Twisted Date Bread Recipe

 

Twisted Date Bread

A few months back one of the food magazines had a recipe for a twisted dessert bread that looked something like this.I think it was for a Babka? I remembered how they twisted it (because it was very easy) and I thought I could do something similar with the dough I make all the time. I make a basic dough that I also use for focaccia, onion rolls, challah, pizza and cinnamon buns. Then I just rolled out the dough, made the date filling and rolled it up from the LONG ENDS. Then I just sliced the long rolled dough in half and just twisted the two pieces together. It was pretty FORKING EASY! I threw the dough in the oven and I almost burnt it but I didn’t. It got really dark and got me nervous but isn’t burnt! I put it in at 450 degrees F and pulled it out at about 18 minutes. I didn’t cover the bread but maybe I’d recommend to lightly cover halfway because it was that close. The bread is delicious and moist. Only a minimal amount of sugar was used because the dates are so sweet. You will have some extra date filling but it’s so delicious you won’t mind. You can use it for breakfast on toast or in your oatmeal. The two clementines and their zest I added just accent the date filling so well. I think next time I’d spread the date mixture a little thinner than I did. I thought some would bake into the dough but it didn’t. This technique is great for all kinds of different breads.

Twisted Date Bread

Ingredients for about 16 servings

1 packet active dry yeast – (2 1/4 teaspoons or 1/4 ounce)

1 1/2 Tablespoons sugar

1 1/2 cups warm water 100-110 degrees F

3 cups bread flour

1/4 cup scant extra virgin olive oil

1 Tablespoon course sea salt

1 cup bread flour – this is the extra flour that you knead into dough, let dough ball rest in and also use to flour surface and rolling pin.

1 lb 6 oz dates pitted and chopped (I note I had about a cup of extra filling I didn’t use for recipe)

2 1/2 cups water – Your amount of water may differ…..depends on how dry or moist your dates are…

2 clementines – just the zest and fresh squeezed juice

1 Tablespoon cinnamon (I used Vietnamese)

1/4 cup dark brown sugar

pinch course sea salt

1 large egg –  beaten with a teaspoon of water

Directions

Start out with a large bowl and put the sugar and yeast in a bowl and add the 1 1/2 cups of 100-110 degree water. Mix it up and wait for a foam to develop on the top to make sure your yeast is alive and working. It should take between 10-30 minutes.

After you got foam add the (3 cups) flour, oil, salt and mix well. Keep mixing till the dough comes off bowl and your hands. Make a dough ball and get the remaining cup of flour. Let the dough ball rest on most of the flour and sprinkle the top of the dough ball with flour.

Cover with plastic wrap. Now work on the dates.

In a sauce pot on medium heat add the dates, One of the cups of water (start with less than the 2 1/2 cups I don’t know how much you will need keep adding water as you need it. That’s what I did) clementine juice and zest, cinnamon, dark brown sugar and pinch of course sea salt. If your dates are like what I used they kept absorbing the water quickly. I slowly added water until the dates stayed at a jammy consistency. Then I took them off the heat and used a stick blender and blended them up. I’d say they were close to apple butter like. Then I set them to the side.

Around this point you can turn your oven to 450 degrees F

Your dough should have doubled in size.

Punch the dough down and keep kneading it till it feels smooth and doesn’t stick to anything. Use the extra flour in the bowl to dust surfaces. Make it into a rectangle.

Pat the dough out as much as you can to a big rectangle shape and finish with a dusted rolling pin,

Sheet under the dough is 16×24 inches

From LONGWAYS you roll the dough like a jelly roll.

Then you cut in half LONGWAYS.

Then you put the two pieces of dough next to each other with the date side up and start on an end.

You just keep laying one piece over the other BACK and Forth! Like the right piece goes over the left piece till you get this. I made this on a Quilon Baking Sheet and I lifted the whole thing up on to a baking sheet and made it fit by squishing it together but you can cut the bread in half or make a circle…..

 

Then I cut off the ends of paper than hang off the sheet so they don’t burn. Next I brush the beaten egg mixture on the bread twice and avoid where it meets the paper so it doesn’t stick.

I put it in the 450 degree F oven for 18 minutes but next time I’d put a loose cover on it half way threw because another minute and it might have burnt…I got it out just in time and it was done. I don’t like cutting it that close…got lucky.

Twisted Date Bread

Came out Forking Delicious and I think it’s kind of pretty too!

The Forking Truth

 

 

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