How to create Lievito Madre (Pasta Madre) for panettone

UPDATE: This post has been updated to add some modifications to the process of creating your own lievito madre or pasta madre. The new information will be in colored boxes like this paragraph.


Hello everyone!
As promised, here’s my guide to building a lievito madre or pasta madre to make panettone. I will use both names because it came to my attention that some people are using the term lievito madre to refer to liquid sourdough and it’s not the same. I want you to get familiar with both names so you know that lievito madre or pasta madre are the same thing 🙂

First of all, I want to say that all this is not my idea. I’ve been reading blogs and watching videos to have a better understanding of the whole process. Eva’s posts were full of information. I’ve been tracking down everything the Italian Pasticcieri had online and read scientific publications to understand better how bacterias work (surprisingly there’s not much research on this).

This guide is a summary of everything I’ve read and everything I’ve learned every day, and I hope it can be useful to you. It’s focused on building and training the lievito madre. The next step will be the 3 refreshments before making panettone, which I will write about once I’m more familiar with the process.

For a better understanding of how sourdough bacteria grow, I recommend you read this post first. It’ll help you understand how pasta madre works.


When I first heard about panettone, I never thought it was this incredibly challenging bread! It never even occurred to me that it was made with sourdough or how laborious the process was!

To be honest, I do have a panettone recipe here, and trust me when I tell you that I spent a lot of time trying to get the dough right, but now… I feel like I was cheating! (I still think it’s a good place to start getting familiar with very enriched dough and gluten development).

A few notes about pasta madre

First and foremost, is not just a firm sourdough starter. This stiff dough is indeed a sourdough starter, but a special one. It requires a very specific maintenance routine and it has a very specific purpose: to bake grandi lievitati products such as panettone, pandoro, colomba…

If you want to make some rustic Italian bread using sourdough, you can create a stiff starter, or use your own sourdough starter. You wouldn’t need lievito madre, because you wouldn’t need the specific characteristics of grandi lievitati products in a rustic loaf.


Grandi lievitati bakes also require very strong flour, and most likely, your regular bread flour won’t be enough. Also, I wouldn’t say that nobody uses whole wheat flour, but I believe that’s not the most common way to maintain pasta madre.

Things you need to know before you start

These are things that I’ve learned along the way and that I think everyone should know before making the decision to start this journey.

  • Be aware that it’s going to take 15 days to get the lievito madre ready. There are two major parts in this process: building the stiff starter and training it.
  • I encourage you to do a few experiments to see if you can find a place where you can keep a constant temperature of 30C/86F. This step is crucial in the first couple of days and also to ferment the panettone dough.
  • Check your schedule and plan accordingly. Don’t start making the starter on a Saturday at 1 pm if you won’t be home at 1 pm during the week because the cycles are either of 12 or 24h.
  • Gather all your ingredients before you start and make sure you have enough flour. You will need it. I bought 15lb and it’s enough to prepare the pasta madre, train it and make at least 1 batch of panettone (probably more).
  • If the quality of your water is not good, buy water (you don’t need a high mineral concentration in the water). If the quality is fine, I suggest you filter the tap water.
  • Get your mind in the right place. Some days you will be tired and will want to go to bed, but you’ll have to feed your pasta madre, this is very important when you’re training it. The whole point of this is to reduce the acidity. Once is matured, you can put it in the fridge and feed it once a week.
  • Be patient. Use your eyes and, especially, your nose to let the dough tell you what’s happening.

The process of creating your lievito madre

Building period
Day 1Make apple yeast water
Day 2 Create a 100% hydration sourdough
Day 3 Convert into a stiff starter and start anaerobic fermentation (wrapped log)
Day 4 Wait. Nothing to do
Day 5 Collect the core of the log, refresh it with flour and water and start fermentation in water
Training Period
Days 6-10 Refreshments using same amounts of flour and starter +30-50% of the weight of flour in water

Building the lievito madre: 5 days

The first step of the building period is to activate the wild microorganisms found on apples. In other words: create an apple yeast water.

As you know, vegetables, fruits, cereals, etc have lactic acid bacteria and yeasts that are dormant and need to be activated.

These microorganisms, in general, proliferate better when their environment is moist. In science, we refer to this as “water activity”. This number ranges between 0 and 1 (pure water being 1), so the higher the water activity, the easier it will be for the microorganisms to wake up and grow.

Temperature is also crucial. Fermentation can occur at different temperatures, but not all microorganisms are activated at the same temperature. For panettone purposes, we should make sure our culture is at 28-30C (82-86F) so we promote the fermentation of specific strains of lactic acid bacteria.

A typical sourdough culture can have dozens of different strains of bacteria and many different types of yeast. So we can select which ones we prefer by controlling the temperature, moisture content, pH…

Day 1: Start the apple yeast water

You will need:

  • 1 or 2 pesticide-free and untreated apples (I bought organic and they worked great, they shouldn’t have wax or anything, the more natural the better. If you can go to an orchard even better!)
  • A glass container with a lid
  • A grater
  • Water at 30C/86F ( I used tap water filtered with my Brita)
  • A scale
  • A knife
  • A thermometer
  • A warm place where you can maintain a temperature between 28-30C/82-86F (my oven with the light on is enough, if it’s too cold and the temperature drops in the evening I put a glass with hot water on the other corner of the oven before I go to bed or when I wake up)
  1. Cut the apples in 4 and remove the core. You don’t need to clean the apples because if you do, you’ll probably wash out lots of nice microorganism. If there’s dirt on the stem area, just cut that part out.
  2. Grate the apples and keep the peels
  3. Weight 200g of grated apples and peels an place them in the glass container
  4. Weight 200g of water at 30C/86F
  5. Add the water to the glass container and close it tightly. You can shake it a little bit if you want
  6. Place the container in your oven or fermenter and wait for 24h

That’s it for now!

