Joan's Soft, Fluffy and Delicious Vegan Challah Recipe • Jewish Food Hero (2024)

Joan's Soft, Fluffy and Delicious Vegan Challah Recipe • Jewish Food Hero (1)

Community Recipes is a recurring feature where I ask a community member to share a vegan recipe with us. This week I’m featuring Joan Laguatan and her vegan challah recipe.

Community Recipes is a recurring feature where we share your vegan recipes. If you want to share a recipe in this series,pitch us your idea here.

Joan's Soft, Fluffy and Delicious Vegan Challah Recipe • Jewish Food Hero (2)

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About Joan

Joan is a Filipina-Jewish vegan mom and real estate broker. She was born in the Philippines and grew up and lives in San Francisco. She became vegan eight years ago after watching the documentary “Earthlings” and learning more about the realities of factory farming. She and her husband, Devin Benjamin had a vegan wedding in 2011 (you can read theirdelicious vegan wedding menu here).

Joan's Soft, Fluffy and Delicious Vegan Challah Recipe • Jewish Food Hero (3)

Challah is a central Jewish Food

Challah is a central Jewish food as it is served every Shabbat and on most holidays. The bread is visually beautiful and it smells delicious. The classic recipe includes flour, eggs, sugar/honey and oil. The traditional recipe is a very rich food and heavy on our stomachs. If you are serving it out of obligation, here is some food for thought.

Joan Favorite Shabbat Recipe is Challah

Her favorite food to make for Shabbat is challah so she created a soft, fluffy and delicious vegan challah recipe. One time her family hosted a blind taste test with a group of friends. The taste test compared her vegan eggless challah to one with eggs and everyone preferred her vegan challah.

Every Shabbat, she normally makes two, four-strand braided challah loaves. She learned how to make a for strand challah by watching this easy to follow youtube tutorial by NY Bakers.

Leftover Challah for breakfast and a vegan snack

On Sunday morning her husband uses the leftovers to make decadent cinnamon Challah french toast breakfasts for their children. Leftovers from breakfast can be eaten as a favorite vegan snack food!

Joan's Soft, Fluffy and Delicious Vegan Challah Recipe • Jewish Food Hero (4)

Tools you need to make this Challah

For this recipe, Joan uses the following toolsunbleached all purpose flour;

organic canola oil;

this ultrafine baker’s sugar;

good kosher salt

a dough scraper;

a silpat silicone mat for even baking.

This unbleached all purpose flour is certified 100 percent organic by Quality Assurance International (QAI) and approved organic by the USDA and it is never bleached and never bromated.

This ultrafine baker sugar is a key ingredient to get the desired texture of the Challah. Ultrafine baker sugar is made especially for baking so it mixes, blends and melts more evenly.

Silicone baking mat will help your Challah cook evenly and also it means that you do not need to grease up your baking sheet.

Kosher salt is always necessary in the kitchen. This special kosher salt is lovely tasting and really adds a new taste dimension to Challah.

Jewish Food Hero Kitchen Vegan Challah Recipe Cards

Download a beautiful printable Vegan challah recipe card – the recipe is oil free and has two surprising and top secret ingredients.

More resources for plant-based Shabbat recipes

This plant-based squash dip would be a delicious spread to serve with Joan’s Challah.

This dairy-free tapioca pudding is a delicious Shabbat dessert and kosher-for-Passover dessert.

This plant-based honey cake also makes a good Shabbat dessert especially during the holiday of Rosh Hashanah. This recipe is oil-free and lighter than traditional Jewish honey cakes. This recipe can also be used to make cute honey muffins. Add fresh lemon juice to the recipe to add an extra zing.

If you are looking to make a plant-based Shabbat meal, here are 17 plant based recipes to choose from.

Want to add a nourishing grain bowl as your Shabbat main dish, try Esther’s nourishing grain bowl recipe.

Joan’s Recipe is featured in a published cookbook

Joan’s recipe is published in the Feeding Women of the Bible, Feeding Ourselves Cookbook.

