Super Soft Brioche Braids

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Super Soft Brioche Braids… Imagine the aroma of freshly baked sweet bread filling the kitchen on a Sunday morning: there’s no better way to wake up than with super soft brioche braids.
These brioches strike the perfect balance between the lightness of a cloud and the indulgence of a rich, buttery, and fragrant dough. Thanks to a slow and careful fermentation, their crumb turns out stringy and incredibly soft, melting in your mouth with the first bite.
Why will you love this recipe?
Extreme softness: A secret of hydration and kneading that keeps them fresh for days.
Versatility: Great to enjoy “as is,” dipped in milk, or filled with sprinkles or chocolate, but also with simple granulated sugar on top.
Artisanal aesthetics: The braid shape is not only beautiful to look at but allows the heat to distribute evenly, ensuring perfect baking.
Whether you are an enthusiast baker or a beginner looking for the perfect breakfast, preparing these braids is a small wellness ritual that transforms simple ingredients like flour, milk, and butter into a masterpiece of sweetness.

  • Difficulty: Easy
  • Rest time: 15 Hours
  • Preparation time: 20 Minutes
  • Portions: 20 braids
  • Cooking methods: Oven
  • Cuisine: Italian
  • Seasonality: All Seasons
309.22 Kcal
calories per serving
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  • Energy 309.22 (Kcal)
  • Carbohydrates 45.92 (g) of which sugars 12.08 (g)
  • Proteins 8.79 (g)
  • Fat 10.35 (g) of which saturated 6.17 (g)of which unsaturated 3.65 (g)
  • Fibers 1.35 (g)
  • Sodium 15.13 (mg)

Indicative values for a portion of 90 g processed in an automated way starting from the nutritional information available on the CREA* and FoodData Central** databases. It is not food and / or nutritional advice.

* CREATES Food and Nutrition Research Center: https://www.crea.gov.it/alimenti-e-nutrizione https://www.alimentinutrizione.it ** U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service. FoodData Central, 2019. https://fdc.nal.usda.gov

Ingredients

  • 6 1/2 cups Manitoba flour
  • 1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 4 eggs (medium)
  • 1 1/4 cups whole milk (room temperature)
  • 25 g fresh yeast
  • 1 tablespoon orange (orange paste or grated orange peel if you don't have the paste)
  • 200 g butter (soft)

Tools

  • 1 Stand Mixer
  • 1 Brush

Steps

  • In a stand mixer, or if you don’t have one you can easily do everything by hand, combine the flours with the sugar

  • Add the salt,

  • the eggs

  • 100 g of softened butter

  • Dissolve the yeast in the milk

  • and pour it into the stand mixer

  • Add the orange paste, but if you don’t have it, grated orange peel will do just fine.

  • Mix the dough at medium speed and during the kneading, add the other 100 g of softened butter

  • Work with the stand mixer until the butter is completely absorbed by the dough and it becomes soft, elastic, and homogeneous. It will take about 15 minutes. Place the dough in a bowl to rise covered with plastic wrap for about 16 hours in the fridge. I leave it in the fridge overnight. If you’re in a hurry, you can let it rise in a turned-off oven with the light on for about 4 hours and then shape the braids.

  • In the morning, take the dough out of the fridge. It will be firm, don’t worry, that’s normal. Take pieces of the dough weighing 100 g each

  • Divide each piece into three parts

  • Shape them into balls

  • Do the same until the dough is finished

  • Now take the three balls and form them into sticks

  • Braid them together

  • Now you can choose to bake them immediately and let them rise in an oven warmed to 95°F and then turned off, for about 1 hour

  • Or you can store them in the freezer without doing the second rise and take them out as needed. The important thing is that before baking, let them rise out of the fridge in a turned-off oven with the light on for 8 hours

  • At this point, gently brush the braids with the egg and milk mixture

  • Pour on top, as desired, either chocolate chips

  • or sprinkles and bake the brioche braids in a preheated ventilated oven at 356°F for 13 minutes.

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isaporidiethra

Hello everyone and welcome to my blog. My name is Francesca, a true native of Taranto. I love cooking desserts and traditional dishes, and my inspiration comes from the women in my family. Photography, for me, is about capturing the moment… in a shot, you hold your breath and then start again, savoring every little detail as you develop it. Why Ethra? She was the wife of Phalanthus, the founder of Taranto, the Spartan city. I'd like to take this opportunity to thank you all… there are already so many of you following me. Thank you, thank you, thank you!

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