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Recipes

Spinach Bourekas

🧀 Dairy
Yield: 12 bourekas  |  Difficulty: Intermediate  |  Active Time: 45 min  |  Total Time: 2½ hours  |  Bracha: Mezonot

This beloved recipe from the Israeli tradition brings authentic flavors to your home kitchen. Following the Kosher Bread Pro template with precise measurements, baker’s percentages, and detailed halachic guidance, this recipe ensures a perfect result every time.

Whether you’re an experienced baker or trying this for the first time, the step-by-step instructions and troubleshooting tips will guide you to success. Every ingredient is carefully chosen and every technique explained for reliable, delicious results.

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Chocolate Babka Muffins

✔ Pareve
Yield: 12 muffins  |  Difficulty: Intermediate  |  Active Time: 45 min  |  Total Time: 3½ hours  |  Bracha: Mezonot

This beloved recipe from the Jewish tradition brings authentic flavors to your home kitchen. Following the Kosher Bread Pro template with precise measurements, baker’s percentages, and detailed halachic guidance, this recipe ensures a perfect result every time.

Whether you’re an experienced baker or trying this for the first time, the step-by-step instructions and troubleshooting tips will guide you to success. Every ingredient is carefully chosen and every technique explained for reliable, delicious results.

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Recipes

Chocolate Chip Challah

✔ Pareve
Yield: 1 large loaf  |  Difficulty: Intermediate  |  Active Time: 35 min  |  Total Time: 4 hours  |  Bracha: Hamotzi

This beloved recipe from the Jewish tradition brings authentic flavors to your home kitchen. Following the Kosher Bread Pro template with precise measurements, baker’s percentages, and detailed halachic guidance, this recipe ensures a perfect result every time.

Whether you’re an experienced baker or trying this for the first time, the step-by-step instructions and troubleshooting tips will guide you to success. Every ingredient is carefully chosen and every technique explained for reliable, delicious results.

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Recipes

Chocolate Rugelach

✔ Pareve
Yield: 32 rugelach  |  Difficulty: Intermediate  |  Active Time: 45 minutes  |  Total Time: 3½ hours  |  Bracha: Mezonot

If classic rugelach are the everyday gems of the Jewish pastry case, chocolate rugelach are the special-occasion showstoppers. These crescents wrap a cocoa-enriched dough around a filling of dark chocolate, cinnamon, and finely chopped walnuts, producing a pastry that is simultaneously flaky, fudgy, and deeply chocolatey.

The cream cheese dough (here made pareve with margarine or coconut oil) creates the signature flaky layers, while cocoa powder added directly to the filling paste ensures chocolate flavor in every single bite. A final brush of egg wash and a sprinkle of cinnamon sugar gives each rugelach a crackly, caramelized exterior that shatters on first bite.

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Recipes

Cheese Bourekas Recipe: Savory Sephardic Pastry

🧀 Dairy
Yield: 16 bourekas  |  Difficulty: Intermediate  |  Active Time: 45 minutes  |  Total Time: 3 hours  |  Bracha: Mezonot

Cheese bourekas are the undisputed king of Israeli breakfast—flaky, golden pastry parcels bursting with a savory, tangy cheese filling that has been satisfying Sephardic and Mizrahi Jews for generations. Walk into any Israeli bakery on a Friday morning and the first thing you’ll see is a gleaming tray of bourekas, their sesame-topped surfaces glistening with egg wash, served with a hard-boiled egg and a dish of pickles on the side.

The bourekas tradition traveled with Sephardic Jews from the Ottoman Empire to Israel, where it became one of the most iconic foods of the nation. In Turkey, Greece, and the Balkans, Jewish communities developed their own variations: triangular for cheese (so you could identify the filling by shape), spiral for spinach, and rectangular for potato. This identification system was practical in communities where dairy and meat needed to be clearly distinguished, and it persists in Israeli bakeries to this day.

These cheese bourekas feature a homemade flaky dough (easier than you think) wrapped around a filling of crumbled feta, ricotta, and fresh herbs. The dough uses a simple oil-based lamination technique that creates dozens of flaky layers without the complexity of traditional puff pastry. The result is a boureka with a crust that shatters audibly when you bite through it, revealing a warm, creamy, tangy cheese interior that is absolutely irresistible.

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Cheese Danish Recipe: Classic Jewish Bakery Pastry

DairyContains Dairy • Contains Eggs • Contains Gluten
Yield12 danish
DifficultyIntermediate
Active Time35 minutes
Total Time3–4 hours
BrachaMezonot

The cheese danish is the undisputed king of the Jewish bakery pastry case. Walk into any Jewish bakery in New York — Zaro’s, Moishe’s, Oneg — and there it is: a golden, flaky pastry shell cradling a pillow of sweet, tangy cream cheese filling, sometimes topped with a ribbon of fruit preserves or a shower of streusel crumbs. It is the pastry that launched a thousand Sunday morning rituals.

