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Babka Two Ways! (1) Chocolate Nutella Babka and (2) Cookie Butter Babka Recipe
This recipe makes 3 loaves of babka, because one or two simply aren’t enough.

Inspired by Breads Bakery Chocolate Nutella Babka
My good friend, Illona introduced me to babka. Not just any babka, this was Breads Bakery Babka. We got together for a fun night out for dinner and watched Night of Too Many Stars with John Stewart at the Beacon Theater. Ask me anything about the show and I can’t remember. But the moment Illona pulled out a loaf of New York Chocolate Babka with Nutella and dark chocolate from her bag and handed this amazing gift over to me is forever etched in my mind. I came home that night still buzzing from my fun night with great friends and cut myself a slice. I studied the loaf, admiring how insanely pretty the chocolate swirls cut across and around the babka. At that moment, I couldn’t fathom ever being able create such a visual masterpiece. It was beyond my imagination how good it tasted. Well, Breads Bakery is world famous for this chocolate babka so I should have known. My mind raced with 100 thoughts. Should I have another slice? (Yes.) Should I save some for the boys? (Yes, I almost wanted to wake them up and insist they have some right then, just so I can see their faces when they taste it.) Where exactly is Breads Bakery and how can I get more chocolate babka, like today?
I had to find a way to make this. I spent days researching recipes, watching videos, calculating flour measurements and sugar ratios in my head. I made loaf after loaf. They were ok but nothing compared to Breads Bakery. At last, I settled on this recipe. I might still tweak it here and there because the bar was set so high. I must warn you, nothing will ever be as good as Breads Bakery. They must have magical flour, butter, chocolate and a special oven that blows fairy dust on their babkas.
So Many Babka Flavors So Little Time
Throughout my babka baking journey, I’ve experimented with different flavor combinations like just chocolate (no nutella), cookie butter spread (Ben’s favorite babka), babka muffins and savory combinations like jalapeño and cheddar. I will share those recipes soon. Here are my Nutella + dark chocolate and Cookie Butter + milk chocolate babkas.





























What’s in the babka
- bread flour
- milk
- granulated sugar
- instant yeast
- canola oil or butter
- eggs
- vanilla
- nutella or cookie butter
- chocolate chips or callets