Joan's Soft, Fluffy and Delicious Vegan Challah Recipe • Jewish Food Hero (5)

Feeding Women of the Bible, Feeding Ourselvescookbook features a short compelling narrative of 20 female biblical heroines from the Hebrew bible, paired with two healthy plant-based kosher pareve recipes inspired by the character’s experience.

This is a community cookbook by Jewish Food Hero and is the co-creation of 40 Jewish women. The twenty biblical narratives are contributed by Rabbis, Rabbinical students, Jewish teachers and emerging thought leaders. The forty-one plant-based recipes were developed by professional chefs, homecooks who are elementary school students, and great-grandmothers.

The NEW Jewish Holiday Calendar Art Print

Joan's Soft, Fluffy and Delicious Vegan Challah Recipe • Jewish Food Hero (6)

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Joan's Soft, Fluffy and Delicious Vegan Challah Recipe • Jewish Food Hero (7)

Joan’s Soft, Fluffy and Delicious Vegan Challah Recipe

  • Author: Joan Laguatan
Print Recipe

Ingredients

Scale

Makes 2 large loaves

  • 8 cups unbleached all purpose flour (use last cup towards kneading dough and lightly flouring surface)
  • 3/4 cup organic canola oil (or vegetable oil)
  • 1 cups ultrafine baker’s sugar
  • 2.5 cups warm water
  • 1 tablespoon salt
  • 3 packets yeast
  • Sweet soy milk or agave nectar mixed with almond milk

Instructions

  • In a large bowl, combine sugar, water, yeast, and oil. Stir and allow yeast to work and bubble for 10 minutes.
  • Add the salt and 7 cups (900 g) of flour. Stir well and transfer the mixture onto a clean, lightly floured surface.
  • Knead the dough for 10 minutes, gradually adding from the remaining flour, only as needed, to make the dough less sticky.
  • Lightly grease a deep bowl and place the dough in the bowl, turning it gently so all sides are nicely greased – this prevents the dough from forming a crust. Cover the bowl with a damp cloth.
  • Allow to rise for about two hours or until the dough doubles in volume.
  • Punch down the dough and allow it to rise for a second time, about another hour.
  • Transfer the dough onto a lightly floured surface. Divide the dough into three equal parts and form into large strands. Braid the three strands together. Divide the braid into 2 loaves.
  • Preheat your oven to 350F (180C) degrees.
  • Allow the braided challah to rise for another 20-30 minutes before transferring into the preheated oven for 20 minutes. After 20 minutes, take the challah out of the oven and baste with sweet soy milk, then place back in the oven for another 10 minutes, or until golden-brown.
  • Let the challah cool completely before slicing and serving.

Thank you Joan for sharing your vegan recipe with the Jewish Food Hero community!

If you are looking for a Vegan Oil-free Challah Recipes —> this is Absolutely the Best Vegan Challah Recipe (+ Two Surprising Ingredients) and it came about by accident one morning at 5am when I ran out of one ingredient and had to resort to another.

Absolutely the Best Vegan Challah Recipe (+ Two Surprising Ingredients)

Your turn: Want to share a healthy vegan recipe with the Jewish Food Hero community? Send your recipe submissions to hello@jewishfoodhero.com

Joan's Soft, Fluffy and Delicious Vegan Challah Recipe • Jewish Food Hero (2024)

FAQs

Why is challah so soft? ›

It's important to know that challah is what you call an enriched dough. Enriched doughs have a higher fat and sugar content, resulting in a soft and tender crumb (interior). The enriching components in this dough are melted butter, whole eggs, egg yolks and sugar.

Why is challah yellow? ›

Challah, or egg bread as many bakeries call it, is a rich, golden bread made with more eggs than usually found in “white” breads.

What is challah in culinary? ›

: egg-rich yeast-leavened bread that is usually braided or twisted before baking and is traditionally eaten by Jews on the Sabbath and holidays.

