not been the wiser. (Pro tip: Set all your folding reminders at once—as alarms on your phone, so you never forget to keep resetting the timer.)

Lately, Fechtor has taken to rolling out the chilled dough, speckling it with cinnamon, sugar, and raisins, then curling it up into a cinnamon swirl loaf (or braiding it into an even sweeter challah). "When the dough is so easy to work with, it just unlocks things," Fechtor told me. You could even apply this folding technique to your family's own challah recipe, or other breads, even Liège waffles and buttermilk biscuits (she has). "The moral of this story is to fold everything and everything will be awesome." Slightly adapted from Stir (Avery, 2015).
Genius Recipes

What You'll Need
Ingredients
  • Dry ingredients
  • 4 cups (500 grams) bread flour
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons instant dry yeast
  • 2 teaspoons fine sea salt
  • Wet ingredients + shaping
  • 2 large eggs plus 1 large egg yolk (save the extra white in a covered glass in the fridge for glazing later on)
  • 3/4 cup (190 grams) water
  • 1/3 cup (75 grams) olive oil
  • 1/4 cup (85 grams) honey
  • For sprinkling, before baking (optional): Sesame seeds, poppy seeds, flaxseeds, rolled oats, sunflower seeds, and/or pumpkin seeds
Directions
  1. Whisk together the dry ingredients in a large bowl, and the wet ingredients in a smaller bowl. Dump the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients and stir with a rubber spatula until a wet, sticky dough forms. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and let sit for 10 minutes.
  2. Peel back the plastic. Grab an edge of the dough, lift it up, and fold it over itself to the center. Turn the bowl a bit and repeat around the entire lump of dough, grabbing an edge and folding it into the center, eight turns, grabs, and folds in all. Then flip the dough so that the folds and seams are on the bottom. Cover tightly again with the plastic, and let sit for 30 minutes.
  3. Repeat the all-around folding, flipping, covering, and resting four more times. (I keep track by drawing hash marks in permanent marker right on the plastic.) The dough flops more than it folds in the first round or two. Then, as the gluten develops, you’ll get proper folds. By the final fold, the dough will be wonderfully elastic, and you’ll be able to see and feel the small pockets of air within. Pull the plastic tight again over the bowl and refrigerate for 16 to 24 hours—any longer and you risk over-proofing.
  4. Cover a baking sheet with parchment paper and set aside. Transfer the dough to a lightly floured surface and divide into six equal pieces. Roll into six strands, each about a foot long and 3/4 inch in diameter, dusting sparingly with flour when necessary to prevent sticking. (You’ll want to add as little extra flour as possible.)
  5. Form two three-strand braids, and transfer the loaves to the prepared pan. Cover with plastic and let proof at room temperature for 2 to 3 hours, until the dough is noticeably swollen and puffed and bounces back very slowly, if at all, when you poke it lightly with your finger.
  6. Preheat the oven to 375° F. Remove the plastic wrap from the loaves and brush with the reserved egg white. If you’d like, sprinkle with seeds. Poppy and sesame seeds are traditional challah toppings. Fechtor typically covers one with a combination of flaxseeds and rolled oats, and the other with sunflower seeds and pumpkin seeds, though lately she's been opting for no seeds at all.
  7. Bake for about 20 minutes, until the bread is golden and gorgeous and a tester inserted into the center comes out clean. You can also check for doneness with a thermometer. The internal temperature of the loaves will be 190° F when fully baked.
  8. Transfer to racks and let cool.
  9. These loaves freeze very well: Wrap the cooled loaves in plastic wrap, then put them in zip-lock bags and freeze. Thaw directly in the bag on the counter, then remove the plastic and reheat in a warm oven. You won't be able to tell it's been frozen.

See what other Food52ers are saying.

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    mdelgatty
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    Carla Louise
Genius Recipes

Recipe by: Genius Recipes

135 Reviews

Katie W. May 10, 2024
I have made this many times and I bake using weight measurements. I follow the recipe to the T and my dough is not wet; I actually have to add more water! Has anyone else followed the recipe using weight measurements? I used the King Arthur website conversion chart to check the volume vs weight measurements and the weight measurements are actually heavy, so it should be even wetter. Anyway, this recipe results in the fluffiest challah I ever made! I think the taste is a bit bland, so I add more salt and a up the honey to 1/3 cup. And i also increase the water. but this is my go to challah recipe now!
 
champs04 April 26, 2022
Does anyone know, if the challah could be filled with cheese ?
 
