- Babka
Babka, or Bobka, also known as baba, is a sweet pastry yeast cake.
East European version
It is a spongy
yeast cake that is traditionally baked forEaster Sunday. Darra Goldstein, professor of Russian atWilliams College says "babka comes from baba, a very tall, delicate yet rich yeast-risen cake eaten in Western Russia and Eastern Poland." [Joan Nathan, "Inviting an Old Favorite to the Hanukkah Table", "The New York Times", (December 5, 2007) page F5.] Traditional babka has some type of fruit filling, especiallyraisin s, and is glazed with a fruit-flavored icing, sometimes withrum added. Modern babka may bechocolate or have acheese filling.Jewish version
Babka is popular among
Jew s, particularly those with family origins in Eastern Europe. The Jewish version however is different from the one described above. It is made from a doubled and twisted length of yeast dough and is typically baked in a high loaf pan. There is never a fruit filling; the dough contains either cinnamon or chocolate. It is usually topped withstreusel . A similar cake called a "kokosh" is also popular in Jewish bakeries. "Kokosh" also comes in chocolate and cinnamon varieties, but it is lower and longer than babka, is not twisted, and not topped with streusel.Babka of this style has become popular in
North America n cities with largeJew ish populations, includingMontreal ,New York andToronto . This sort of babka was used as aMacGuffin in the "Seinfeld " episode "The Dinner Party." [ [http://seinfeldscripts.com/TheDinnerParty.html Seinfeld - The Dinner Party ] ]Other than the dessert variety, there also exists a traditional Eastern European Jewish variety prepared during
Passover in lieu of bread. Generally, this sort is not sweet and is prepared using crushedmatzos with water, egg, and salt. Some Polish Jews refer topancake s with these ingredients as "bubbeleh," a name similar to "babka."Belarus and Lithuania: savoury dish
Babka is also the name of a savoury dish, popular especially in
Belarus and inLithuania , where it is called "bulvių plokštainis". It is made from grated potatoes, egg, onions, and smoked bacon. It is baked in a crock, and often served with a sauce of sour cream and pork flitch. Depending on recipe and cooking method it may be either a flaky potato pie, or a heavy potato pudding.Etymology
The names "babka" ( _ru. бабка) and "baba" ( _ru. баба) mean "grandmother", and probably refer to the shape of the pastry, a tall cylinder, sometimes with corrugations resembling a skirt’s pleats. [
Oxford Companion to Food ] The name of the pastry entered the English language from Polish, via French, although it is also sometimes used in its original sense, especially among those of Eastern European descent. [Canadian Oxford Dictionary , 2nd ed.]See also
* Paska
*Rum baba
*Cozonac References
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