Jewish bakery cheese danish are different from the laminated Danish pastries of Scandinavian tradition. The Jewish version uses a rich, yeasted dough (not laminated puff pastry), which is softer, more bread-like, and easier to make at home. The filling is a mixture of cream cheese, sugar, egg yolk, vanilla, and lemon zest — tangy, sweet, and impossibly smooth.

These are not the shrink-wrapped, mass-produced danish from a supermarket shelf. These are the real thing: freshly baked, with a golden, slightly crisp exterior and a warm, creamy center that oozes slightly when you take the first bite.

For another Jewish bakery dairy classic, try our Burekas. For the chocolate side of Jewish pastry, see our Kokosh Cake.

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Recipes

Babka Buns Recipe — Individual Chocolate Babka Rolls

Dairy
Contains Dairy • Contains Eggs • Contains Gluten
Yield12 buns
DifficultyIntermediate
Active Time50 minutes
Total Time4–5 hours
BrachaMezonot

What if babka came in individual portions? That is the idea behind babka buns — the same rich, buttery, chocolate-swirled dough that makes classic babka irresistible, shaped into individual rolls that fit perfectly in a muffin tin. Each bun is a miniature babka: layers of enriched dough spiraling around a dark chocolate filling, glazed with simple syrup while still warm, and absolutely impossible to eat just one of.

Babka buns solve the eternal babka problem: the uneven slicing, the crumbling, the debate over who gets the chocolatey end piece versus the leaner middle. With individual buns, every portion is perfect — each one a self-contained swirl of dough and chocolate, with maximum filling-to-bread ratio and a glossy, sticky finish.

These buns use the same enriched dough as our Chocolate Babka — butter, eggs, milk, and vanilla create a tender, brioche-like crumb. The filling is a simple but intense chocolate paste enriched with espresso powder, which deepens the chocolate flavor without adding coffee taste. Baked in a muffin tin, the buns emerge tall and swirled, ready to be brushed with warm simple syrup for a bakery-quality finish.

For the classic loaf version, see our Chocolate Babka. For a cinnamon variation, try our Cinnamon Babka.

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Recipes

Burekas Recipe — Sephardic Cheese-Filled Pastries

Dairy
Contains Dairy • Contains Eggs • Contains Gluten
Yield24 burekas
DifficultyIntermediate
Active Time45 minutes
Total Time2½–3 hours
BrachaMezonot

Burekas are the Sephardic pastry that conquered Israel. Walk down any street in Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, or Haifa and you will find them: golden, flaky, sesame-crusted crescents and triangles filled with salty cheese, creamy potatoes, or wilted spinach. They are the ultimate Israeli street food, sold from bakery windows for breakfast, lunch, and every snack in between. They are also one of the great Sephardic Jewish contributions to the world’s pastry canon.

The word burekas (also spelled börek, bourekas, or burek) traces back to the Ottoman Empire, where filled pastries were a staple of Turkish, Greek, and Balkan cuisines. Sephardic Jews throughout the Ottoman world — in Istanbul, Salonica, Izmir, and Rhodes — adopted and adapted the tradition, creating their own versions filled with the cheeses and vegetables available in their communities. When these Jews immigrated to Israel, they brought their burekas with them.

In Israeli bakeries, the shape of a burekas tells you its filling — a code that every Israeli learns as a child: triangles are cheese, half-moons are potato, rectangles are spinach. This system allows you to grab what you want without asking, even at the busiest bakery counter. It is an elegant solution born from practical necessity.

For another Sephardic filled pastry tradition, try our Sambusak. For Ashkenazi filled pastries, see our Hamantaschen.

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Chocolate Babka Recipe — Rich, Swirled, and Utterly Irresistible

This chocolate babka recipe delivers the babka that makes the whole house smell like a bakery.

There is a moment — right around minute thirty-five in the oven — when the scent crosses some invisible threshold and fills every room. Dark chocolate, warm butter-rich dough, a whisper of vanilla. Your kitchen smells like a Yerushalayim bakery on Erev Shabbos. That is the moment you know you have done something extraordinary.

This chocolate babka is not a quick project. It is a labor of love — the kind of baking that rewards patience with swirls of bittersweet chocolate tucked between tender, pull-apart layers, all drenched in a glistening sugar syrup that keeps every slice impossibly moist for days. This is the recipe that disappears before it cools. We have watched it happen, loaf after loaf.

Below, you will find everything you need: precise gram weights, baker’s percentages, a foolproof chocolate filling, detailed shaping instructions, and complete kosher guidance for both pareve and dairy versions. Whether this is your first babka or your fiftieth, this recipe will elevate your baking.