Tag: Ashkenazi

Ashkenazi Jewish baking traces its roots to the Jewish communities of Central and Eastern Europe — Germany, Poland, Lithuania, Hungary, and Russia — where bakers shaped a tradition built around enriched egg breads, dense rye loaves, and butter-rich pastries. The braided challah, the swirled chocolate babka, the rugelach, the bialy, the pletzel, the kichel, the rye bread of the Lower East Side delicatessen — every one of these recipes carries the fingerprints of a specific shtetl, a specific bubbie, a specific holiday table. Ashkenazi baking is unmistakably wheat-forward, often pareve, and almost always shaped by halacha and Shabbat timing. Below you will find every Ashkenazi recipe in our collection, each tested with precise gram measurements, baker’s percentages, and complete halachic notes. Start with the Classic Kosher Challah if you are new to braided breads, or jump into the Chocolate Babka if you are ready for laminated dough.