Polish Babka Recipe (No Yeast) (2024)

By Monika Last Updated 4 Comments

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This Polish babka is a simple everyday cake especially popular around Easter. It’s made without yeast so comes together quickly and is very easy to prepare. Ready in 1 hour and 15 minutes.

Polish Babka Recipe (No Yeast) (1)

What is Polish babka cake

Polish babka can be made with or without yeast. Yeast-based babka often contains raisins (soaked in rum) while the yeast-free variety is typically made with either lemon or cocoa (as in this recipe).

Polish babka without yeast is called ‘babka piaskowa’ (‘piasek’ means ‘sand’ in Polish) which describes the soft texture of this cake (it doesn’t actually taste gritty like sand!).

The words ‘babka’ or ‘baba’, as this cake is also sometimes called, in Polish as well as other East European languages mean ‘grandmother’ or ‘old woman’. This name comes from the cake’s cylindrical shape and fluted sides which are reminiscent of an old (village) woman’s skirt.

Where does it come from

According to the Encyclopaedia of Polish Cuisine¹ babkas were known in Poland already in the 17th century. The tradition of baking these cakes originated in the east and came to Poland from countries such as Lithuania and Belarus.

Good to know

Polish babka is very different from Jewish babka which is a braided yeast bread made with chocolate, cinnamon or other ingredients.

Ingredients and substitutions

Polish Babka Recipe (No Yeast) (2)
  • Flours: all-purpose/plain flour and potato starch (see details below).
  • Baking powder.
  • Salt.
  • Oil: any mild tasting vegetable oil with work (I used rapeseed).
  • Eggs: ensure they are at room temperature.
  • Vanilla extract: use almond extract instead if preferred (1 tsp), or a bit of both.
  • Sugar: I recommend caster sugar (superfine sugar).
  • Lemon juice.
  • Cocoa: or cacao.

What flour to use

I used a combination of regular wheat flour and potato starch which is typically used in babka recipes. Potato starch makes light and fluffy bakes and is sometimes even used on its own. Contrary to what you may have heard, it is not the same as corn flour (although they have a similar texture) and I do NOT recommend making this swap. Your cake will be denser and have a slightly powdery texture (I tested it!).

If you can’t get potato starch ('maka ziemniaczana' in Polish) the next best thing is cake flour (omit regular flour and use cake flour only).

What cake pan to use

To make a traditional Polish babka you will need a fluted ring pan approximately 4 inches deep (which is what I used). Some babkas are also made in regular bundt cake pans so if you prefer to use that make sure it’s big enough (an 8-cup pan will be sufficient).

Loaf cake pans are also used but less frequently.

Top tip

Using a bundt cake pan is likely to shorten baking time (check with a skewer after about 50 minutes). You might also like to bake the cake at 180 C.

How to make Polish babka: step-by-step

1.Preheat the oven to 325 F/ 170 C/ fan 160 C/ gas mark 3. Grease your cake pan thoroughly (with butter or margarine) and coat with almond flour or breadcrumbs. Turn the pan upside down to remove excess crumbs and set aside.

2. Combine the flour with the potato starch, baking powder and salt and stir thoroughly using a whisk or fork. Set aside.

3. Beat together the sugar and eggs (on high) for 7-8 minutes or until pale, thick and fluffy.

Polish Babka Recipe (No Yeast) (3)

4. Slowly pour in the oil and beat (on low) until thoroughly incorporated. Add the vanilla extract.

5. Gradually add the dry ingredients whisking in until just combined (or use the lowest setting of your electric mixer). Towards the end add the lemon juice.

Polish Babka Recipe (No Yeast) (4)

6. Pour approx. 3 quarters of the batter into the prepared pan.

Polish Babka Recipe (No Yeast) (5)

7. Whisk the cocoa powder along with 1 teaspoon of water into the remaining batter until thoroughly incorporated.

Polish Babka Recipe (No Yeast) (6)

8. Pour the cocoa mixture into the cake pan (try to distribute it evenly over the surface of the cake). Some of this mixture will sink into the batter.

Polish Babka Recipe (No Yeast) (7)

9. Bake in the centre of the oven for 1 hour or until the skewer inserted into the middle comes out clean.

Polish Babka Recipe (No Yeast) (8)

10. Remove from the oven and set aside to cool a little. Remove from the pan while still a little warm (gently tap the pan against the counter a couple of times before turning over). Cool your Polish babka completely before dusting with powdered sugar/icing sugar and serve.

Polish Babka Recipe (No Yeast) (9)

Serving suggestions

Icing sugar is the most common ingredient used to decorate Polish cakes and works well in babkas. Alternatively you can drizzle your babka with lemon or orange glaze.

To make a simple glaze combine 3.5-4 tablespoons of icing sugar with about 1 tablespoon of lemon or orange juice and stir until smooth then drizzle over the cake (once cooled). Finish off with lemon or orange zest, poppy seeds or candied fruit.

