Tsoureki (Greek Easter bread)

November 1, 2016
Tsoureki (Greek Easter bread)

Tsoureki (Greek Easter bread)

Serves: 3 loaves
Cooking Time: 4 hrs

Ingredients

  • 3 packets Anchor Instant Yeast
  • 400g (2 cups) sugar
  • 375ml (1½ cups) lukewarm milk
  • 125ml (½ cup) lukewarm water
  • 1,1kg (9 cups) flour
  • 100 – 120g butter, grated
  • 6 eggs + 1 extra, beaten, for egg wash
  • 10ml (2 tsp) vanilla extract
  • 15ml (1 tbsp) mastic powder
  • 60ml (¼ cup) brandy
  • 3 red eggs (boiled in red food colouring)
  • toasted almonds, roughly chopped

Instructions

1

Preheat the oven to 180°C.

2

Pour the yeast into a bowl, add 5ml (1 tsp) of sugar and the milk and water. Whisk in 2 cups of flour until smooth and cover with a clean tea towel. Set aside in a warm area of the kitchen for about 30 minutes.

3

Sift the rest of the flour into the butter and mix with a dough hook. While the butter and flour are blending, use a separate mixer to beat the eggs with the sugar, vanilla, mastic powder and brandy until it reaches a light creamy consistency. Add this mixture to the flour and butter and continue to mix with the dough hook attachment.

4

Add the yeast mixture slowly and beat with the dough hook until smooth and bubbly. Cover the mixture and set it aside to rise in a warm spot until it has doubled in size, about 2 hours. Punch the dough down and knead a few times then divide into 3 equal portions.

5

Divide each of the thirds into 3 again and roll the smaller 3 into long ropes. Once rolled out, make a plait with the 3 ropes, pinching them together at each end, and place in a baking pan lined with greaseproof paper. Place a red egg into the bread at one end. Do the same to form another 2 plaits.

6

Cover the 3 loaves with a tea towel and allow to rise for another hour. Brush the tops of the tsoureki with egg wash and bake for about 20 minutes; they should sound hollow when tapped. Cool on a wire rack.

Notes

Mastic is a resin obtained from the mastic tree. In pharmacies and health shops it is called arabic gum (not to be confused with gum arabic). To use for tsoureki, grind in a pestle and mortar.

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