S’mores Babka

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Summer has been officially over for a few weeks. As a final farewell to the sunny weather and long days, I figured I’d share a fun babka recipe based on a campfire favorite treat: s’mores! 

Well, okay, to be honest I’m not the biggest fan of summer. I am super sensitive to humidity, it’s always too hot and bugs scare me. It’s kind of miserable. I am really enjoying the cooler weather that’s coming in.

This is a simple, standard babka. Brioche dough, chocolate filling and coated in sweet syrup. But I added in the traditional s’mores flavors. So, the dough gets some wheat flour and cinnamon to emulate graham crackers and marshmallows are added to the filling. 

First, we make the brioche. Mix the yeast into the warm milk and allow to bloom. Then stir in 2 tablespoon of sugar with ¼ cup of all purpose flour to make a paste. Let this rise until its doubled in size. This will take around 30 minutes. The paste adds an extra rise and gives a more tender texture to the babka. 

After the initial rise is done, stir in the egg and yolks first to turn the dough back into a paste, then add in the wheat flour, the rest of the sugar, cinnamon, salt, and vanilla. A sticky dough will form at this point, so add in more all purpose flour until it becomes a rather stiff dough, for me it is usually ½ cup more. Once the dough has completely come together, knead in the butter a tablespoon at a time. This will take some time, but it should come together to form a luscious dough. Cover the brioche and let it rise until its just starting to puff up, then put it in the refrigerator at least overnight, but it will last for up to 3 days. 

Remove the dough and roll it out thin. Then make the filling. Just cream together the butter with the cocoa powder, brown and powdered sugar, salt and vanilla. Spread the chocolate all over the rolled out brioche, then sprinkle the chocolate chips and marshmallows over top the filling. Roll the dough toward you to make a log then cut it lengthwise to create two long strands. Twist the dough halves over each other like a braid, and scrunch the babka to fit in a standard sized loaf pan. Cover it up and let it rest again. It won’t rise too much at this stage, it will look a bit more puffy and the dough will spread to attach itself to the sides of the pan. 

As it rises, preheat your oven to 350 F, and when it’s ready, bake for 45 minutes. That’s the shortest amount of time I have ever fully cooked a babka, but usually it takes closer to an hour. However, this is around the time the top will begin to overly brown. If that bothers you, just throw some aluminum foil over the babka for the last few minutes of baking, if not, just let it brown. That’s what I did for this one and I don’t think it looks too bad. It’s certainly fine inside and that’s what matters most. 

Once the babka has finished baking, make a quick simple syrup. That’s just equal amounts of water and sugar heated until the sugar fully dissolves and the syrup thickens. You can do this on the stove in a saucepan, but I usually just microwave the mixture in 30 seconds and that seems to work just fine. While the babka and the syrup are still hot, spoon the syrup over the babka until everything is coated and shiny. Let the babka sit to cool and absorb all the syrup before enjoying.