Day 2: create a sourdough starter with the apple yeast water

After 24h you might see small bubbles in your container, it can make a fizzy noise when you open it, it can smell like cider or maybe you can’t tell if something happened in there. That’s why this step is important. If after 24h, your starter doesn’t show activity, start with the apples again because something went wrong.

You will need:

Today is an easy day, enjoy it, because things get more complicated!

  1. Strain the apple mixture from the day before and collect the liquid. In my case, I didn’t see small bubbles, but it did smell like cider.
  2. In a medium bowl weigh 200 g of Manitoba flour and add 200 g of the fermented apple water. With a spatula mix well until you don’t see dry flour particles. It should look like a regular 100% hydration starter.
  3. Carefully transfer the starter to the tall container. And let it ferment at 30C for 24h. I put it in the oven with the light on. After 24h the starter will raise and collapse. At the very least it should double in size. That’s why it’s important to not leave dough stuck on the container wall because while the starter rises and collapses it’ll leave a mark on it, so you’ll be able to tell how far it rose. If there was anything there before, you might get confused.
NOTES:

You don’t have to put a lid on the container, you just need to place a napkin on top it there is any risk of something falling inside.

If you have it in the oven, try not to open the door all the time. That way you avoid streams of colder air coming inside and changing the temperature. The more constant the temperature the better. I checked my oven before going to bed and in the morning if the temperature changed too much overnight or I felt the house very cold.

Make sure the container you use for this is tall enough that can hold the dough even if it quadruples in size. Also, just in case some starter overflows, put a plate or a tray underneath.

*my container is a coffee canister that I bought in Walmart for less than $2. It’s 10x9x20 cm (4×3.6×8 in)

Day 3: Convert the starter into a stiff starter and do an anaerobic fermentation

Today is when you should start seeing activity in the sourdough. After 24h at 30C, your sourdough should’ve grown and collapsed. There should be some debris on the walls of your container that indicates how high the starter rose. It should’ve, at the very least, doubled in size. If it didn’t, at least, double, I’d start again. There aren’t enough bacteria or the ones that are in the culture, are not strong enough.

You must always keep in mind that making panettone is a difficult task and fermenting all that dough full of sugar, butter and egg is difficult too. So, we need to make sure that the bacteria we select and will train is the strongest.

The starter should be very runny, the same as a 100% hydration starter that has reached the peak and collapsed. It should have small bubbles on the surface and a pungent aroma. Don’t freak out if it smells like something rotten, so far, it’s normal. The bacterial colonies are fighting against each other, everything we do is to promote the survival of the ones we want.

The second time I built my LM I didn’t wait until it completely collapsed (24h), instead, I decided to proceed with the next step after 12h. This way most of the bacteria were still in the stationary phase, which means that I collected more live bacteria. Ultimately, my PM was more active than the previous one.

You will need

  • 200 g of yesterday’s starter
  • 200 g of flour (more if needed to achieve desired consistency)
  • A rolling pin
  • A scale
  • A Ziplock bag
  • 2 cotton cloths
  • 1 meter/1 yard of some strong rope or string  
  1. Collect 200g of the starter and add 200 g of flour.
  2. With your hands mix everything well. The dough should be dry and relatively hard, it shouldn’t stick to the counter but should be soft enough to work with a rolling pin. It is OK if you need to let it rest a few times to relax the gluten.
  3. Once you’ve incorporated the flour, with a rolling pin start working the dough until it gets a little bit more elastic. It doesn’t have to be extremely soft and smooth, but it shouldn’t have lots dry flour or chunks of dry flour either.
  4. Shape the dough into a rectangle-ish that’s about 20cm long and 15cm wide and roll it into a log. Place it into the ziplock bag and wrap it well. Wrap the packet with a cotton cloth and then with another cotton cloth and tie it with the rope or strings you have. It doesn’t need to be too tight, just enough to keep the cloths in place.
  5. Put the dough in an empty pot and put the pot inside of your oven (this is precaution, it can explode due to the built-in pressure). You don’t need to leave the light on. Just make sure that nobody turns the oven on and burn your pasta madre.
  6. Let it ferment for 48h. As time goes by the log gets harder and harder. That’s a good sign. It means that it is fermenting and as a result, the pressure is increasing.
lievito madre stiff sourdough starter

Day 4: No need to do anything

Day 5: Collect the fermented stiff starter and begin the fermentation in water

After 48h the log might not feel as tight as after 24 or it might still feel a bit tight. Anyhow, today we’re going to unwrap the whole packet. Be careful because it can explode. Most likely, you’ll see how, due to the pressure built inside, the dough tore apart the plastic bag and some of it came out and it’s dry and stuck on the cloth. Don’t worry, it’s absolutely normal.

You will need:

  1. Unwrap the log carefully
  2. With a knife cut the bag and open the log lengthwise. You should see small alveoli. The dough should have a dark color (from the apple water) and it should smell better, more of a fermentation smell than in the previous step.
  3. With a clean spoon, collect the inside part of the log (the “cuore” as Italians say). The strongest bacterial colony is in the core of the log. The bacteria undergo a very rough 48h where an anaerobic fermentation takes place and only the strong survive, and those are the ones we want.
  4. Collect 200g of dough or as many as you can.
  5. In a bowl add 200g of dough, 200g of flour and 30-50% of the weight of flour in water at 30C/86F. That is 60-100 g. Start by adding 30% and move up if needed. The dough should be dry and hard, it shouldn’t stick to the counter but should be soft enough to work with a rolling pin.
  6. Roll the dough into a rectangle, fold it in 2 or 3 and roll it again. The procedure is very similar to working with laminated dough.The dough should get smoother and smoother. It shouldn’t have pieces of dry flour in the middle.
  7. Roll the dough into a long rectangle that is slightly narrower than your container and about 1cm/0.5 in thick.
  8. Fold the rectangle into 3 or 4, put it inside of the plastic container and fill it with water just to cover the dough.
NOTES:

If your kitchen is:

  • Cold-Very cold: you can use room temperature water for the bath
  • Not too cold, not too warm (around 20-23C, 69-73F): you can use room temperature water and check how it evolves, you might be able to do refreshments every 12h or every 24.
  • Warm-very warm: use cold water. Keep a bottle of water in the fridge, or cool it with ice cubes and when it’s cold enough add it to the container.