Katie W. May 10, 2024
in our community we can buy Guava challah and it is spectacular! To recreate it, i use the King Arthur Recipe for Harvest Apple Challah and substitute Guava paste. It is quite dense and sticky and delicious. To make cheese challah, I suspect you could lay some cheese inside the strands before braiding and it would be just fine.
 
Katie W. May 10, 2024
Actually, a sweet cheese and guava paste together would result in an amazing final challah. I live in South Florida and Guava and Cheese pastalitos are a staple in our bakeries!
 
Rosalind P. April 8, 2022
this is a long way to a question. I have been baking challah for many years, many different recipes. All of them produce a stiffer, less wet dough and are pretty easy to roll for braids or any other shape. This dough is much wetter. I'm used to that for "artisan" breads now, and have no trouble with the folding. (Hint; wet your hands. Magic.) I do have HUGE trouble dividing and rolling strands; they fight back any stretching and resting the dough does NOT work. So I usually give up and don't make a braided challah. I try to coil just one strand into a crown, but even that fights me, and I often end up with a beautifuly, golden, delicious just round loaf. Tastes like the egg-rich challah should. BUT; any hints for handling the dough to shape the loaves? Thanks!! (And did you know that "challah" can be any bread at all. It originally meant bread from which a small piece was removed -- called challah --, blessed and burned to replicate a ceremony at the ancient a temple in Jerusalem. It has only recently --19th c?-- come to mean the specific egg-rich dough we're used to.
 
Rosalind P. April 8, 2022
oops. Just saw that I wrote essentially the same comment when the recipe first appeared. Please excuse. I just plain forgot. And no one came up with an answer.
 
elaine February 10, 2022
Beautiful out of the oven and such a soft texture. Straightforward recipe and easy to switch up by adding raisins soaked in cider and cinnamon.
 
KirasOma December 5, 2021
Recipe was super easy to follow and finished product was delicious!
 
susan April 7, 2021
Will this work with half AP flour and half whole wheat flour?
 
Rosalind P. April 7, 2021
i did it with 1/3 white whole wheat. Start small?
 
karin.anderson.52 April 9, 2021
If you want to exchange more than 10% of the white flour with whole grain flour you will need to add more water - whole grain flour absorbs more liquid than AP flour.
Peter Reinhart's advice: increase water by 14 g/1/2 oz for every 57 g/2 oz whole grain flour you substitute for white flour.
 
susan April 16, 2021
Thank you!
 
Carroll April 3, 2021
This was my very first try at making Challah, this recipe could not have been easier and the bread is perfect, so light, so delicious! I only had to look up how to shape it as I had no clue, but found great visual steps at http://www.foodwanderings.com/2015/09/braiding-challahs-three-strand-crown.html

Thank you!
 
RJM March 22, 2021
Granted, I'm only somewhat prolific as a baker, but this dough was unrepentant and unwieldy. I followed this recipe, letter perfectly, twice. Both times the dough is unmanageable. Shame on me for thinking a non-knead challah was possible.
 
Josho March 23, 2021
It IS possible. Look over the comments and reviews. Many people (including myself) are having wonderful results with it.

My only suggestion is to do the folding with a dough scraper. I found the dough incredibly sticky, much moreso than the recipe suggests. I could not even flip the dough ball upside-down as directed in Step 2 (and again in Step 3) until about the fourth folding process...it was too sticky and soft to flip, it would stick to the sides of the bowl unmercifully. But by the end of the scraping-and-turning process, it was a great deal more workable and I didn't have any trouble at all when it came to the braiding.
 
Rosalind P. February 21, 2022
A little late with this answer: wet your hands to fold this very wet and sticky dough. Shake off the water. It works!
 
Andi January 29, 2021
LOVE THIS RECIPE!! Have tried so many challah recipes and this one is my gold standard. Its light and delicious and easy. Thank you Jessica!!!!
 
Andi January 29, 2021
LOVE THIS RECIPE!! Have tried so many challah recipes and tyhis one is my gold standard. Its light and delicious and easy. Thank you Jessica!!!!
 
Rosalind P. September 18, 2020
For me, the wet, sticky dough wasn't tough to deal with (learned how to deal with it with all that no-knead, very wet dough baking). What was more challenging for me was how much the dough resisted shaping. It had a mind of its own, shrinking back and resisting the stretching and rolling. Resting it intermittently didn't help all that much, but I finally won! I confess I used a modified pizza attack -- holding it up and letting it stretch just a bit with gravity. I wanted only one long rope because instead of braiding it I wanted a Rosh Hashana coiled crown. Definitely worth the struggle. :-)
 
mdelgatty September 17, 2020
I'm finding myself frequently concerned about the profligate use of non-renewable plastic wrap recommended in recipes here.
 
