Rosh Hashanah Recipe Roundup

Just in case you need a little last-minute help planning your Rosh Hashanah dinner menu, here’s a recipe roundup to get your creative juices flowing.

Rosh Hashanah Recipe Roundup.TheCubanReuben.com

Challah:

Apple Butter Swirl Challah

Appetizers:

Polenta Bites with Mushroom Ragu

Smoked Salmon Dip

Salad:

Summer Harvest Salad

Irene’s Famous Salad dressing

Soup:

Chicken Noodle Soup

Main dishes:

Carne con Papas: An alternative to Brisket

Ropa Vieja: Cuban Brisket

Side dishes:

Farro

Onion Noodles

Dessert:

Berries and cream crostata

Plum Cake

A Rosh Hashanah recipe for a sweet new year: Apple Butter Swirl Challah

InsideChallah

As is the custom at many synagogues across the country, my synagogue is following a theme this high holiday season: Old. New. Make it holy. What is something old that can be made new? At TheCubanReuben.com, that’s an easy question. A recipe, of course! But how do we make a recipe holy? Let’s take my Apple Butter Swirl Challah, for example.

Filling the dough and creating the swirls.
Filling the dough and creating the swirls.

Every shabbat, we feature long, beautifully braided loaves of fresh challah, as did our ancestors many moons ago. Families have been passing down challah recipes for generations. This tradition, so indicative of the Jewish culture, can be considered the “old.”

RawRoundBraid
The starting position on a round braided challah.

For the “new,” I have incorporated another Rosh Hashanah tradition: apples. Symbolizing a sweet new year, apples are often enjoyed during Rosh Hashanah. Inspired by my Jewish summer camp experience, where bowls of dense, cinnamon and nutmeg-spiced apple butter were served alongside challah at every shabbat, I spread a bit of this spiced apple reduction along the dough, then rolled it to create my strands. After it baked, the apple butter appeared as deeply hued swirls decorating and perfuming the airy loaves. That’s certainly not something you see everyday.

RawRoundChallah
An example of a challah twist, before the oven.

And how do we make it holy? Of course, there’s the blessing over the bread, but what’s more, challah loaves that are specifically used for the Jewish new year are either braided into a round loaf, or twisted into a big swirl twist. Because of their round shape, these loaves are distinctive from their shabbat cousins, and this difference is what helps make them holy. Also, can you imagine the french toast this would make in the morning? That’s definitely holy.

Swirl Challah
Baked round twist challah.

With Rosh Hashanah  beginning  at sundown, you might think that there are folks racing the clock to get the feast on the table. But I would venture to guess that many Jewish cooks have been preparing for some time now. If that’s the case, it’s definitely not too late to incorporate this old, new, and holy recipe on your Rosh Hashanah menu. You won’t regret it.

RoundBraid Challah
Round braided challah loaf.

Shana tova, from TheCubanReuben.com, to you! May this be a sweet, happy, and healthy new year for us all.

5.0 from 2 reviews
Apple Butter Swirl Challah
 
Author:
Recipe type: side
Cuisine: Jewish
Serves: 12
Prep time:
Cook time:
Total time:
 
Make this the highlight of your Rosh Hashanah table!
Ingredients
  • 2¼ tsp dry active yeast
  • 1½ tsp plus ¼ cup sugar
  • ¾-1 cup warm water
  • ¼ cup vegetable oil
  • 4 eggs, divided
  • 1 egg yolk
  • 1½ tsp table salt
  • 4 cups flour (or less)
  • ½ cup of prepared apple butter
Instructions
  1. In the bowl of your stand mixer, add yeast, 1½ tsp sugar, and between ¾ to 1 cup of warm water, and mix until dissolved. Let sit for 10 minutes.
  2. Mix in vegetable oil, 2 eggs (1 at a time) and egg yolk, with remaining sugar and salt.
  3. Slowly add flour, ½ cup at a time.
  4. When the dough holds together, switch to the bread hook, and knead until smooth.
  5. Transfer dough to a greased bowl, cover with plastic wrap, and let rise in a warm place for at least 1 hour.
  6. Punch dough down, and leave it to rise again for 2 hours.
  7. You can now either make 1 large challah or 2 smaller challahs. To make one large challah, cut dough into 2 pieces, and with a rolling pin, roll into thin rectangle. Spread ¼ cup of apple butter on each rectangle, leaving a 1-inch border on each. Tightly roll the strands, and pinch the long edges, so that the apple butter is locked in. You can now either make a twist challah or a braided challah.
  8. For a twist challah, tightly snake each rope of challah, like a snail. Tuck in the edge.
  9. For a braided challah, cut the 2 ropes in half, creating 4 equal strands. Pinch the raw edge to seal. Lay two strands next to each other. Take the third strand, and lay it over one strand and under the other. Take the fourth strand, and lay it alongside the third strand, but under the strand that is over the third, and over the strand that is under the third. The center of your braid should look like a square, with 4 pairs of strands sticking out. Take the right side of each pair of strands, and move it over the left. Now take the left strand, and move it over right to its neighbor's strand. Continue this process, until the strands are all braided. Pinch together the end of the strain pairs, and pull up to the middle. Then, turn the loaf over, and place braided loaf on a cookie sheet lined with parchment paper.
  10. Use one egg to brush an egg wash over the top of the loaf.
  11. Let sit for one hour.
  12. Use another egg to brush a second coat of egg wash. (At this point, you can sprinkle turbinado sugar, sesame seeds, or any other topping you want).
  13. Bake at 350 for 20-25 minutes, or until golden brown.

 

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