Pay attention to how the dough behaves. Warmer temperatures will accelerate the fermentation process and colder will slow it down. Avoiding over fermentation is crucial.

In my case, my kitchen was not too warm and not too cold, but since I’m not home all day, I didn’t want to risk the dough to over ferment and lose a lot of it, so I started using cold water. The dough didn’t show much sign of fermentation in the first 12h. After 16h it was floating and after 24 it had clear signs of fermentation (alveoli), the layers weren’t visible anymore and it had developed a dry skin on top.

Something I realized was that this sourdough starter likes routines, so try to always do the same thing and keep it at the same temperature. During this process, there was a night when the temperature dropped a lot and the pasta madre didn’t rise as usual. In my experience, consistency is key!

The reason the container and the dough should be almost the same width is that when the dough starts fermenting and the layers get thicker, the container will retain the dough and prevent it from expanding to the sides. Therefore, the dough doesn’t have a choice but to grow upwards.

Training your pasta madre: 10 days

Days 6-15: refresh the lievito madre every 12 or 24h

According to the Italian regulations for Artisanal Panettone, the lievito madre has to be trained for at least 7 days. In our case, it’ll be trained for 10 days.


From now on you need discipline because you must feed your LM at the very least every 24h. Whether you’re tired or sleepy. Therefore, you need to think well about which schedule works for you best.

For example, I leave my house around 8:45 am, and come back home around 8 pm, that’s my window. I started the process at 8:30 pm and then I was doing the refreshments at 8:30 pm every 24h. I chose this time because not only is it when I’m home, but it’s also a time that works for me on the weekends. Because your pasta madre doesn’t take weekends off!

I’m saying this because if you start working very early, you might do refreshments at 5 or 6 am, but… will you wake up that early on a weekend? If you will, then it’s fine! I know I wouldn’t, I’d probably turn my alarm off and regret it later.

You will need:

  • A knife
  • A scale
  • 200 g of stiff sourdough
  • 200 g of flour
  • 60-100 g of water at 30C/86F
  • Mixing bowl
  • Rolling pin
  • Tall and transparent container
  • Water for the bath
  • A large bowl to discard the water or the kitchen sink

I changed my container to a shorter but wider one after day 6 or 7. It allowed me to control and shape the dough better.

The procedure is similar to day 5.

After 24h, the lievito madre should’ve risen to the top of the container and probably developed a dry skin. In the bottom, you will see some flour. Your pasta madre will be very soft and slimy on the outer parts. What we need is the core of the dough.

  1. Remove the dry skin that developed on top. It might not be completely dry, but even so, remove it. It’s the part that has been exposed to dust and particles falling on top of it.
  2. Hold the container with one hand and with the other try to separate the dough from the walls of the container so the water to come out but you can hold the dough, and remove the water.
  3. Squeeze the dough to drain water out of it and massage it so the slimy mushy part falls out and you only keep the dough that was not degraded.
  4. In another bowl weigh 200g of Manitoba flour, add 200 g of the drained pasta madre and add 60-100 g of water at 30C/86F
  5. Knead everything and incorporate all the flour. If you need to let the dough rest, do so.
  6. Roll and shape the dough the same way you did the day before
  7. Place the dough in the container and add water to cover it.

Repeat this every day for the next 10 days paying attention to how the dough smells, how the alveoli look after the fermentation cycle etc. Also, smell everything. The dough, the water you discard… Your nose will let you know how the lievito madre is doing more than your eyes will.

Right after refreshment
12h later

Things you need to know

  1. You need to keep everything extremely clean to reduce the chance of cross-contamination.
  2. Keep in mind that you’re going to use a lot of flour just to build your starter. If you’re a pro at this, probably you can use smaller amounts of flour and LM because you can tell how the dough is doing just by looking at it. But if you’re like me, in the learning process, you might want to keep relatively large amounts of flour for each refreshment until you learn to feel the dough and see if it needs more or less water, 24 or 12h refreshment cycles, etc. I learned this method this way and larger amounts are easier to deal with and to avoid over-degradation of the dough. This is especially handy when you’re not home all day. I see this as an investment, from now on I’ll take care of my lievito madre and, hopefully, I won’t have to do it again!
  3. Your hand will suffer, keep your moisturizing lotion close by! After a few days I noticed my hands were getting very dry. I guess it’s normal, you’ll be washing your hands all the time, and let me tell you… this dough is difficult to get rid of! Warm water is your best friend here. Also, you’re going to be working every day with a slightly acidic dough. So yeah, keep the lotion close by.
  4. If you can find/afford 2 containers with the same dimension, get them. It’ll make the process a bit faster because you don’t have to stop to wash it to put the dough back in.

That is all for now!

This is all for now. If you have any questions you can contact me through email, DM on Instagram, or send me a message on Facebook and I’ll try my best to help you!

Let’s start a movement for homemade artisanal panettone! Tag your pics with the hashtag #missionpanettone so we can all see how everyone’s lievito madre is doing.

You can find me on InstagramFacebook, and Pinterest, and you can also subscribe to my Youtube channel.

This post contains affiliate links and any sales made through such links will reward me a small commission – at no extra cost for you – that allows me to keep running this blog.