Rosalind P. September 17, 2020
I had the same thought -- and not just for this recipe. It's really not needed to cover the bowl -- any cover would work. As for wrapping, double bagging might work, and I reuse my freezer bags many times. And if plastic is used to wrap, it too can be reused. My family used to make fun of me for washing and reusing, but no more. Still, even less use is still only slightly better. Need to find even better ways.
 
artisanal September 19, 2020
I use and reuse and reuse and reuse produce bags from the grocery store. AND now that i'm making so much bread, you can buy "disposable" (I don't throw them out as I re-use them, too) shower caps, like the kind you get when you stay at a nice hotel except I bought them from Amazon, They're great for covering bowls, loaf pans, etc. when proofing bread.
 
mdelgatty September 19, 2020
You can also get stronger 'shower caps' that withstand washing better and will last even longer; I get mine at the dollar store. I remember my mother's using them long ago; what goes around, comes around!
 
Rosalind P. September 16, 2020
ToJessica: any advice on substituting white whole wheat or whole wheat pastry flour for about 1/3 of the bread flour? Would extra water be needed? (I'm thinking not, given the already high hydration, but asking your expert advice.)
 
Helene R. July 5, 2020
has anyone noticed that the gram measurements don't sink with the cups measurements?
 
karin.anderson.52 July 5, 2020
If you compare different volume/weight conversion tables, you will find that there are sometimes rather significant discrepancies (for example up to 20 grams (!) per cup of flour. If you use 4 cups for the recipe that could be a difference of 80 (!) grams. For that reason, I never bother with the volume measures, and go straight for the grams, assuming that professional bakers weigh their ingredients, anyway.
I made this bread several times, using the weight measurements. It‘s very nice.
 
Helene R. July 9, 2020
thanks so much!

 
Rhea September 17, 2020
I just mixed mine using the grams measure and I have a rather sticky dough with no structure. I'm popping it into the fridge now but don't expect to be able to roll into strands. guess I'll go back to the old way.
 
jksingh June 18, 2020
Hi there - anyone have tips on where to cut down time if this needs to be made in say, 16 hours total (inclusive of fridge time + post-fridge proving)?

I'm contemplating taking out of the fridge at 14 hours and letting it rise for another 2.
 
Josho June 12, 2020
Five stars!

All throughout the folding procedure, even at the last folding, the dough was incredibly sticky and I couldn't really do it by hand; I used a dough scraper, and that made it much easier.

For the crust, I use Everything Bagel seasoning, which gives the loaf a very gentle onion-garlic flavor. I sprinkle some of the seasoning on the parchment before putting the braided loaves on it to rise prior to baking; then I sprinkle on a good deal more after painting the risen loaves with the egg white.

For even more of that flavor, I sometimes add a couple of heaping tablespoons of Everything Bagel seasoning into the dry ingredients when making the dough. This gives the challah a stronger onion-garlic flavor.
 
Delia M. May 22, 2020
I have read through all the reviews/comments and I’ve never seen the answer to the question of whether or not you can use all purpose flour in this recipe despite its being asked several times.
 
Babs I. May 22, 2020
I have used organic AP when I didn’t have bread flour on hand. Slightly less rise, still pretty wonderful.
 
Christopher J. July 31, 2020
Yes you can. Might be a good idea to run it through a sieve first.
 
Carla L. April 16, 2020
I followed this recipe to the letter,but ended up with heavy,dry loaves! What could have gone wrong here? I refridgerated the dough overnight, let it rise again after shapjng cob loaves,for 21/2 hrs...... Iam puzzled!
 
Foodie71 April 15, 2020
This is my new favorite bread recipe!! Was stuck on Jim Lahey's no-knead, but this is SO delicious there is only half the first loaf left. Initially made it for French toast... well, maybe the NEXT batch. Weighed everything but still had to add more water - maybe my bread flour had been on store shelf for a while. My advice is to go with your gut - VERY forgiving dough. Will try adding raisins, cinnamon, different braiding techniques, but this is my new go-to recipe.
 
Nina April 14, 2020
Can you use all purpose flour instead of bread flour?
 
Nancy11son April 10, 2020
I have never made bread before!! I was worried at first - it's sticky! But the recipe indicated that it would be so I reserved judgement. I pretty much can't believe I did this. I've not only never made bread before, but the kitchen and I really are NOT friends. I married a chef for a reason! JK - he's a love too. In any case, if I can do this - ANYBODY can. Made one plain (for the hubs) and one covered like a blanket in poppy seeds. Both are delicious. 20 mins as stated for bake time plus another couple mins for good measure.
 