Is challah just bread? ›

Challah (/ˈxɑːlə/, Hebrew: חַלָּה ḥallā [χa'la] or Hallah [ħɑl'la]; plural: challot, Challoth or challos, also berches in Central Europe) is a special bread of Ashkenazi Jewish origin, usually braided and typically eaten on ceremonial occasions such as Shabbat and major Jewish holidays (other than Passover).

What is the secret to softer bread? ›

Bread Making Tips For Softer Bread
  1. Do Not Over-Knead Your Dough. ...
  2. Ensure Dough is Well Hydrated. ...
  3. Lubricate With Oil. ...
  4. Add Sugar. ...
  5. Add Eggs. ...
  6. Reduce Baking Time. ...
  7. Create Steam in Oven. ...
  8. Add Milk.
Mar 27, 2023

What is the best flour to use for challah? ›

Myrna's original recipe calls for all-purpose flour, and you can substitute that here. But I find bread flour gives the challah a nice chew without making it tough, and also helps the braided loaf maintain its shape after baking. For some novice challah makers, that braid can seem like the hardest part.

What does challah mean in Hebrew? ›

The word challah may be derived from an ancient Hebrew word that meant “portion.” In Biblical times, Jews were to give a portion of their bread to the kohanim, or priests, every Sabbath.

Why does my challah taste yeasty? ›

If the area is too warm, bread will rise too fast and begin cooking before the yeast has finished acting. This will impart a "yeasty" taste to the dough that will be transferred to the finished baked loaf. Using old ingredients (rancid nuts, "old" shortening) will cause yeast breads to taste old or have an "off" taste.

Why is my challah not fluffy? ›

Challah needs to fully proof before baking. That means that it should respond to a light press of the fingertips by very slowly rebounding. It could also be that your dough is too dense, or that you're not shaping it well.

Do Sephardic Jews eat challah? ›

The Sephardim observe unique customs that are different from those of the Ashkenazim – Middle European Jews. One of the most important differences is that they do not bake challah, the special bread used for the Sabbath.

Why do Jews eat challah? ›

The term “challah” is applied more widely to mean any bread used in Jewish rituals. On the eve of Shabbat, two loaves are placed on the table to reference the Jewish teaching that a double portion of manna fell from heaven on Friday to last through the Saturday Shabbat.

Why do you dip challah in salt? ›

Shulchan Aruch (OC 167: 5) writes that one should not recite Hamotzi until condiments or salt are brought to the table, so the challah can be dipped right after hamotzi. Mishnah Berurah (167:27) explains that dipping in salt or condiments makes the first bite tasty and adds honor to the beracha.

What makes challah so good? ›

Due to the addition of eggs and honey in the recipe, it is richer than regular bread, slightly sweet and delicious with unsalted butter. Challah is baked to celebrate the Sabbath, so it has a special place in a Jewish home, and it is sometimes brought to the table under a special cloth.

Why is challah not eaten at Passover? ›

Challah is not eaten at Passover because it's a leavened bread (which is why we didn't sell it at Easter this year). Challah is one of many incredible Jewish breads and pastries.

What does the Bible say about challah bread? ›

In the Bible, challah is the portion of bread that is set aside and given to the priests to eat (Numbers 15:19-20). The mitzvah of separating challah applies to the five grains, wheat, barley, spelt, oats and rye. The rabbis calculate that more than 1.75 kg of dough baked at one time must have challah taken from it.

Why is my challah so doughy? ›

You kneaded in too much flour when you worked the dough. You added too little liquid or eggs or oil. You didn't let it rise enough.

Why did my challah come out doughy? ›

If this is what's happening, it could be that your challahs have simply not been inside the oven long enough. If so, increase your baking time by another 5 minutes for your challahs. Don't worry if the tops get browner, that's fine.

What makes challah different from bread? ›

Unlike other enriched breads, a truly kosher challah is made without dairy or meat derivatives, relying on vegetable oils for fat and a contested number of eggs—which are considered pareve, or neither dairy nor meat, in the kosher laws known as kashrut.

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