I wish I could go back in time and eat all the babka I missed growing up, but that's not an option so I just have to keep baking it. This Chocolate Peanut Butter Babka is the latest. It's a chocolate babka with swirls of peanut butter running through it.
Mix the Peanut Butter with Sugar and Butter
When I first attempted to make a peanut butter flavored babka, my main concern was that the peanut butter filling would sink into the dough as the bread baked. Thinking back on tricks I'd learned to keep peanut butter from being absorbed, I came up with a mixture of peanut butter, sugar and butter. It did the job nicely, as you can see from the swirl of peanut butter in the bread.
Quick Rise Yeast
Chocolate Peanut Butter Babka also calls for quick rising yeast. I've used Rapid Rise and a special kind from Red Star called "Platinum" that works exceptionally well for a lighter, higher rising babka. This one rises quite a bit as it bakes.
Chocolate Peanut Butter Babka Rolling
And finally, I used my stand mixer with the dough hook. As much as I like using a hand held mixer, the standing mixer is indispensable (for me, at least) when it comes to kneading -- especially sticky doughs like this which are almost impossible to knead by hand without adding in a lot of extra flour. This is a very soft dough, but by the time it's ready to be assembled and has a nice coating of oil, it's a very easy dough to work with. You shouldn't even need a rolling pin to roll it out.
Recipe
Chocolate Peanut Butter Babka
Ingredients
- 1 ¾ cups 8 ½ ounces bread flour plus additional for dusting
- ¼ cup sugar 1.75 oz
- 1 /2 packet 1 ⅛ teaspoon fast rising yeast or "Platinum" yeast
- ⅜ teaspoon salt
- ¼ cup plus 2 tablespoons no more very warm milk (120F)
- 1 large egg
- 1 egg yolk
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 5 tablespoons unsalted butter softened
Peanut Butter Filling
- ⅓ cup creamy peanut butter 80 grams
- 2 teaspoons unsalted butter softened
- 1 tablespoon sugar
Chocolate Filling
- 2 oz about ⅔ cup 60% bittersweet chips (Ghirardelli works well)
- 4 teaspoons unsalted butter
- 1 tablespoon granulated sugar I use "Baker's Sugar" or superfine
- Optional: A little egg mixed with milk and sparkly sugar
Instructions
- Combine the flour, sugar, yeast and salt in the bowl of a stand mixer with the paddle attached.
- Add milk and stir until well mixed, then add the egg, yolk, and continue mixing until blended. Add the butter a few chunks at a time and continue mixing, scraping down sides of bowl with a scraper.
- Switch to the dough hook knead for about 5 minutes. Stop the kneading occasionally and push dough off the side of the bowl and into the center with a scraper. It will be a very sticky dough, but kneading it should give it some elasticity. Don't expect it to fully leave the sides of the bowl as it's kneaded.
- Scrape the dough into a bowl that has been greased with oil and roll the dough around so that it’s slick. Cover with plastic wrap and let rise in a warm place until doubled in bulk (about 40 minutes to an hour with the fast rising yeast).
- When dough has almost finished rising, prepare the filling mixtures.
- Mix together the peanut butter, butter and sugar and set aside.
- Melt the chocolate chips and butter together in the microwave using 50% power and stirring every 30 seconds. Stir in the sugar.
- Dust a work surface with flour. Pat the dough into a 9x16 inch rectangle. You might want to lay a sheet of parchment over it and roll it a bit with a rolling pin, but it should be slick and fairly easy to work with. I usually just pat it down with my fingers.
- Spread melted chocolate mixture over half and peanut butter mixture over the second.
- Score the rectangle vertically down the center so that you have two sections that are 9 inches tall and 8 inches wide. Starting at the bottom, roll each piece into a tight jelly roll so that you have two jelly roll/cylinders each about 8 inches in length. Transfer to a parchment lined baking tray or something that will fit in the freezer and freeze for about 20 minutes to set the chocolate.
- Thoroughly grease an 8 ½ by 4 ½ inch or a 9x5 inch loaf pan, line lengthwise with a strip of parchment paper and dust sides with flour.
- Remove dough rolls from the refrigerator. Cut each one in cross-wise in half so that you have four cylinders, then split each of those down the center so that you have 8 split strands
- Take one strand of the split chocolate and one strand of the split peanut butter. Twist one over the other the best you can (the chocolate twist might be a bit stiff from the freezer) and lay your stubby little twist cross-wise in the loaf pan. Repeat with remaining split dough strands. In the end you should have a loaf pan with four stubby little twists sitting side-by-side going across the whole pan. Push them together gently, but don't worry too much because they'll all mesh together when they rise and bake.
- Let the loaf rise for an hour.
- If desired, mix together a little egg and milk and brush tops of loaves with egg mixture. Sprinkle with a little coarse sugar if desired.
- Bake in a preheated 350 oven for about 45 minutes or until a thermometer inserted reads 205 degrees F.
- Let cool in the pan, then very carefully remove, using parchment paper as a lift. Let cool completely, then wrap in plastic wrap and freeze until ready to use. I find the loaf easier to deal with after it's been cooled, frozen and thawed.
Notes
** For the chocolate filling I've found that Ghirardelli Bittersweet chips mixed with sugar and butter work nicely and the chocolate doesn't seep/thin out as when I use a chopped bar. But bars work too. For the loaf size I've successfully used an 8 ½ by 4 ½ inch pan and a 9x5 inch.
Kathy says
I have to try this. Plain and simple. Going to have to make a change though. I have folks that are severely allergic to chocolate so will have to use carob instead, but Im used to this substitute. To late to start today, but I know what tomorrow holds. Thank you for this.
Anna says
Hi Louise! I was fixated on keeping the peanut butter from getting mixed in with the chocolate. That is, I wanted distinct swirls of peanut butter and distinct swirls of chocolate and figured a person would get enough of both flavors once the whole thing was rolled, cut, assembled and baked. However, you could certainly play around with the filling method or give your idea a try if you want more of both flavors at once.
Louise says
Curious why you did not shmear the peanut butter on top of the chocolate - so you would get both flavors in each bite - lie a reeses pb cup. Did you try that? thanks!
Anna says
Stephanie, I started with the one from Epicurious which everyone likes, but ended up making small changes such as using fast rising yeast, melting the chocolate and just playing around with the assembly technique. The dough itself is actually pretty simple if you don't get bogged down with the details and just kind of go with the flow. I recommend trying that one first. If you like it, definitely tr the peanut butter version.
Anna says
I wish I could send you some!
Rebecca says
I'd like one delivered right away, please!