Other popular flavours you can use

  • Lemon: add zest of 2 lemons to the batter and omit the cocoa. Decorate with icing sugar or lemon glaze.
  • Orange: add zest of 1.5 oranges (you can but do not need to omit the cocoa layer). Decorate with icing sugar or orange glaze.

Top tips

  • Make sure your eggs are at room temperature.
  • It’s important to beat the eggs and sugar until pale and thick so take your time doing this step.
  • I recommend greasing the pan with either butter or margarine rather than oil. The ground almonds will stick to the pan better. Grease your pan even if it is non-stick.
  • Cool your babka cake completely before decorating and cutting.
  • Keep covered with cling film or in a plastic container for up to 3 days.
  • Freeze for up to 3 months. Decorate after defrosting.
  • You can buy potato starch in Polish shops (look for 'maka ziemniaczana').
Polish Babka Recipe (No Yeast) (10)

Related recipes

  • Polish Poppy Seed Cake (Makowiec)
  • Traditional Baked Polish Cheesecake (Sernik)
  • Traditional Polish Apple Cake (Szarlotka)
  • Polish Gingerbread Loaf Cake (Piernik)
  • Polish Walnut Torte (Tort Orzechowy)

Check out also these other traditional Polish recipes!

Keep in touch!

If you make this Polish Easter cake recipe I’d love to know how it turned out for you. Let me know in the comments below, thanks😊

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¹Encyclopaedia of Polish Cuisine, Hanna Szymanderska, Wydawnictwo REA s.j., Warsaw 2003, p. 939.

Recipe

Polish Babka Recipe (No Yeast) (11)

Polish Babka Recipe (No Yeast)

This Polish babka is a simple everyday cake especially popular around Easter.

5 from 3 votes

Print Pin Rate

Course: Dessert

Cuisine: Polish

Prep Time: 15 minutes minutes

Cook Time: 1 hour hour

Total Time: 1 hour hour 15 minutes minutes

Servings: 12 servings

Calories: 157kcal

Author: Monika Dabrowski

Equipment

  • 1 Ring pan 22 x 22 x 11 cm/8.66 x 8.66 x 4.3 inch

  • Electric mixer

Ingredients

  • 1 cup+1 tsp (130 g) all-purpose flour/plain (4.59 oz)
  • ¾ cup (130 g) potato starch (4.59 oz)
  • teaspoons baking powder
  • teaspoon fine sea salt
  • 4 large eggs
  • 1 cup (200 g) superfine sugar/caster sugar (7.05 oz)
  • ¾ cup (180 ml) vegetable oil
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract or 1 tsp vanilla and 1 tsp almond
  • 3 teaspoons lemon juice
  • 2 tablespoons cocoa powder
  • 1 teaspoon water

Extras

  • 1 teaspoon butter or margarine for greasing the pan
  • 2 tablespoons almond flour/ground almonds or breadcrumbs for coating the pan
  • Powdered sugar/icing sugar for dusting the babka

Instructions

  • Preheat the oven to 325 F/ 170 C/ fan 160 C/ gas mark 3. Grease your cake pan thoroughly (with butter or margarine) and coat with almond flour or breadcrumbs. Turn the pan upside down to remove excess crumbs and set aside.

  • Combine the flour with the potato starch, baking powder and salt and stir thoroughly using a whisk or fork. Set aside.

  • Beat together the sugar and eggs (on high) for 7-8 minutes or until pale, thick and fluffy.

  • Slowly pour in the oil and beat (on low) until thoroughly incorporated. Add the vanilla extract.

  • Gradually add the dry ingredients whisking in until just combined (or use the lowest setting of your electric mixer). Towards the end add the lemon juice.

  • Pour approx. 3 quarters of the batter into the prepared pan.

  • Whisk the cocoa powder along with 1 teaspoon of water into the remaining batter until thoroughly incorporated.

  • Pour the cocoa mixture into the cake pan (try to distribute it evenly over the surface of the cake). Some of this mixture will sink into the batter.

  • Bake in the centre of the oven for 1 hour or until the skewer inserted into the middle comes out clean.

  • Remove from the oven and set aside to cool a little. Remove from the pan while still a little warm (gently tap the pan against the counter a couple of times before turning over). Cool the babka completely before dusting with powdered sugar/icing sugar and serve.

Notes

  • You can buy potato starch in Polish shops (look for 'maka ziemniaczana').
  • Make sure your eggs are at room temperature.
  • It’s important to beat the eggs and sugar until pale and thick so take your time doing this step.
  • I recommend greasing the pan with either butter or margarine rather than oil. The ground almonds will stick to the pan better. Grease your pan even if it is non-stick.
  • Cool your babka cake completely before decorating and cutting.
  • Keep covered with cling film or in a plastic container for up to 3 days.
  • Freeze for up to 3 months. Decorate after defrosting.

Nutrition

Calories: 157kcal | Carbohydrates: 35g | Protein: 4g | Fat: 2g | Saturated Fat: 1g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 1g | Trans Fat: 1g | Cholesterol: 55mg | Sodium: 66mg | Potassium: 156mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 17g | Vitamin A: 79IU | Vitamin C: 1mg | Calcium: 18mg | Iron: 1mg

*Nutritional information is automatically generated and should be considered as an estimate.