Chocolate Nutella and Cookie Butter Babka
Elevate your baking game with babka. There are so many flavor combinations to fill up these delicious swirls and today we have this decadent Chocolate Nutella Babka and Cookie Butter Babka.
Why You’ll Love This Babka Recipe
- Irresistible Texture: A silky, enriched dough that stays soft for days
- The Perfect Swirl: Follow our simple twist and tuck method for professional looking ribbons of your filling of choice.
- Glossy Finish: Brushed with a traditional simple syrup soak that creates a beautiful shine and locks in moisture.
High protein bread flour is essential for the chewy, airy structure. Instant yeast will give this babka dough a powerful, consistent rise. A slow, cold fermentation in the fridge makes the dough easier to handle and develops a deeper flavor. Ensure your kitchen is warm and draft-free for the final rise to achieve maximum height. This homemade babka recipe, whether you use Chocolate Nutella or Cookie Butter, pairs perfectly with a hot cup of coffee or a cold glass of milk. It can be stored in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 3 days, or sliced and frozen for a quick gourmet snack whenever the craving hits.
- Method: Baking
Ingredients
Dough
- 1 cup (240 grams) whole milk, warmed to 100°F
- 3 1/2 teaspoons (11 grams) instant yeast
- 4 3/4 cups (600 grams) bread flour
- 2 large eggs, room temperature
- 1/3 cup (67 grams) granulated sugar
- 2 teaspoons vanilla
- 1 3/4 teaspoons (9 grams) kosher salt
- 1/4 cup (45 grams) canola oil (any neutral oil or melted butter)
- 1 1/2 tablespoons of melted butter (for brushing over babka right before baking)
Filling
- 6.5 ounces nutella or cookie butter per babka
- 1/4 cup chocolate per babka (chips, callets, milk, semi-sweet or dark) per babka
Syrup
- 1/4 cup granulated sugar
- 1/3 cup water
Instructions
Syrup
- Combine the sugar and water in a small sauce pan. Heat until boiling then simmer for 2 minutes.
- Set aside and let that cool in the fridge until ready to use.
Dough
- In the mixing bowl of your stand mixer with the dough hook attached, combine milk, yeast, flour, egg, sugar, vanilla, salt and oil. Knead on low until it looks like a dry shaggy mess, about 3 minutes.
- Knead the mixture on medium for 7 more minutes. Dough will form a ball and should be neither dry, wet nor stick to the bowl.
- Remove the dough from the mixer and shape the dough into a square. Wrap the dough in plastic wrap and refrigerate for 8 to 12 hours.
- Line 3 loaf pans with parchment paper and prepare a workspace. A pastry mat is very helpful to have for this. Unwrap the dough and divide it into 3 equal parts. The dough will weigh about 1050 grams so each divided dough should be about 350 grams each. With a rolling pin, roll out one of the dough into a rectangle, about 10×12 inches and 1/4 inch thick. The wider side of the rectangle dough should be closest facing you. This is the side you will start rolling to form a log.
- Measure out your filling. If using nutella or cookie butter, spread that evenly with an offset spatula, leaving 1/4 inch boarder on all sides of the rectangle. Sprinkle 1/4 cup of chocolate chips evenly over the spread.
- Starting from the middle of the side facing you, gently roll the dough up and 1/2 inch away from you. Continue that movement along the edge of the dough working your way from the middle and going left and then right until the entire edge of the dough starts to form a log. Use your fingers to gently stretch and maneuver the dough so the log stays tight and even across the rolled edge. Keep rolling the dough until it forms a log.
- With the seam side down, mark a line across the center of the dough lengthwise. This will help guide you when you cut the log in half. Using a sharp serrated knife, cut the log in half, following the line you marked. With the cut side up, gently separate the two sides so they are parallel to each other about 1 inch apart. Starting from one end, form an “X”with the pair of strips. Then pull one strip over the other and form another X. Continue to twist until you reach the end, always leaving the cut side of the strip facing up. Place the twist into a lined loaf pan. Gently push the ends of the twist together if it looks too long to fit. The dough maneuvers very well and you can gently push or pull on parts of the twist to have it fit snugly in the pan. Repeat for the remaining two babkas. Cover the loaf pans and let them rise in a warm spot for 60 minutes.
- With 10 minutes left of your 60 minute rise, preheat the oven to 325°F on convection bake. Melt butter and brush it over the dough before baking. Bake for 27 to 30 minutes.
- Immediately brush the tops of the dough with the cooled sugar syrup. Cool in the loaf pan for 10 minutes before transferring to a wire rack to continue cooling. Allow the loaves to cool completely for 2 hours before slicing. The spread and the chocolate will need time to fully set.
❓ FAQ’s for Babka
Great question! Both are enriched breads made with butter and eggs, but babka has a filling (hello, chocolate!) and is braided into that signature swirly shape, while brioche is typically unfilled and baked as a soft, domed loaf. Babka is basically brioche’s more dramatic, chocolatey cousin.
Absolutely — and honestly, you should. The dough can be made the night before and left to do a slow, cold proof in the fridge overnight. This makes it easier to roll and produces even better flavor. Bake it the next morning and try not to eat it straight out of the oven.
Yes! Wrap your fully baked babka tightly in plastic wrap and then foil, and freeze for up to 2 months. Thaw overnight at room temperature. It reheats like a dream — a few seconds in the microwave or a warm oven and it tastes fresh-baked.
Sticky dough is normal for enriched breads — resist the urge to dump in extra flour! Instead, pop it in the fridge for 30–60 minutes before rolling. Cold dough is much more cooperative, and you’ll have a much better time braiding it.
A stand mixer makes life easier (and your arms less tired), but you can absolutely do this by hand. It just requires a bit more elbow grease and patience while kneading. Think of it as your arm workout before eating a beautiful loaf of babka.
Semi-sweet or dark chocolate gives you that deep, rich flavor that balances the sweetness of the dough. Milk chocolate works too if you prefer something sweeter, and a mix of both is never a bad idea.
Bread Bakery is known for their perfectly layered, generously filled, show stopping babkas. This recipe captures that same spirit — a rich chocolate filling, a beautifully braided swirly loaf, and a soft, buttery crumb — made achievable for home bakers with clear, step-by-step guidance.
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