The Jewish Chronicle

Mossbollet­jie-style rooibos babke

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This bun found its way into South African cuisine courtesy of the French Huguenots who settled in Franschhoe­k in the Cape. Just as they contribute­d so significan­tly to the developmen­t of viticultur­e in the region, they also brought their cooking and baking traditions with them. Mosbolletj­ies were made during the winemaking season when unfermente­d grape juice was readily available. Afrikaans for or ‘must’ is ‘mos’, and ‘bolletjies’ is the Afrikaans word for ‘little balls or buns’. As a bread lover, I simply had to include a mossbollet­jie recipe, but I’ve replaced grape juice with rooibos tea. . MAKES 1 LOAF

INGREDIENT­S:

550g plain cake flour

2 tsp salt

100g white sugar

10g rapid rising dried yeast 500ml rooibos tea, made from 1 tea bag

125g butter or margarine 250ml warm water 250ml milk or soya milk, room temperatur­e

150 - 170g apricot jam 100g brown sugar mixed with 1 tbsp ground cinnamon

2 eggs

190g raisins or sultanas, or a mixture of both (optional)

METHOD:

Sift the flour and salt together in a bowl. Add the sugar and yeast and mix.

Once the tea has steeped for 2–3 minutes, squeeze the bag to extract maximum flavour from the tea bag.

Place the hot tea into a bowl, then add the butter or margarine, warm water and milk. As soon as the butter has melted, add the liquid mixture to the dry ingredient­s. Rooibos tea gives this Ashkenazi bread an African twist Knead the resulting dough well until smooth and elastic, then place into an oiled bowl, cover with clingfilm and leave to prove until doubled in size (30–40 minutes).

Knock back the dough, then roll out until it is about 2cm thick.

Smear with the apricot jam and sugar-cinnamon, then divide into 8–10 equal pieces.

Roll each piece into a rounded oblong and pack them tightly together into a greased loaf tin.

Cover and allow to prove for another 30 minutes. Preheat the oven to 180°C. Beat the eggs and brush over the top of the loaf. Sprinkle over the raisins or sultanas, if using.

Bake for 35–40 minutes until golden and risen.

Leave to cool on a wire rack. Leftovers are great toasted.

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