Mitslal G. December 31, 2019
I love this recipe. It made me feel like I am a good baker. Thank you for sharing this recipe
 
rosenivory August 5, 2019
This is my new go-to recipe for challah! I've made this recipe over and over, and it never fails. Recently I rolled it out for cinnamon rolls - it was delicious!
 
Babs I. March 17, 2020
It makes wonderful cinnamon rolls, doesn’t it?
 
samanthaalison November 12, 2018
This was so good!!! I've never made any kind of enriched bread before and I was thrilled with the results. We ate the first loaf within a couple hours of it coming out.

I wasn't sure I was really doing the folding right, but the end result was awesome so apparently I didn't screw it up. The only thing I'd change next time is I think I might sub a neutral oil instead of the olive because I could taste it in the final loaf.
 
Camille D. November 8, 2017
a lovely recipe ... and now it seems Ill be able to make Challah again...my old hands and fingers are no longer strong and flexible .....I would like to know if I may mix in Cuisinart till wet.... and proceed as described with the rest of the directions Thank you in advance Camille
 
Lana R. July 16, 2017
I followed the instructions and the bread was raw after 20 minutes. I doubled the bake time to 40 minutes and it came out perfect.
 
Phf523 March 17, 2017
When I usually make challah I make about double this amount. I always use 3 cups or so of white wheat flour. How would this effect this challah method?
 
Yayita January 30, 2017
As a first time bread baker this recipe's title was very alluring because it implied that a tedious recipe was made easier, which I wrongly assumed it made it fool proof. Although I was a first time baker, as a kid I had seen my mom and grandmother make bread so I had a vague idea of how bread dough should look and feel. Before making this recipe though I did watch some "how to make challah" YouTube videos to see what consistency I was looking for in the though and also read a bunch of other recipes online to acquaint myself with the kneading portion as I knew this would be key. Despite reading contradictory instructions on other recipes I decided to follow the recipe to the letter. And so I did. I have to make a note that I used Instant Dry Yeast not Active Dry Yeast. I mixed the ingredients as instructed and found the dough to be VERY sticky, so sticky that I had to scrape dough from the edge of the bowl as 1/3 of it seemed stuck to the sides. I tried really hard to fold it but it wouldn't want to stretch and was still sticky even after lighting flourish it. In order to complete 2 folds I had to flour it each time and even then dough never relaxed enough that it could be stretched and folded. I fought with the dough a 3rd time and tried to fold it and it became even harder to stretch it and so then I knew I wasn't going to be able to braid it at all since I could even stretch it enough to roll it. At this point I decided to salvage it my putting it in a loaf pan and just cooking it as is, this way I would learn from this epic fail I.e. figure out just how hard adding flour made it, or how hard un kneaded challah got. Despite this failure I was looking forward to seeing how the crumb of the bread turned out to be. Alas, I burnt it and wasn't able to taste it at all. If anyone can help me figure out where I went wrong I'd greatly appreciate it.


I ended up trying another Food52 recipe: Ima's Challah. In this recipe they ask that the instant yeast be used and in the comment saw that the author specified Active Dry Yeast. Per the recipe I proof the Yeast for 5 mins and used my standup mixer to do the mixing. And it worked! I successfully made challah bread that was both pillowy and chewing. Which leaves me scratching my head as to why the dough for Jessica's Five-Fold Challah didn't seem to work for me. Anyone have any ideas?
 
Babs I. November 20, 2018
It sounds like you took the dough out of the bowl for the folding. The dough should remain in the bowl, covered tightly by the plastic wrap between foldings. No more flour should be added; the development of the gluten gradually brings it together. The dough should not leave the bowl until after the long rise in the refrigerator, at which point it only needs shaping, not kneading.
 
Foodie71 April 15, 2020
My guess is you had the same problem I did - dry, maybe old flour. I added more water and it relaxed enough to fold it. Try maybe 1/4 cup more water. And set your timer so you don't burn it!
 
LuAnn R. November 25, 2016
Agree with all of the other comments--this recipe is amazing! very easy..and the bread came out perfectly!! Looks just like the picture above, and tastes great! made it for Thanksgiving, froze it as explained. I plan on making french toast with the leftover!
 
sparkycooks November 24, 2016
This is an amazing recipe. Delicious, delicious AND easy to make. Brought it today to a thanksgiving gathering of friends and it was a huge hit. Will make this again and again. Thank you.
 
JS I. October 14, 2016
I've made this twice, once as a test run for the holidays, and then again for Rosh Hashanah. Amazing! The best challah anyone in my family could remember. And it's so much fun to make! I'll be looking for excuses (and not just the holidays) to make it. Maybe Thanksgiving?? Many thanks for the recipe and all the helpful comments and suggestions.
 
