Recipes for Hanukkah

On Hanukkah is it customary to eat foods that are fried in oil.

The fried foods custom recalls the miracle of Hanukkah, which centered around oil (one cruse lasting for eight days). Latkes (fried potato pancakes) are traditional, topped with applesauce or sour cream, but there are many creative variations to the pancakes and the toppings. Other fried foods for Hanukkah include sufganiyot (jelly doughnuts) and other kinds of fritters.

Chocolate Babka Donuts 

When babka meets a donut, you know it’s doubly delicious.

BY CHAYA RAPPOPORT

Babka is nearly a weekly occurrence in my house, and I can think of few things better. But it’s not just me: Babka has really been getting the recognition it deserves all over the country, making appearances everywhere from artisanal bakeries to Jewish delis and even high-end restaurants.

My babka recipe is rich, buttery and loaded with eggs, more closely related to brioche than to the old, which is what I wanted for these babka-donut hybrids. I increased the flour content and the eggs, making for a sturdier dough, and I reduced the amount of butter — just by a smidge so the dough would stand up better to frying. For a little crunch and to offset the sweetness of the filling and dough I added cacao  nibs, which impart a slightly bitter flavor and some nice crunch too. Cacao (or cocoa) nibs are dried, fermented pieces of coffee beans – a very pure, intense chocolaty flavor. You can find them at Whole Foods, specialty food stores (like a health food store), or on Amazon.

With these donuts you get all the pillowy softness of babka, plus the moisture that deep-frying locks into the dough. The dark chocolate pastry cream would be lovely in a tart, cream puffs or on cake, but here, along with the cacao nib sugar, it serves to further complement the dough and turns the whole treat into something much more than just chocolate babka. Both donuts and babka are time-intensive kitchen projects — usually, it’d be either or — and that choice would be pretty hard to make. But with these donuts both are possible at once. And if that isn’t a Hanukkah miracle, then I don’t know what is.

Please note: you want to make the dough the night before you will fry, so plan accordingly.

Ingredients

For the donut dough:

  • 3⁄4 cup whole milk
  • 4 large eggs, lightly beaten
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1 stick unsalted butter at room temperature, cubed
  • 3 1⁄2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1⁄2 cup sugar
  • 1 Tbsp active dry yeast
  • 1 tsp kosher salt

For the chocolate pastry cream:

  • 4 large egg yolks
  • 1/4 cup sugar
  • 2 Tbsp cornstarch
  • 4 Tbsp unsweetened cocoa powder
  • 1/2 tsp fine sea salt
  • 1 1/2 cups milk
  • 4 oz. bittersweet chocolate, broken into pieces
  • 1/2 stick unsalted butter, cubed

For the cacao nib sugar + frying:

  • 6 cups vegetable oil, for frying
  • 2 cups sugar
  • 4 Tbsp cacao nibs

Directions

  1. To make the cacao nib sugar: In a food processor, grind the cacao nibs until fine. Combine the pulverized cacao nibs and sugar. Transfer to an airtight container until ready to use.
  • The next step is to make the pastry cream, since it needs to set before you fill the doughnuts. Whisk together yolks, vanilla,sugar, cornstarch, cocoa powder and salt.
  • In a heavy saucepan bring milk just to a boil over moderate heat and in a stream add 1/4 cup to egg mixture, whisking until smooth.
  • Transfer the milk-and-egg mixture to the pan with the rest of the milk and bring to a boil, whisking (the mixture will look curdled but will become smooth as whisked).
  • Boil the mixture, whisking vigorously, 1 minute and remove from heat. Stir in chocolate and butter, stirring until melted and combined well. Transfer to a heatproof bowl and chill, surface covered with plastic wrap, overnight, or until ready to fill doughnuts.
  • To make the doughnut dough: Heat the milk until warm to the touch, around 110°F. Add the eggs to the warm milk mixture and whisk gently to combine.
  • Butter a medium bowl and set aside. In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, combine the flour, sugar, yeast and salt. Add the milk mixture and mix just until combined. Switch to the dough hook and knead the dough on low speed, about 3 minutes. The dough will be sticky — this is perfectly fine.
  • Increase the speed to medium and add the butter, a piece or two at a time. In the mixer, let the dough mix until completely smooth and elastic. To test the dough’s readiness, try stretching a piece of it. It should stretch easily to a point where it becomes translucent but doesn’t rip.
  • Put the dough in a buttered bowl, cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate for minimum of 12 hours, or overnight.
  • The next day, when ready to make the donuts, line two baking sheets with parchment paper. Dust the paper well with flour. Tip the cold dough onto a lightly floured work surface and roll it into a 9 1/2 by 12 1 ⁄2-inch rectangle. It should be about 1/2  inch thick.
  • Using a 3-inch round cookie cutter, cut out 12 dough rounds and set them on the prepared sheets. Lightly cover them with plastic wrap and set in a warm place to proof for about 1 1/2 hours. After proofing, the dough should look puffy and spring back slowly when pressed gently.
  • When you’re ready to fry, line a rimmed baking sheet with paper towels. Prepare the cacao nib sugar in a bowl nearby. Spoon the pastry cream into a pastry bag fitted with a small round tip.
  • Add the oil to a medium, heavy-bottomed pot or to a deep fryer. Heat the oil to between 350°F and 365°F.
  • Carefully add 2 to 3 doughnuts to the oil and fry them until golden brown, 2 to 3 minutes per side. Using a slotted spoon, put the doughnuts on the paper towels. After about 1 minute, when the donuts are cool enough to handle, toss them in the cacao nib sugar. Repeat with the remaining dough.
  • To fill the donuts, put the pastry cream in a pastry bag. Using a knife or a chopstick, poke a hole into one side of each donut. Be careful not to poke through the other side. Insert the tip of the pastry bag into the hole and gently squeeze to fill.

About Chaya Rappoport

Chaya Rappoport is a food stylist, baker and recipe developer with a deep love for challah, halva and salty everything. Currently NYC based, you can find her blogging seasonal recipes on retrolillies.com and postings snaps of her day to day cooking + baking on instagram, @retrolillies. Her work has been featured on The Feed Feed, Delish.com, Food and Wine and Conde Nast Traveler.


Sweet Potato Latkes 

The ever-popular potato latke heads the list of traditional, oily Hanukkah treats. Here is an exciting update to your favorite potato pancakes.

BY MY JEWISH LEARNING

Ingredients

2 lbs sweet potatoes or yams

2 Tablespoons matzah meal or flour

2 eggs

1 teaspoon baking powder

1-2 teaspoons cinnamon (to taste)

1/4 teaspoon nutmeg

peanut oil

1/4 teaspoon cloves

Directions

Peel and grate sweet potatoes and remove any excess moisture (can put in dish towel or cheesecloth and squeeze out moisture). Beat eggs and add one at a time, mixing well. Add matzoh meal or flour and baking powder. Add spices and mix well. Heat oil until hot and put large spoonful for each pancake. Cook until brown and flip.

Note: For fluffier pancakes, separate eggs. Separate and add yolks where “add eggs.” Beat egg whites until stiff. Fold in egg whites after all other ingredients have been mixed in.

Recipe reprinted from Jewish Family & Life

Find even more Hanukkah recipes here.

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