I hope you all have a wonderful weekend and if you are celebrating Thanksgiving… Happy Thanksgiving!

Maria.

Best (and vegan!) pumpkin bread – Video

Hello friends!


Are you ready for some pumpkinlicious bread? Yeah, I just made a word up. But only because I couldn’t find one that fits this bread!

pumpkin shape bread fall vegan
Jump to Recipe


These days Instagram is packed with pictures of pumpkin bread and pumpkin buns and pumpkins in general and I couldn’t let it go, I had to post my recipe.

I’ve made different types of pumpkin bread before, but my favorite is the recipe I’m posting today.


Why, you may ask?


Because it’s full of flavor, it’s soft, it’s sweet and has a lovely shape!


And it’s accidentally vegan!


I say accidentally because I wasn’t really planning on making this bread vegan, it just happened! Lately, I’ve been using the Country Crock line of plant-based butter. I’ve tried them all and I love the result in bread! (This is not an ad, I’m just letting you know the dairy-free butter that I use)

This recipe yields 2 medium pumpkin-shape loaves. You can divide it into more loaves, or you can make one larger loaf. Just keep in mind that you’ll have to adjust your oven temperature.

I personally prefer medium to large loaves using this recipe. Since the bread doesn’t have eggs, smaller shapes will dry out quicker.

This bread is very soft, you don’t even need a knife to cut through it, the shape makes it easier to pull a piece :o) It’s also sweet enough to enjoy with both savory and sweet food. Did I mention is super soft?


How come it is so soft… if it doesn’t have eggs?


Miracle pumpkin puree! The carbohydrates (fiber included!) of this orange vegetable play a significant role in keeping the moisture in the bread. Pumpkin has starch, and when you boil it, some of that starch is gelatinized and able to keep the moisture in. Also, the pumpkin particles are not too hard, and they do not disrupt the gluten network like cereal bran could do, allowing the dough to develop properly and become very elastic.

Oh, and pumpkin is PACKED with antioxidants, carotenes to be exact. It’s all goodies in here!


So, without further ado… Let’s carve this pumpkin!


You can watch the video for more details on how to make this bread.

The first thing you need to do is dissolve the yeast into 3 Tbsp of the total amount of water.

While you let the yeast activate mix the pumpkin puree and the sugar in a different bowl. When the yeast is ready, add it to the pumpkin mixture and combine everything well. Let it rest while you prepare the other ingredients

Mix the flour, the salt and the pumpkin spice powder in a larger bowl.

Grate the butter and mix it with the flour. If you don’t have a grater you can use a pastry blender or cut it in smaller pieces and use a fork. The idea is to have small pieces of butter mixed in with the flour.

This dough is not too hydrated so adding the butter later would be a bit difficult. I found that grating the butter makes the process easier while still having great results. The butter will be absorbed in the dough as you knead it.


Add the wet ingredients to the flour/butter mixture and combine everything. Start adding the leftover water 1 oz at a time. Depending on your flour you might not need all of it. I use King Arthur bread flour and I used all 115 ml of water.

NOTE: If you add too much water, the dough will be too hydrated and the pumpkin won’t hold the shape in the last proofing.


The dough should feel soft, slightly sticky but it should hold the shape for several minutes.

Alrighty! Once the dough comes together, let it rest for a few minutes and start kneading!

Knead until it’s soft and shiny and it doesn’t stick to your fingers or your working surface.

If you feel the dough is not coming together let it rest for a few minutes and continue kneading.

Shape the dough into a ball and place it in a lightly oiled bowl. Let it rise until it doubles in size. It should feel puffy and soft and smell yeasty.

Deflate the dough well, the crumb of this bread doesn’t have large alveoli so try to get rid of large air pockets.

Divide the dough into 2 pieces of similar weight and pre-shape them into a ball. Don’t worry if one is slightly larger than the other one. They don’t have to be perfect.

Cover them and let them rest for a few minutes.

In the meanwhile, prepare the thread.

Cut 8 pieces of 45 cm (18 in)

In a small bowl add 2 tbsp of vegetable oil and soak the threads well. This will avoid leaving thread debris on your loaves and it’ll make easier to take them off after baking.

Place 4 pieces of thread on the table, crossing each other by the middle part and making sure that there are 8 spaces of similar size, watch the video for better understanding.

Take one of the dough balls and shape it into a ball. Try to create some tension so it’ll hold the shape better, and place it on top of the threads.

Tight the threads, not too tight, not too loose, just enough. As the dough ferments, it’ll puff up and the pumpkin shape will become more obvious.

Do the same with the other piece of dough

Cover the pumpkins with plastic wrap and let them ferment until you see the pumpkin shape. Don’t worry if it is a bit asymmetric.


About 20 mins before the proofing ends, turn your oven on at 375 F.


If you want, you can brush the pumpkins with vegetable milk (or regular milk if you don’t mind about dairy). I used soy milk on mine.

Put the pumpkins in the oven, lower the temperature to 350 F and bake the bread for 35-45mins (time depends on your oven), or until they’re golden brown.

If the loaves are getting too dark but they’re not done yet, lower the temperature to 330F or cover the pumpkins with aluminum foil.


After they’re baked, let the pumpkins cool down in a cooling rack for 30 minutes to an hour before you take the threads off.

This is important, you have to let the crumb set before you take the threads out. If they get stuck in the crumb, carefully pull them, one at a time, and they will slip out of the bread.

OPTIONAL: When the bread has cool down completely, take 2 cinnamon sticks and insert them on the top of the bread, this way your pumpkins will look really cute and can decorate your table while your guests arrive! Or just look incredibly beautiful for your next Instagram post.


And now it’s the best part… It’s time to enjoy your pumpkin bread!

See you next bake!