Madelien October 10, 2016
Made this last week for Rosh Hashanah - both nights!! It was gorgeous and absolutely delicious. Both my mom and MIL took photos of the loaves LOL. So much easier than every other recipe I've made too. Question: My family would like MORE raisins in the challah this time. Can I just mix the raisins into the dough when I initially mix it up? Adding them to the strands before braiding didn't let me put enough in. Thanks! Wishing a sweet and healthy new year to all who celebrate!!
 
CarlaK October 4, 2016
Everyone I sent photos to of my just-baked challah raved about how gorgeous the loaves were. They should only have tasted them -- so delicious with a soft, squishy texture and just the right amount of sweetness! I can't get over how easy the whole process was for such a great result.
 
sticksnscones October 3, 2016
This may well become my "go-to" Challah recipe! I had my reservations, & was concerned about the scant rise after spending an overnight in the fridge. I let it come to room temperature for a couple of hours before shaping it, then let it rise again. It was truly delicious...perfect crumb & balance of flavor & texture. It actually won a blind taste test against a very good bakery!
 
K I. October 2, 2016
I have never made bread before in my life, but I gave this a try and I am so proud of myself I'm smiling from ear to ear. The bread turned out beautiful and tastes fantastic--light and fluffy and just slightly sweet. Thank you so much for this recipe which I will be making again and again.
 
J_McCrory October 1, 2016
Just took the first loaf out of the oven and it looks great! One question though, is there a secret to getting that really dark, mahogany color on top? I never seem to be able to achieve that, even with the egg wash...
 
Babs I. October 1, 2016
My best guess is that the temperature of your oven might be slightly off. All ovens vary temperature within their own space. Have you tried moving the baking sheet to the top rack? Oven temps are always my first suspect.
 
Idalu January 16, 2017
I slightly beat a whole egg and a little bit of salt and that works for me. Good luck.
 
shiraz.moola August 4, 2016
I read the recipe wrong a did the first proof for 16 hours on the kitchen counter instead of the fridge. Will this overproof the bread. Shall I shorten the second proof after I make the loaves?
 
Babs I. August 5, 2016
Ok, so that probably would count as over proofing. However, I would suggest punching it down, kneading a few times (or do a round of folds), put it in the frig for a few hours, then take the instructions from there. Since the ingredients are already used, there's really nothing to lose. If you were planning on using it for dinner tonight, you might want to buy a loaf for backup. Keep making the bread. It took me about six tries to get it to the cotton candy, pull apart texture that we love. I make it about every other week, slice it, and freeze it.
 
Malavika January 23, 2016
This recipe worked out amazingly for me. I ended up folding 8 times rather than the 5 suggested because I thought I was going to skip the overnight rise, but ended up getting busy and letting it sit in the refrigerator overnight. Texture is that perfect soft pull apart-- really amazing. I've never been able to achieve it before.

I didn't have problems with the dough being too dry or anything (I did use my scale for the ingredients). When I was doing the folds, I would wet my hands with water to prevent them from sticking as the dough was tack for most of the handling time.
 
Sujatha December 18, 2015
Planning to try this weekend but only have active dry yeast rather than instant called for. Other questions about type of yeast & annabels comment about needing extra rise got me wondering & I found this from KAF website http://www.kingarthurflour.com/learn/yeast.html
"they can be substituted for one another 1:1. We've found that active dry yeast is a little bit slower off the mark than instant, as far as dough rising goes; but in a long (2- to 3-hour) rise, the active dry yeast catches up. If a recipe using instant yeast calls for the dough to “double in size, about 1 hour,” you may want to mentally add 15 to 20 minutes to this time if you're using active dry yeast."
 
Babs I. March 27, 2016
I only use active dry yeast, and just proof it with the water and sugar (I sub sugar for honey, and add a little extra water to compensate for the moisture). The rise time is the same as in the original recipe, and turns out a fluffy and pull-apart texture.
 
Tracey December 16, 2015
Made two loaves for company. Thought I would later put one loaf in the freezer. It never made it there. The bread was a hit with everyone. It was amazing! Will definitely be a favorite bread to make for company.
 
Annabel November 29, 2015
I've made this four times now, and each time the dough has looked "odd" and unfinished, in the sense of not ready to shape yet, after the 24-hour stay in the fridge. Each time I've let it just hang out in there another day, and then it is good to go. The end results have been delicious each time. My yeast must be like my kid: on its own schedule for meeting milestones.
 
