Holiday Recipes, Recipes, Side Dishes

Sweet Challah Rolls with Apple Raisin Filling

We’re right in the middle of High Holidays. Last Tuesday was Rosh Hashana and today and Thursday are Kol Nidre and Yom Kippur. It’s a time of celebration and atonement. A time to reflect on the past year, what we’ve achieved and what we hope to accomplish in the coming year. It’s a time when the community gathers together to pray and rejoice. But with all that prayer and rejoicing comes the very important eating. Yes, food is just important as guilt. (Sometimes they even go hand in hand.)

The Jewish holidays are when all the classic Jewish recipes show up on tables all over the world. For Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur’s Break the Fast, there’s brisket and challah, kugel and rugelach and of course apples and honey. Apples and honey are very important to Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur because they symbolize a sweet new year. While the day of Yom Kippur is all about fasting for 24 hours as a way to atone for the sins of the past year, apples and honey are all over the Break the Fast table. I mean, we haven’t eaten for 24 hours, you know there’s going to be a feast once that sun goes down. Sure there will be meat and potatoes, plenty of kugel and knishes, but there will also be tons of apples, honey and challah.

While you could absolutely have sliced apples and jars of honey for dipping as well as a beautiful braided challah adorn your table, wouldn’t it be cool if you could just combine all three into one amazing dish? First of all it would free up table space (which you’re going to need for the tons of food you’re going to gobble up). But it would also look and taste delicious! Don’t think such a recipe exists? Well, thanks to Beth A. Lee and her new The Essential Jewish Baking Cookbook, it does!

Lee’s book has everything you think of when you think of Jewish baked good. There’s babka, bagels, black & white cookies, hamantashen, knishes, macaroons, rugelach and soufganiyot, just to name a few. There’s challah in there too. And not just one recipe. There are four different challah recipes. There’s your basic braided challah but there’s also a challah bread pudding (which I can’t wait to make) and these Sweet Challah Rolls.

What intrigued me about these adorable little rolls was not only how easy they were to make, but also that they were stuffed with sweet apples, cinnamon and raisins. They’re not only perfect for fall, they’re the ideal dinner roll for Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur. Don’t get me wrong, I love a good piece of challah right out of the oven smothered in butter. But with these rolls you get sweet apples, raisins and cinnamon in every bite. They’re absolutely delicious! And because they’re in cute little circles, they’re perfect for the holidays. While they’re a delightfully sweet side for dinner, they’d also be great for breakfast. I’ve only made one batch, but I can’t wait to make them again and for as long as apples are in season. So, I guess that means I have a delicious dinner roll until at least January. Yay!