Best Pumpkin Bread

Bun-like pumpkin bread with incredible aroma and delicate crumb

Course Appetizer, Dessert, Side Dish, Snack
Cuisine American, lactose free, vegan, vegetarian
Keyword bread, buns, pumpkin, vegan
Prep Time 3 hours 45 minutes
Cook Time 35 minutes
Servings 2 loaves
Author Maria

Ingredients

  • 500 g bread flour
  • 300 g pumpkin puree (canned or homemade)
  • 80 g vegetable butter
  • 4 g active dry yeast
  • 120 g water
  • 6 g salt
  • 40 g sugar
  • 3 tsp pumpkin spice (add as much/little as you want)
  • 2 tbsp vegetable oil (to soak the threads)
  • 8 pieces food grade thread (45 cm / 18 in)
  • vegetable milk for brushing
  • 2 sticks cinnamon for decoration

Instructions

  1. Dissolve the yeast in 3 tbsp of the total amount of water and let it rest a few minutes

  2. In a small bowl mix the pumpkin puree, the sugar, and the yeast solution

  3. In a bigger bowl, add the flour, the salt, the pumpkin spice, and mix well

  4. Grate the vegetable butter and add it to the flour. Using your hands, mix the flour and butter

  5. Add the pumpkin mixture to the flour and combine

  6. Add the leftover water and incorporate all the ingredients well until you don't see dry flour particles. Let it rest for 20-30 min (autolysis)

  7. Knead the dough until it's soft and shiny. You can do it by hand or with a stand mixer

  8. Lightly oil a bowl and place the dough inside. Cover it and let it rise until it doubles in size

  9. Deflate the dough gently and let it rest a few minutes.

  10. Divide the dough into 2 similar pieces, pre-shape them into balls, and let them rest 5-10 mins

  11. In the meanwhile prepare the threads. Cut 8 threads (food grade) of 45 cm (18in) long and soak them into 2tbsp of vegetable oil

  12. Put 2 threads making a cross on the table, and 2 more making an X (Try to put them as center as possible)

  13. Take one piece of dough, shape it into a tight ball and place it on top of the threads

  14. Tie the thread tight enough so they won't fall apart but loose enough you don't push the dough. Do the same with the other piece of dough.

  15. Preheat your oven at 350F

  16. Cover the pumpkins and let them rise until you see the pumpkin shape

  17. When ready, brush them with vegetable milk and bake them for 35-45 minutes (depends on your oven)

  18. Let the loaves cool for 30 mins before you take the threads out. And let them cool completely before cutting through them

  19. OPTIONAL: Insert a cinnamon stick on top of the loaves for decoration

Recipe Notes

If your loaves are browning too quickly, lower the oven temperature to 330 F and put foil on top if necessary. 

Delicious Nuts & Cardamom Babka – Video

It’s that time of the year again!

Fall is here and with it, all holidays and family & friends gatherings. Although, to be honest, sometimes I feel like I’m running out of ideas of what to bring to a party. Luckily for us all, I came up with a wonderful one!

Jump to Recipe

Babka!


You might think it’s not very original but this babka is different! I’ve developed a dough that keeps soft and fresh for many days, and a filling that’s unique and delicious! Oh, and also VERY customizable to fit everyone’s needs and preferences!

Nuts & cardamom babka!

In my opinion, babka is the perfect bread to play around with flavors and fillings. Firstly, because the dough it’s not too sweet and goes great with everything. Secondly, because it’s a beautiful bread!

Babka bread is a Polish Jewish bread (The non-Jewish babka is a cake rather than bread). The word “babka” comes from the Slavic word “babcia” which means “grandmother”.

Apparently, grandmas are worldwide known for making the yummiest food!

Babkas gained popularity after Polish people brought the recipe to New York City, and today is a very well known and loved sweet bread.


Although the original recipe called for a cinnamon filling, babka nowadays is made with plenty of other fillings, both sweet and savory.

On this recipe, I used pecans, hazelnuts, and almonds for the filling. I added cardamom powder and orange blossom water to make a paste with the ground nuts. And O EM GEE!

Note: You can find orange blossom water in Asian or Arabic stores. If you don’t live close to any, you can also find it on Amazon.


Okay, let’s talk nerdy for a minute!

One of the problems of bread (any bread) is shelf life. It dries out rather quickly (aka bread staling). However, when fats and sugar are added to the dough, the bread tends to last a bit longer because of how the fats and the gluten proteins attach to each other, and how the starch granules help give the gluten network elasticity and keep the moisture in the crumb. Okay, so what happens when we add nuts to the equation, especially when they are ground?

I’ve been thinking a lot about this, and although the dough ingredients and procedure definitely help, based on my reading and nerdy research, the oils in the nuts are released while cooking the paste, and during the baking process. The way babkas are shaped, they have several layers of filling. So, the layers of nut paste might stop the crumb moisture from leaving the bread so fast. Therefore, if it takes longer for the moisture to leave the bread, the bread will stay soft for longer time. Although I highly doubt this babka will last long!

There’s always a but…

But… adding nuts cannot make up for insufficient kneading. You still have to knead your dough well. The dough of this recipe is pretty sticky, but it does come together at the end. Check my brioche recipe to get directions on how to knead enriched dough.

You have to do it in batches. Knead a few minutes, let the dough rest a few minutes. You will see how after stopping for 5-10 minutes the dough is much more elastic and comes together much better. Don’t freak out if you spend a whole hour (with rests included) kneading. There’s nothing wrong with the dough. Eventually, it’ll become soft and elastic and shiny and it’ll have little blisters on the surface, and it won’t be sticky!

Never get intimidated by the time you spend kneading, it’s easier to not knead enough than to over work the dough.


Let’s start with this yummy recipe!