Babs I. November 21, 2015
I have a question about the amount of water. Three quarters of a cup (6 ounces) is less than 190 gms. With the initial 6 oz., it was awfully dry, but with the additional water was very wet and sticky. After all the folding and the overnight it rise, it was only a little sticky, but workable. I think the loaves proofed too long because the bubbles were really big, but they were springing back at the 2 hour point, so I let them go another 45 min. I will definitely try again, but am still unsure about the water amount and how that affected the outcome.
 
salena November 21, 2015
This recipe works amazingly well. I left out the 3rd yolk by mistake and it didn't matter but decided to use a whole egg for the wash, and that worked too. So, indeed, it is as bread recipes go, relatively flexible. I used a seed called charnushka (from Penzey's), which tastes and looks (and I think must be) what my grandmother used on her challahs and called kimmel (as in Jimmy), which isn't the same as caraway. I highly recommend it. I was very surprised that the loaves baked in 20 minutes.
My result was perfect. This made me very happy. Thanks Jessica for sharing this wonderful and easy recipe.

 
karin.anderson.52 November 8, 2015
I really liked this challah. Nice and fluffy in the inside, and not too dry (like some egg laden other recipes I tried). I would use another oil next time, though: the olive oil is a bit too assertive, and was discernible even after two days.
 
Julie R. October 28, 2015
The loaves look gorgeous! Mazel Tov!
 
Andy October 28, 2015
I'm going to state up front that I am a complete noob. I've literally never made bread before, but I've always wanted to try. This recipe looked easy so I gave it a whirl and I'm so glad I did. My first dough was a complete dud, for what could be a hundred different reasons, it didn't rise at all. My measurements may have been off, the room may have been too cold, my yeast could have been bad. I didn't let that stop me. My second attempt I corrected things based on feedback and comments here. First I measured the flour more exactly, even so I found it a little dry and added a touch more water. Speaking of water, I used tepid water instead of cold. The initial stir was more like a folding of the ingredients this time. Finally, I place it in the over where it was warmer. It set up perfectly as I worked my way through the five folds and the overnight fridge. I baked it today and I think it came out great. Very light and airy, and delicious. Here's a pic of the finished product: https://instagram.com/p/9Y0ZDXAihxwp-cY4QsKQpF67ehmMrczF-mRBg0/
 
Andy October 28, 2015
BTW, when I placed it in the oven to rise, the oven was off ;)
 
saragrad October 22, 2015
I wish to knead in raisins for one of the loaves - not sure how much should I use for that quantity of dough? Also, is it necessary to soak the raisins in water to plump them up before adding them to the dough?
 
Julie R. October 22, 2015
I added raisins to the dough just before I braided and shaped the loaves. It was a little strange but I just rolled the raisins into the dough as I formed the strips-kind of rolling them in as I shaped and stretched the dough, but before the actual braiding. Used regular golden raisins straight from the package and just winged it on the quantity. Don't worry, everyone will be amazed at your baking prowess and never say your raisin ratio was faulty!!
 
Jan R. October 19, 2015
I try to use Einkorn flour when I can, wondering if this would make any difference in this recipe? Have just recently started making my breads this way, rustic breads, also Lazy Mans bread with slight differences, just leave it on the counter for 12 hrs. Eliminate that kneading, which as one ages the hands can be quite stiff, and makes bread making the joy it has always been. :)
 
Annie44 October 19, 2015
I've never seen a recipe with yeast where the water wasn't warm. Is this right?
 
Julie R. October 19, 2015
You have to use the correcct type of yeast-RapidRise Instant Yeast is not the same as ActiveDry Yeast. This recipe calls for the Instant Yeast.
 
Annie44 October 21, 2015
Yes but I still don't know whether water must be warm or not.
 
Julie R. October 21, 2015
I made my dough with tap water and I didn't care about the temp. Recipe worked out just fine. The yeast package recommended 120F-130F. That is tepid. Too hot will kill the yeast organism.
 
Annie44 October 21, 2015
Thanks so much!
 
Julie R. October 21, 2015
Good luck. Let us know how it came out!
 
Foodie71 April 15, 2020
Rapid-rise is not the same as instant. Former doesn't do well in fridge, whereas instant is more flexible.
 
Melissa September 25, 2015
I found the dough too dry and I had to add more water. Anyone else have this problem?
 
Joan R. September 24, 2015
Didn't have good luck with this. Dough is too sticky and sticks to the bowl. Should I have oiled the bowl first?

