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I kneaded to know about challah to celebrate Shabbat in Devon

As a Liberal Jew in rural Devon living nowhere near a kosher bakery, challah was the missing ingredient to my Friday night.

February 21, 2019 10:49
Anna Turns and her children are finally able to celebrate Shabbat with 'that yummy bread'

By

Anna Turns ,

Anna Turns

3 min read

Shabbat blessings are an important part of my cultural identity as a Jew but my children often wondered, “Mummy, where’s the yummy special bread?”

So, I’m on a mission to master baking it from scratch, starting with a session with Boudicca Woodland at Exeter’s new One Mile Bakery. As I head into Woodland’s (non-kosher) kitchen, I’m nervous because my previous bread-making attempts have resulted in dense, inedible loaves.

We weigh out the ingredients, adding the yeast, salt and sugar into the flour, followed by warm water and eggs to create what is known as an “enriched dough”. Mixing this together, we make a messy, shaggy mixture in the bowl, and scrape this out on to the work surface.

“It’s important to knead your dough for ten whole minutes and time yourself so you’re not tempted to stop too soon,” says Woodland. It’s quite a work-out but, as I continue to knead, I can feel the texture changing as the stretchy gluten strands begin to form. “The more you knead it, the better your dough develops,” says Woodland.