You can make this recipe with regular milk and butter, but I also tested a non-dairy version using soy milk and almond oil butter (it’s the one on the video) and it worked perfectly! If you use milk, just make sure you boil it first. Boiling the milk breaks down some enzymes that affect the development of the dough.


As always, activate the yeast first, then add the sugar and eggs and combine well.

Add the salt to the flour and mix the wet ingredients with the dry ingredients.

When you don’t see dry flour particles, cover the dough and let it rest a few minutes.

Start kneading and when you feel the dough is starting to get elastic add the butter or dairy-free spread.

I used Country Crock plant butter, the one with almond oil, and the dough turned out great! (Not an ad, I’m just letting you know what worked for my dairy free version ;] )


Incorporate the butter well and keep kneading. Let the dough rest as many times as you need, if you feel the dough is not coming together, stop, cover it, let it rest 5-10 mins and start again.

babka with cardamom and nuts filling delicious bread

Avoid using too much flour while you knead, it will break the balance of the ingredients and your babka will end up drier. Trust in the power of gluten!


When the dough is elastic, it passes the windowpane test, it’s shiny and has blisters covering the surface it’s ready! You can stop kneading, shape it into a ball, and place it in a lightly oiled container.


Let the dough ferment until it is puffy and has risen about twice its volume. Then deflate the dough and let it rest a few minutes before dividing it into 2 equal pieces.

This recipe yields 2 loaves. So, while you work with one piece, make sure you cover the other piece of dough well. You can even place it in the fridge to slow down the fermentation.


While the dough is fermenting you can make the filling.

Grind the nuts thin enough they will make a paste. Add the cardamom powder, milk, and orange blossom water. If you want it sweeter you can add sugar too.

Cook at medium heat until the nuts get a paste-like consistency. Turn off the heat, add the butter and stir. The butter helps the paste be creamier.


Transfer the paste to a plate and let cool to room temperature. Remember that if you add the filling while it’s too hot you can kill the yeast.

When the dough has risen enough flour your work surface lightly and roll the dough into 12 x 17 in rectangle. You can roll it into a longer length, the thinner you roll it, the more layers your babka will have, but the slices will fall apart easier.

Spread the filling on the dough and roll it into a log. Cut the log lengthwise and twist both strands leaving the open part up.

Grease your baking pan and place the babka in it. Let it rise until it reaches the edges of the pan.


Before the fermentation time ends, turn your oven on at 335F

Brush the babka with the leftover egg white and bake until it’s golden brown (about 45 mins, it depends on your oven). If the babka is not dark enough, you can bake it 5 minutes at 350F but be careful, the top can burn quickly!

After baking, babka is usually brushed with a simple syrup

If you want to make the syrup mix 2 tbsp of water and 2 tbsp of sugar and bring it to a boil. Cook until it reaches syrup consistency.

If you don’t want to make the syrup, I found a shortcut: Maple syrup!

Mix 2 tbsp of maple syrup and 2 tsp of water and mix very well.

When your babka is cooked, brush it with the syrup immediately, you can even pour the leftover syrup through the gaps. This will also help keep the moisture in the loaf.


Let the babka cool down a few minutes in the pan an then transfer it to a cooling rack to cool completely… If you can wait that long!

The next step is to make a nice cappuccino an enjoy it with a slice of your babka!

Let me know what you think if you make this recipe and don’t forget to subscribe to my YouTube channel so you can receive a notification when I upload a video!

Enjoy!

Nuts and Cardamom Babka

Course Breakfast, Dessert
Cuisine Jewish
Keyword Babka, cardamom, nuts
Prep Time 4 hours 15 minutes
Cook Time 45 minutes
Servings 2 loaves
Author Maria

Ingredients

Dough

  • 500 g bread flour
  • 225 g milk or vegetable milk
  • 5 g dry yeast
  • 80 g butter or dairy-free spread
  • 2 L eggs
  • 1 L egg yolk
  • 50 g granulated white sugar
  • 6 g salt
  • 2 tsp vanilla extract

Filling (1 loaf)

  • 200 g assorted nuts
  • 70-100 g milk or vegetable milk
  • 30 g sugar (optional)
  • 2 tsp ground cardamom
  • 2 tbsp orange blossom water
  • 10 g butter or dairy-free spread (optional)

Instructions

Dough

  1. Add the yeast to the lesser amount of milk and let it sit for 1o minutes to activate the yeast

  2. Add the sugar, eggs, and vanilla extract and mix well

  3. On a separate bowl sift the flour and add the salt

  4. Add the flour to the wet ingredients, combine until you don't see dry flour particles, and let it rest 20-30 mins (autolysis)

  5. Knead the dough until it's elastic, shiny and covered with small blisters. It should pass the windowpane test.

  6. Let the dough ferment until it doubles in size and it's puffy

  7. Deflate the dough well and divide it in 2 equal pieces

  8. Roll one piece into a 12 x 17 in a rectangle. Spread the filling and roll the dough into a log

  9. Cut the log lengthwise and twist each strand

  10. Grease a 9in loaf pan and place the babka inside. Let it proof until the dough reaches the edges of the pan

  11. Turn your oven on at 335F

  12. Brush the babka with the leftover egg white and bake it for 45 minutes or until is golden brown

  13. Prepare the syrup and brush it on the babka immediately after you take it out of the oven.

Filling

  1. Grind the nuts in a food processor

  2. Add the cardamom and sugar if you're adding any and stir well

  3. Add the milk and orange blossom water and combine everything

  4. Cook the nuts at medium heat until it gets a paste consistency

  5. Add the butter for a creamier paste

  6. Transfer to a plate and let it cool down to room temperature

Brioche with sourdough discards

sourdough brioche


Hello friends!


I hope you’re having a wonderful summer! I’m definitely enjoying my well-deserved break! Since I have time, I’m baking almost every day. Nothing makes me happier than having fresh bread on the table!