Julia
 
Rochelle September 22, 2015
Hi Jessica.... Made the Challah this past weekend.... Thanks so much for the recipe. One was braided and the second one I rolled with the butter cinnamon sugar and baked in a loaf pan.... The cinnamon loaf was excellent, however the braided Challah was somewhat dry... Not moist like store bought.... Maybe I used too much flour or overlooked it... ANY SUGGESTIONS FOR MORE MOIST NOT SO DRY... the flavor was amazing... Thank you Rochelle...
 
Rochelle September 25, 2015
Typo ... Meant to type overcooked it... Not overlooked it....
 
RuthF September 21, 2015
Can this be made with all-purpose flour, or is bread flour essential?
 
Michele September 16, 2015
Texture was perfect - just like what I buy from the bakery. My family ate the while first loaf in a day and has been devouring the second in short order. My 13 year old son asked if he could learn how to make it. Thanks for sharing!
 
Pam September 14, 2015
What is the timing between turns?
 
Robyn September 13, 2015
The challah was perfect! Everyone loved it!
 
ariel A. September 13, 2015
Mmmmm this was my first time baking challah, and it was gorgeous! It definitely made for a very sweet way to kick off the new year.
 
vrinda September 13, 2015
Great Peggy thanks. I'll be interested to know how the oat flour and WW flours work.
Trying to stay away from white flours...you know how that goes !
 
peggy September 14, 2015
Vrinda,
Just took my challah out of the oven - they are beautiful! I think combining flour works well and adds some whole grain to the mix. I also used King Arthur bread flour which is unbleached and ground from hard spring wheat flour. I'm sure there are other companies that make minimally processed bread flours as well.
The aroma of the bread is amazing - gonna have to try before it cools!
 
Carol E. September 13, 2015
Maybelline
Arika, The French Laundry has an amazing gluten free brioche recipe. It might be worth a try to see if those tender little clouds & these delicious braids can be persuaded to cross pollinate somehow. It shouldn't work, but it might.
 
Arika H. September 13, 2015
Color me intrigued. I'll definitely be checking that out. Thanks, Carol!
 
vrinda September 13, 2015
Love this recipe
can I use whole wheat flour instead ?
 
peggy September 13, 2015
I am trying this recipe with half bread flour and half oat flour. Will let you know how it turns out. The other option I will try is using part or all white whole wheat flour or whole wheat pastry flour. They seem to bake up more like regular flour but with the benefits of whole grain.
 
Rosalind P. September 16, 2020
To Peggy: I i want to try using some whole wheat flour as well -- white whole wheat or even pastry. How did yours come out?
 
PaulaE September 13, 2015
If bread flour isn't available, would regular all-purpose work?
 
Brooklyn September 13, 2015
Can this be done with gluten free flour like Cup 4 Cup?
 
Robyn September 12, 2015
I have 4 challahs rising on my counter. I love this recipe. I made two batches of the dough yesterday and It was really easy and fun. I will let you know how it turns out, thanks for sharing it. Very easy to follow.
 
Julie R. September 11, 2015
If I add some raisins for our holiday challah what should I do differently?
 
Jessica F. September 11, 2015
Nothing! Except for adding the raisins, of course. I fold them in when I first remove the dough from the fridge, before shaping.
 
Julie R. September 12, 2015
Thanks Jessica! I'll let you know how it goes. This is my kind of bread recipe.
 
navahfrost September 11, 2015
I am wondering if I can just use the proportions for my go- to challah recipe (Basically the same ingredients you have here) and just use this method instead of the conventional kneading and double rise? Is there any reason it wouldn't work?
 
Jessica F. September 11, 2015
I'm not familiar with your recipe, of course, but I say go for it! I'd love to hear how it turns out.
 
Emily September 10, 2015
Is challah typically made with butter? Would that work as well?
 
Emily September 10, 2015
Just figured out that I was thinking of brioche! Maybe I'll try making it with butter to see if a no knead brioche works!
 
Jessica F. September 11, 2015
I always make challah with oil, but you could try replacing it with melted butter, if you'd like.
 
AntoniaJames September 12, 2015
Use soft, not melted butter. Boulangere shares helpful insights here: https://food52.com/hotline/6177-melted-or-softened-butter-in-baking ;o)
 
Rosalind P. September 16, 2020
oil is the default for challah because dairy cannot be eaten with meat for kosher eating.
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Rosalind P. September 16, 2020
challah isn't typically made with butter. It's a bread that is usually served with Shabbat or holiday dinners, or just dinner in general, and in kosher eating, dairy cannot be eaten together with meat, including poultry. So it's typically oil.
 
Joy September 10, 2015
Do you think the honey could be replaced with granulated sugar?
 