**A note about baking: If using a fan-assisted oven refer to your appliance's instructions and adjust the temperature accordingly.

Tried this Recipe? Pin it for Later!Mention @Monika8021 or tag #EverydayHealthyRecipes!

Polish Babka Recipe (No Yeast) (2024)

FAQs

Why do Jews eat babka? ›

As a way to use extra challah dough, Jews there would roll up the dough with cinnamon or fruit jam and bake it alongside the challah. Babka remained relatively unknown outside of Eastern Europe until the 1950s, when European-style bakeries in Israel and the United States began to offer it.

What does babka in Polish mean? ›

The Polish word baba and its diminutive, babka, mean either 'grandmother' or 'old woman' (or even just 'woman', in some contexts). The cake is shaped like a cylinder with a hole in the middle; sometimes, the sides display corrugations that resemble the pleats of a skirt.

Why is my babka dough not rising? ›

If you have too much sugar in your dough, it could gobble up almost all of the food the yeast needs, leaving you with dry, ineffective yeast. To counteract this, allow sweet doughs, like the kind used to make cinnamon rolls or babka, plenty of time to rise.

What nationality is babka? ›

A babka is a sweet braided bread which originated in the Jewish communities of Poland and Ukraine. It is popular in Israel (often referred to as simply a yeast cake: עוגת שמרים) and in the Jewish diaspora.

Why do Jews eat bread without yeast? ›

Religious significance

Per the Torah Old Testament, they were instructed, "Seven days shall there be no leaven found in your houses: for whosoever eateth that which is leavened, even that soul shall be cut off from the congregation of Israel, whether he be a stranger, or born in the land."

What does babka mean in Yiddish? ›

borrowed from Yiddish & Polish; Yiddish babke (in sense a), borrowed from Polish babka (in sense b), literally, "old woman, grandmother," diminutive of baba "grandmother, midwife, old woman"

What do Polish people call their grandma? ›

Polish: The Polish name for grandmother is most often “Babcia,” but can also be “Babunia.”

What is the difference between Ukrainian babka and paska? ›

Difference between babka and paska

Traditionally, paska is baked in a large round decorated on the top with symbols, including crosses, flowers, braids, wheat, or other designs representing aspects of Orthodox and Eastern Catholic faith. Babka is traditionally baked to be tall and cylindrical.

How do you respond to Dziękuję in Polish? ›

Responding to Thank You in Poland
  1. Proszę bardzo — You're welcome. The most common response to a "dziękuję."
  2. Nie ma sprawy — It's nothing. To downplay the favor, indicating that you were happy to help.
  3. Cała przyjemność po mojej stronie — The pleasure is all mine. ...
  4. Nie ma za co — Not at all. ...
  5. Na zdrowie — Bless you.

What temperature kills yeast? ›

Too Hot to Survive

Regardless of the type of yeast you use, if your water reaches temperatures of 120°F or more, the yeast will begin to die off. Once water temps reach 140°F or higher, that is the point where the yeast will be completely killed off.

How to get more layers in babka? ›

Roll it up: starting with the rectangle closest to you, roll it up from the bottom along the longer edge, working evenly side to side and pulling back with your fingertips to make the roulade as tight as possible. Repeat for the second rectangle. The tighter the roulade, the more layers of chocolate you'll have.

What is Polish bread called? ›

We've gathered together some top-rated traditional Polish breads (pieczywo), including sourdough rye bread, bagel-like bialys, egg breads, sweet breads, poppy seed rolls, and more.

Is challah and babka dough the same? ›

Babka is another braided white bread that is usually served with a cinnamon filling and syrup. But unlike challah, which includes eggs and oil, babka dough contains eggs, butter and milk, making it more airy, shiny and smooth.

Is babka the same as panettone? ›

From there they have diverged. All have a rich, yeast-risen, tender crumb; panettone's texture is more like cotton candy with its long, airy strands that literally melt in your mouth, whereas babka and brioche tend to be a bit denser and somewhat chewier, with a high ratio of butter and eggs to flour.

What is the difference between challah and babka? ›

Babka is another braided white bread that is usually served with a cinnamon filling and syrup. But unlike challah, which includes eggs and oil, babka dough contains eggs, butter and milk, making it more airy, shiny and smooth.

Is babka a Passover food? ›

Matza Babka is a great Passover treat. It's made with matza, eggs, water, and a dash of salt. Only a few ingredients but such a comforting taste!

Why do Jews eat bagels so much? ›

Bagels have been widely associated with Ashkenazi Jews since the 17th century; they were first mentioned in Jewish community ordinances in Kraków, Poland in 1610. Bagels are now a popular bread product in North America and Poland, especially in cities with a large Jewish population.

What do Orthodox Jews eat for dessert? ›

There are plenty of desserts that orthodox Jews eat like babka, Lekach, sufganiyot, rugalach, etc.

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