
”Kougelhopf is a conventional bread from the Alsace area of France and is much like a brioche however made in a particular, fluted tube pan and with extra mix-ins. The true origins of the bread are exhausting to hint, however it’s in style throughout Germany, Switzerland, and France. While it’s made in many various variations, the most well-liked is made with almonds and dried fruit. My small-batch model sticks to raisins for the dried fruit and provides a splash of rum for a kick. While many variations of the bread are completed with a beneficiant dusting of confectioners’ sugar, I prefer to brush these mini loaves with just a little melted butter after which coat them in granulated sugar, giving them an nearly doughnut-like crust.” —Edd Kimber
Edd Kimber’s Small-Batch Kougelhopf
Makes 6 breads
Kougelhopf Dough:
- ½ cup (64 grams) raisins
- ¼ cup (60 ml) rum
- ¼ cup (60 ml) water
- 2 cups (250 grams) all-purpose flour, plus extra for flouring
- ¼ cup (50 grams) granulated sugar
- 2¼ teaspoons (7 grams) energetic dry yeast
- 1 teaspoon (3 grams) kosher salt
- ¼ cup plus 1 teaspoon (65 ml) entire milk
- 1 massive egg (57 grams)
- 5 tablespoons (70 grams) unsalted butter, cubed, room temperature
- Zest of 1 massive orange (about 10 grams/1 tablespoon)
Coating:
- ¼ cup (57 grams) unsalted butter, melted
- ¼ cup (50 grams) granulated sugar
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For the dough: Add the raisins, rum, and water to a small saucepan over medium warmth, and prepare dinner till nearly all of the liquid has cooked off and the raisins are plump. Take away from warmth, and let the raisins with liquid cool to room temperature. (In order for you extra of a boozy observe, you may merely cowl the raisins within the rum and go away for a day or so to permit them to absorb the rum slowly.)
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Add the flour, sugar, yeast, and salt to the bowl of a stand mixer, and whisk collectively to mix. Pour within the milk and egg, and beat on medium-low pace utilizing the dough hook till a shaggy dough is shaped. Scrape dough hook and backside and sides of bowl. With the mixer on medium-low pace, knead the dough for 12 to fifteen minutes or till the dough is easy and elastic.
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With the mixer nonetheless working, add the butter one piece at a time. Proceed beating the dough for as much as one other 10 minutes or till the butter has absolutely been included and the dough is as soon as once more easy and elastic.
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Tip within the orange zest and the soaked raisins with liquid, and knead simply till evenly distributed all through the dough. Tip the dough out onto a frivolously floured work floor, and type right into a ball. Place the dough right into a frivolously greased bowl, cowl, and put aside for about an hour or till doubled in measurement.
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Tip the dough out onto a frivolously floured work floor, and divide into 6 parts (about 100 grams every). Type each bit of dough right into a neat ball, cowl, and go away while you put together your pan.
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Evenly grease a 6-well mini Bundt pan with just a little softened butter or baking spray with flour.
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Utilizing your fingers or the top of a picket spoon, poke a small gap via the center of every ball of dough, as if making a bagel, and place within the ready pan. Loosely cowl the pan with plastic wrap or a humid kitchen towel, and put aside till doubled in measurement, 30 to 45 minutes.
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Preheat the oven to 400°F (200°C).
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Bake for about 10 minutes or till golden brown. Enable to chill within the pan for a couple of minutes, after which fastidiously invert them onto a wire rack to chill sufficient so you may deal with them.
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For the coating: Brush the kougelhopfs with melted butter, after which roll in sugar to coat them fully. Finest served heat. These will maintain for two to three days in a sealed container.