Jessica F. September 11, 2015
Yes, though I have a feeling not in a 1:1 swap. (Honey is sweeter.) Anyone out there know how to handle the substitution?
 
belgravia September 13, 2015
(If anyone has info on substituting honey with pure maple syrup in this or similar recipes, I'd love to know their results. It's a rainy, cold pre-fall day here and maple challah seems like it might be a really good idea. Or crazy. Or both.)
 
Noor September 13, 2015
I usually use honey in place of sugar in bread recipes and i never tasted it. However, honey/sugar substitution rule is if recipe calls for less than 1 cup of sugar , you can replace it with the same amount of honey, in 1:1 ratio. If the recipe calls for more than 1 cup of sugar, replace each cup of sugar with 2/3 to 3/4 cup of honey ..
 
Shirl G. September 13, 2015
Honey has 130% of the sweetening power of sugar. If sugar is counted as 100%, this means that you would use about 75% (the exact percentage is 76.9%) of the honey amount. Shirl Gard
 
beth September 10, 2015
I would love to know how you do the cinnamon sugar variation mentioned in the article. Do you roll it up and bake it in a loaf pan instead of braid it?
 
Jessica F. September 11, 2015
Beth, for the cinnamon sugar variation I roll the chilled dough into a rectangle, brush with melted butter, and sprinkle generously with cinnamon and sugar that I've stirred together in a bowl. Then, you guessed it, I roll it up and bake it in a buttered loaf pan. I found an old photo on my Instagram, here: https://instagram.com/p/u0aNMzponE/?taken-by=sweetamandine
 
Lisa September 10, 2015
Is it possible to halve this recipe? I have a very tiny oven and can only fit one loaf in at a time. Or can I bake one loaf at a time, without it affecting the taste of the bread or over proofing the dough?

I love making bread, especially no-knead breads!
 
Jessica F. September 11, 2015
Hi, Lisa. I've never tried halving it, but I can't see why you would have a problem. I double this recipe all the time, and the ratios hold up. As for baking one loaf at a time: If your room is cool enough, the extra 20 minutes proofing shouldn't affect the flavor of the second loaf too much. The loaf may be a wee bit puffier, I suppose. If you're worried, you might shape the first half of your dough with the remaining dough still in the fridge, to reduce the time between baking.
 
Arika H. September 10, 2015
Any chance this technique could work with a gluten-free blend? Swapping equal weights? I've baked with gluten-free flours - but never bread.
 
Kristen M. September 10, 2015
Unfortunately, I don't think so. The gluten is really important to forming the structure of this bread, which isn't as true of cakes or quick breads or cookies.
 
Arika H. September 10, 2015
That's what I was afraid of. Thanks for your response!
 
Carol E. September 13, 2015
Maybelline
Arika, The French Laundry has an amazing gluten free brioche recipe. It might be worth a try to see if those tender little clouds & these delicious braids can be persuaded to cross pollinate somehow. It shouldn't work, but it might.
 
Sarah M. September 9, 2015
A guest at the dinner where I served these delicious loaves aptly said that this is "challah for the refined palate." Airy and just the slightest bit sweet. Thanks SJ and Kristen!
 
Jessica F. September 10, 2015
I'm so glad you enjoyed, Sarah!
 
Regine September 9, 2015
Rochelle, it means 1 teaspoon PLUS 1/2 teaspoon of the instant yeast.
 
Rochelle September 9, 2015
With regard to yeast... What does 11/2 mean
 
Rochelle September 11, 2015
Thanks....
 
ChefJune September 9, 2015
Interesting technique. Me, I love kneading bread. Shana Tovah to all!
 
AntoniaJames September 9, 2015
June, this folding is precisely the technique used for just about all - if not all - of the breads in Chad Robertson's "Tartine Bread" (but those use a wild yeast starter, which gives them more flavor than breads relying solely on commercial yeast). We used Robertson's brioche dough for sesame burger buns on July 4; they were terrific. https://instagram.com/p/4vKpNOGB1B/?taken-by=howmothercooks
It will be fun to try this, and compare the two recipes. ;o) P.S. A dough this full of eggs and oil, with a high hydration, is nearly impossible to knead.
 
drbabs September 9, 2015
I must try this.
 
drbabs September 10, 2015
IT'S SO GREAT! So easy! Looks and tastes like weak challah! Try it!!
 
Jessica F. September 10, 2015
Hooray! I'm thrilled to hear that the recipe was a success.
 
drbabs September 10, 2015
Ugh, I meant to write REAL challah. Sorry! It's still really great!
 
Regine September 9, 2015
I am an avid amateur bread maker. Can't wait to make this. In fact, i think i will make it today. Thanks.