North African Coriander Bread

over head braided coriander bread

This Bread is awesome served for a Moroccan feast, just a cup of coffee, or any occasion.

slice of coriander bread

This bread is one of the first bread I ever learned to make in my early teens. I ran across it in a magazine and thought it would be great for Thanksgiving. I was very adventuresome in trying a recipe I’d never made for my huge family for the biggest dinner of the year. My Step Mother had this beautiful delicate clear glass soufflé dish that sort of looked like a science beaker with straight sides. I had been eyeing That dish for some time and decided that a round loaf baked in there would be a great idea. In my innocence, I thought that it would rise straight up and be this great round, but modest loaf of bread. Little did I know that this bread really rises high! The loaf rose to the top of the glass beautifully and started to brown, I know, as I kept checking it. I thought it looked awesome. But the next time I peeked into the oven the top had risen again up and then to one side. All the way to the baking sheet I had put under the soufflé dish. And there it baked into this lopsided loaf. I looked just like a floppy chefs hat. I was mortified, but my family all laughed and decided that it looked great that way. To this day I still think of that loaf of bread as my chefs’ hat bread.

Coriander seeds up close

This bread is very fragrant and delicious. It is not only a good bread for the holidays but for any special occasion. It stands on its own as just good bread. The spice is not overpowering but a great compliment to a great loaf of bread. It does indeed still rise high and mighty, and for me, it has never failed. It makes amazing French toast and I’m sure this would be fantastic as a base for bread pudding.

Braided loaf on a couch and table

I’ve tweaked this recipe a bit over the years and have added a sponge stage as well as a autolyse stage that really develops the gluten and flavor of this bread. You could skip the autolyse stage if you are pressed for time. But for this particular bread, it just works better for the huge loaf you will get.

cut coriander bread

You could definitely shape this dough into rolls or even exotic sandwich or hamburger buns. Let me know in the comments below what you have made out of this bread dough. Or if you have any thoughts.

bread texture up close

To this day this really is one of my favorite breads to make and it is so good!Baked braided round loaf

North African Coriander Bread

A rich spiced bread flavored with coriander cinnamon and oringe rind.

Course: Baking
Cuisine: American, Morrocan
Ingredients
  • 2 cups whole milk
  • 1/2 cup honey
  • 8 cups bread flour
  • 2 tablespoons active dry yeast, you can use 2 packages it will rise slightly slower
  • 4 large eggs, at room temperature
  • 8 tablespoons butter, 1 stick
  • 4 teaspoons ground coriander
  • 1/2 teaspoon gound ginger
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground cloves
  • 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 1 tablespoon grated orange peel
  • 2 teaspoons salt
egg wash
  • 1 large egg, beaten with 1 tablespoon water
Poppy Seeds for finishing is desired
Instructions
  1. Heat the milk almost to the boiling point either carefully in a microwave or on the stove. 

  2. Pour into a mixing bowl for your mixer.

  3. Add the honey and whisk until combined. Let cool until it is 110° -115° .

  4. Whisk in 3 cups of flour and the 2 tablespoons of yeast. 

  5. Beat with a whisk for approximately 50 strokes, just to aerate the sponge. 

  6. Cover and let sit for 20 – 45 minutes. The sponge should be very bubbly.

  7. Using a mixer add in 4 cups of the flour, the eggs, softened butter, coriander, ground cloves, ginger, cinnamon and orange peel. Knead for 6 minutes; the dough should start to come together but still pool in the bottom of the bowl. Depending on the day, wither it is a dry day or a humid day you may need to add in the extra cup of flour or more if it’s still not barely coming together. 

  8. Let rest again for 20 minutes

  9. Add the salt and knead for 10 to 15 more minutes. The dough will start out still pooling in the bottom and seem sticky but it will knead into a ball cleaning the sides of the bowl and look very smooth and elastic. You should see bubbles under the surface, which means the gluten has been formed enough. 

  10. Turn out onto a lightly floured surface and clean the bowl. Lightly oil the bowl with about 1 tablespoon of vegetable oil or grease with some very soft butter. 

    ball of dough
  11. Knead the dough for a minute or so to gather it into a smooth round ball. 

  12. Place the ball into the greased bowl and flip it over to coat the dough with oil. 

  13. Cover the bowl and let rise for 45 minutes until the dough has more than doubled, almost tripled.

  14. Turn out the dough onto a clean work surface. Divide the dough into 2 if making loaves or if you want to make one huge braided loaf divide the dough into 4 even pieces and follow the directions at the end of this recipe.

  15. If making 2 loaves let the dough rest for 10 minutes and then shape the loaves into 2 rounded loaves big enough to fit into 2 buttered 5 x 9 loaf pans

  16. Place into the pans and brush with the egg glaze. 

  17. Pre-heat oven to 350°.

  18. Let rise for 30 to 40 minutes until puffy and nearly doubled. 

  19. Brush again with the egg glaze and sprinkle with poppy seeds if desired. 

  20. Bake for 30 to 40 minutes until deeply golden brown or until the bread sounds hollow on the bottom. If you have an instant-read thermometer a great alternative is to bake until it has an internal temperature of 200°.  

  21. Un-mold the bread and let cool right side up on a rack for at least 45 minutes before slicing.

For a braided round large loaf
  1. To shape into a braided round loaf divide the dough into 4 even pieces.

    Dough strands
  2. Roll each piece into a 26-28 inch long strand. 

  3. Place 2 of the strands next to each other horizontally on the work surface and 2 vertically. 

  4. Weave the vertical strands over and under the horizontal strands. Make sure the strands are pushed up as close together as possible. You should have an “X” of strands with a woven center with 2 strands pointing in each direction.

    first braid
  5. You will be going around each direction to the four points. First, take the left of each pair and cross over to the right, towards the next pair of strands, leaving no space between the strands. Count that you have done all four pairs. 

    2nd braid
  6. Then going the opposite direction, take the right strand and cross over the left one pulling each around the loaf. 

    3rd pass
  7. Continue each pass to the left and right until you get to the end of the strands.

  8. Pinch the ends of the strands to the finished loaf. Tuck the edge slightly under to help seal the ends.

    2nd picture of finished braided loaf
  9. Place on a Silpat or parchment paper-lined baking sheet. 

  10. Brush the large loaf all over with egg wash. 

  11. Pre-heat the oven to 350°. 

  12. Let rise for 35-45 minutes, until the loaf has nearly doubled. 

  13. Brush again with the egg wash and sprinkle generously with the optional poppy seeds. 

    seede braided loaf ready for baking
  14. Bake the loaf until deeply golden brown and sounds hollow when tapped on the bottom, or until it has an internal temperature of 200°.

  15. Let cool completely on a wire rack for at least 45 minutes.

Morrocan dinner

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