I’m also taking this time to look for new recipes, try flavor combinations… And also, to look into how bread science can help your baking.


Lately, I’ve seen several brioche recipes and from the pictures, I could tell that the crumb wasn’t what brioche crumb should be. In other words, most likely, the dough wasn’t developed properly.


Why is brioche usually labeled as a “difficult” bread to make? Well, adding solid butter is challenging, and developing dough with that amount of fat takes extra time. So, it’s easy to give up


But let me tell you something, brioche = patience, that’s it. That’s the secret.


Sometimes we’re tempted to melt the butter and make the whole process easier


Or we stop kneading because we’re just tired of waiting for the dough to be ready…


Both butter and kneading, are strongly related when we make brioche.


On this post, I explain why we should use solid butter and how to knead brioche to achieve the PERFECT texture.


I hope that once you understand the science behind, it’ll be easier for you to achieve better results and not to get discouraged when handling enriched dough.


Also, on this recipe, I show you a way to use sourdough discards.


If you’re beginning your brioche journey, this recipe is for you because the butter content is not too high. Practice with this recipe and feel free to increase the amount of butter later on.


This is not a 100% sourdough brioche, it also has commercial yeast. But the sourdough enhances its aroma, and the long fermentation times improve its texture considerably. Speaking of texture….

How to get the best texture in your brioche


First things first. When making brioche we need to have one thing in mind: the fat content is very high, not just because of the butter, but also the eggs, therefore, developing the dough is going to take time and patience.

Although this brioche has a relatively low flour:butter ratio, all the explanations apply to higher butter content brioche and other enriched doughs.


How does fat affect the dough?


The first thing you need to know is that melted butter and softened butter (which is still in solid-state) are two completely different things.


The structure of solid butter is made of little crystals that interact with other ingredients and are essential for developing a nice gluten network. When you melt butter, those crystals are destroyed, so the structure of the butter is different, therefore, the way it interacts with other ingredients it’s also different.


Although the role of solid fats is not fully understood yet, scientists have agreed in a three-parts mechanism to explain what happens when we add butter or shortening to bread dough:

  1. Wheat proteins have bound phospholipids in their structure which are essential for gluten elasticity. These lipids interact with the crystals found in the butter to create gluten-fat complexes (structures) that strengthen the gluten network and give it more elasticity.
  2. Butter (or solid fats) can act as a lubricant between the gluten structure and starch matrix, improving the gas retention capacity of the dough. As a result, dough that has a higher content of solid fat has the ability to rise more due to an improved gas retention capacity.
  3. Solid fat melts during baking and seals pores that are present in the dough through which the gas would, otherwise, scape. CO2 eventually leaves the dough, but the butter retards this process and, again, helps the expansion of the dough during baking, the famous “oven spring”.


You can see that a proper redistribution of the fats within the dough is very important. And the way to achieve it is…. By kneading! Of course 😉

How to knead dough with high-fat content


Developing the gluten network of enriched dough consists of two major steps: One is the development of the gluten-starch matrix the other is the development of the gluten-butter complexes.


First, we need to develop the gluten-starch matrix, so then, the butter has a place to start forming the complexes I mentioned before. That’s why we don’t add the butter at the beginning, we knead the dough a little bit until it has a good consistency.


After that is when we start adding the butter.


Think of it as building a house. First, you need the main structure, then you start building up the walls.


However, how many times have you tried to develop the dough and it looks as it will never come together?


That’s because the long strands of gluten proteins, as they form, they get all tangled. If you force them too much (knead too much) you might end up breaking them, or in other words: over-kneading the dough. There’s a simple solution though… Let the dough rest!


Letting the dough rest while kneading can go a long way and reduce the kneading time. Whenever you have troubles to bring the dough to full development stop for 5-10 minutes so the gluten strands have time to detangle.

What do you achieve with this?

  1. You avoid over-working the dough having better control over it.
  2. You can develop a better gluten network, with organized gluten strands that are more elastic. This will improve the cohesiveness and strength of the final product. The crumb of your bread will be AMAZING!
  3. You avoid increasing the temperature of the dough to the point where the fats will melt. Either if you’re using your hands or a stand mixer.


The texture of your brioche should NOT look like cake or banana bread. It should NOT be crumbly. It should be cohesive, soft, spongy and springy. You should be able to pull apart strands of crumb. If not, most likely, the dough wasn’t properly developed

Although there can be many other reasons to explain why the texture didn’t come out right, I believe dough development is, usually, the main cause.


As you can see, breadmaking is pure science. And I hope that by understanding better what goes on when you mix the ingredients, you can succeed and make better and better brioche!


And now… let’s go to the recipe!


For this brioche, I wanted to play with aromas a little bit because one of the loaves was going to be a gift. So I added blossom water, orange syrup, and lemon zest. But feel free to skip these ingredients or add other you like better

POSSIBLE SWAPS

  • If you don’t have sourdough starter, just add half of the weight in milk or eggs and the other half in flour. You can also make the day before “pâte fermentée” (also known as old dough).
  • If you don’t have orange syrup you can substitute if for honey, molasses, agave… Whatever you have at home.
  • If you don’t have lemons, you can add any other type of citric zest.
  • If you don’t have orange blossom water, you can add orange juice or brown liquor (rum would give a really nice aroma).


DAY 1 – Late Afternoon


In the morning I fed my starter to bake a sourdough loaf, I always make more than I need just in case! So, I use some for the loaf, some to keep and the rest… I used it in this recipe.


I started mixing my ingredients at 3 pm.


First, I mix all the wet ingredients and the sourdough discards to dissolve them a little. Then add the sugar and the yeast, combine everything well and let it rest a few minutes.


Sift the flour and add it to the wet ingredients along with the salt and lemon zest. Mix everything until you don’t see dry flour particles and let it rest for 20-30 minutes to allow the hydration of the flour.


After the autolysis period, start kneading the dough until it reaches certain consistency.


Start adding butter little by little. It’s better to use it at room temperature (softened butter) so it can be incorporated easier. Otherwise, you might have chunks of butter in the dough and it will be difficult to incorporate it.


I find easier to incorporate the butter by hand, what I do is squeeze the dough and twist it until the butter is absorbed. You can see how I do it on my Belgian waffles video


Then continue kneading the dough at low speed. After 15 minutes stop, cover the bowl and let it rest for 5 minutes. Knead again for another 10 minutes, stop and let it rest for 5 minutes. Continue again for another 10 minutes, stop and let it rest 5 minutes.


At this point your dough should be almost ready, it should start coming up the dough hook of your stand mixer and separating from the sides of the bowl. After this last resting period, keep kneading until the dough is ready, it shouldn’t take much longer.


If you live in a cold and dry environment, you might need more time. So pay attention to your dough, let it tell you what it needs 😊


It took me almost 50 minutes to have the dough fully developed (without resting time).


A fully developed dough should not be sticky, should come out of the bottom of the bowl without tearing and should pass the windowpane test.

To check the windowpane test, let the dough rest a few minutes first. Otherwise, you coul have a “false negative”. The dough could tear because the gluten strands are tangled, not because they’re not ready.


When your dough is ready, let it ferment at room temperature until it almost doubles in size, after that, put in the fridge, and leave it there overnight. Mine was in the fridge for 18 h


Turn the dough onto your work surface and deflate it. Be gentle, but make sure there aren’t big air pockets.


This recipe yields one 9 in (22-23cm) springform pan and one 9.75 x 6 in (25 x 15 cm) loaf pan. If you just want the brioche in the circular pan, multiply all the ingredients by 0.75


Separate 8 pieces of 130-140 g each and shape them into balls and place them into the pans. Then shape the rest of the dough in 4 logs as wide as your pan or 2 longer logs and cut them in half (this is what I did 😉)

And now time to wait! Let the dough rise until it’s puffy; if you poke it with your finger, the dough will spring back but not immediately. That means the dough has enough gas trapped inside. Sometimes, the dough can be ready but does not necessarily double its size.

20 minutes before the brioche is ready, preheat your oven at 350 F (175 C)

Before baking, brush the brioche with egg wash. I like to use an egg yolk and a Tbsp of milk. This egg wash helps soften the crust and the brioche it’s like the one you buy in the store, but better because you made it!

Bake the brioche for 30 – 40 mins, keeping an eye on it. Bake it until it has a nice golden-brown color.

Before you dig into this tasty treat, let the brioche cool down to room temperature. This step is very important because to let the crumb finish baking, set aromas, etc. But after it cools down… oh boy!


If you can see these strands, you worked the dough well. The gluten was properly developed, the fats were successfully incorporated, and the structure of the baked brioche is very cohesive.

brioche easy
5 from 1 vote
Print

Brioche with sourdough discards

Course Breakfast, Dessert, Snack
Cuisine French
Keyword beginner, bread science, brioche
Servings 2 loaves
Author Maria

Ingredients

Dough

  • 500 g bread flour
  • 2 eggs large
  • 140 g milk
  • 160 g 100% hydration SD starter
  • 4 g active dry yeast
  • 100 g sugar
  • 5 tsp orange blossom water
  • 2 tbsp orange syrup optional
  • zest of 2 lemons
  • 10 g salt
  • 1 ½ sticks unsalted softened butter

Egg wash

  • 1 egg yolk
  • 1 tbsp milk

Instructions

Day 1 – late afternoon

  1. Thaw 160 g of your sourdough starter (if you keep it frozen) or take 160 g a few hours after you fed your starter.

  2. Add the eggs, milk, sugar, salt, dry yeast, orange blossom water, orange syrup, and your starter to your stand mixer bowl and give it a good whisk.

  3. Sift the flour and add it to the wet ingredients. Combine until there are no dry flour particles.

  4. Let the dough rest for 20-30 minutes to allow the flour particle to hydrate.

  5. Start kneading the dough at low speed for about 10 minutes or until the dough gets a bit elastic

  6. Add the butter in 3 or 4 batches, making sure it's completely incorporated before you add the new batch.

  7. Knead the dough at low speed until it's very elastic, shiny, the surface has blisters and it's not sticky. You shouldn't need to add more flour. It should pass the windowpane test

  8. Cover the bowl and let the dough rise at room temperature until it doubles in size

  9. Place the dough in the fridge for a cold fermentation for at least 15 h. You can leave the dough in the fridge for up to 2 days

Day 2

  1. Remove the dough from the fridge and gently deflate it. Cover it and let it rest for 10 minutes

  2. Take 8 pieces of 130 – 140 g (4 – 5 oz) from the dough in equal pieces, shape them into balls and place then into your round baking pan.

  3. Divide the rest of the dough into 2 equal pieces, flatten them with your hands and with a rolling pin roll them into a rectangle twice as wide as your rectangular baking pan.

  4. Make a log with both pieces of dough, with a knife or a bench scraper divide them into equal halves, and place them in your rectangular baking pan.

  5. Cover the two pans and let the dough rise to the rim of the pans.

  6. Preheat your oven at 350 F

  7. Before baking, whisk the egg yolk and the milk together and brush the brioche with it.

  8. Bake the brioche for 45 minutes or until it's golden brown

  9. For best results, let the brioche cool down to room temperature before cutting through it.

Recipe Notes

  • Let the dough rest for 5-10 minutes before performing the windowpane test.
  • You can shape the brioche in any way you prefer. Just make sure that the dough fills half of the container you use. 

Happy baking!

all you knead is bread maria