Baba au Rhum

Baba au Rhum
David Malosh for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews.
Total Time
2½ hours, plus 2 hours’ soaking
Rating
4(294)
Notes
Read community notes

A classic French dessert, baba au rhum is a syrup-soaked, soggy, boozy delight. The dough here is intentionally soft and sticky, for a light, tender result. Be sparing in adding flour, incorporating just enough to make it manageable, or refrigerate the dough, then work with it. (Chilled dough is easier to handle.) This recipe yields a dozen babas, but you can bake them all and soak only as many as you intend to serve. You can freeze any baked, unsoaked babas for up to 2 months, then prepare them a day in advance and keep them in an airtight container at room temperature. Any leftover syrup keeps indefinitely in the fridge.

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Ingredients

Yield:12 small babas

    For the Babas

    • 2teaspoons active dry yeast
    • 3tablespoons granulated sugar
    • 4large eggs, beaten
    • Pinch of fine sea salt
    • ½cup/113 grams unsalted butter (1 stick), softened, plus more for greasing the pan
    • 2cups/256 grams all-purpose flour, plus more for dusting
    • ½cup/80 grams golden raisins, soaked in hot water and drained

    For the Rum Syrup

    • ½cup honey
    • ¾cup/150 grams granulated sugar
    • 1(2-inch) cinnamon stick
    • 3whole cloves
    • 3green cardamom pods
    • Zest of 1 large orange, removed in strips with a vegetable peeler
    • ½teaspoon vanilla extract
    • ½cup/120 milliliters dark rum, brandy or whiskey, plus more for serving

    For the Whipped Cream

    • 1cup/240 milliliters heavy cream
    • 2tablespoons granulated sugar
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (12 servings)

401 calories; 17 grams fat; 10 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 5 grams monounsaturated fat; 1 gram polyunsaturated fat; 54 grams carbohydrates; 2 grams dietary fiber; 36 grams sugars; 6 grams protein; 46 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Prepare the dough: Put yeast and sugar in a medium bowl and stir in ¼ cup lukewarm water. Leave for 10 minutes, until mixture is bubbly. Add eggs and salt to the yeast mixture, and whisk together.

  2. Step 2

    In a medium mixing bowl, work the butter into the flour until the mixture resembles wet sand. Add the egg-yeast mixture and drained raisins, and beat with a wooden spoon, mixing well to make a soft, sticky dough. (Alternatively, prepare the dough in a stand mixer.) Cover bowl and let dough rise in a warm place until doubled, about 1 hour.

  3. Step 3

    Butter 2 mini-muffin tins or 12 mini ramekins. Uncover dough, dust lightly with flour and turn out onto a clean work surface. Add flour as necessary to make dough manageable and knead lightly to make a large, slightly sticky ball. Cut the dough into 12 pieces of equal size (about 2 ounces/55 grams). Dust each with flour, roll each into a ball and place in muffin tins or ramekins. Cover loosely and let rise until doubled, about 30 minutes.

  4. Step 4

    Meanwhile, make the syrup: Put honey, sugar, cinnamon, cloves, cardamom and orange zest in a medium saucepan. Add 1½ cups/360 milliliters water and bring to a boil, stirring to dissolve. Lower heat to a gentle simmer and cook for 10 minutes. Stir in vanilla and rum, turn off heat and let syrup cool to room temperature.

  5. Step 5

    Heat oven to 375 degrees. Bake babas until lightly browned on top, 15 to 20 minutes. Turn babas out of their molds and onto a baking sheet, and return to the oven for 5 minutes to brown all over, as necessary. Remove and cover babas with a clean towel to keep them soft. (Store, cooled, in an airtight container at room temperature if making in advance.)

  6. Step 6

    About 2 hours before serving, place babas, top-side down, in a deep baking dish. Pour syrup over and let soak. Turn babas over a few times in syrup — they should get quite soggy.

  7. Step 7

    Prepare the whipped cream: With a whisk, hand-held beaters or in a stand mixer, whip cream to very soft peaks. Add sugar and whip lightly, leaving mixture soft.

  8. Step 8

    To serve, place one or two babas in a low soup plate. Spoon over a little more syrup, and splash on about a tablespoon of rum. Serve a big spoonful of whipped cream on the side. If desired, garnish with a strip of orange zest, plucked from the syrup.

Ratings

4 out of 5
294 user ratings
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Cooking Notes

C'est magnifique! I used Ron Zacapa 23-year old Guatemalan dark rum and these were amazing. There are four of us, and rich as these are we had no trouble eating 3 apiece. I somehow had a small amount of the syrup left, but that was wonderful drizzled over the last slice of cheesecake I had the next day.

These are delicious! I found the 55 gram size filled a regular muffin tin perfectly, but I wish I had cut the size in half and been able to use my mini muffin tins. I have 12 muffin sized babas rather than 24 mini-muffin sized ones which would be nicer to serve.

I have substituted cooked down organic non alcoholic cider for rum and bourbon in some desserts. It tastes good, just not the same.

Googled recipes called for everything from dedicated Baba molds (tall, cylindrical baking molds in various sizes); regular sized muffin tins (recipe cautions to fill them no more than halfway); or a large cake using a Bundt, fluted or other ring-shaped pans. The only issue might be figuring out when your particularly-sized version was done.

Amazing recipe! Transported me right to France. I finished mine with whipped cream and very unseasonal strawberries.

How can I make it non alcoholic?

There is absolutely no place for cinnamon in classical Baba au Rhum. Keep it French, thanks.

Why, if some people find the cinnamon delicious?

I made these in mini loaf pans, then cut the cooked loaves in half. Worked well, so no need for special muffin tins. But cannot bake on cookie sheet because dough is too soft.

Wish there had been more syrup for ours!!

I would use 2.5 cups of flour next time as the dough wasn’t manageable with just two cups, and would make them smaller ( mini muffin tins), as could not get the muffin sized evenly soaked with syrup. Would consider skipping the raisins. Used lemon zest instead of orange- worked fine.

We used cherries instead of raisins, and a satsuma orange for the syrup. We may try chocolate chips next time

Needs more than the 2 cups of flour. It took me about 2-1/2 cups to get the consistency of dough that I was looking for.

Has anyone tried these after freezing? In the intro, it suggests you can freeze baked and then prep the day before. Has anyone attempted this? Any notes to consider?

Very good, used a regular muffin tin. The recipe is confusing related to muffin tins—recipe is for twelve babas, but calls for two mini muffin tins. I do think this would be better using two mini muffin tins

So 12 indentations? My mini muffin pans have 12 indentations. If I used two, there would be 24 little babas. I'm guess you mean to make 12 babas.

My mini-muffin pan has 12 indents, with the bottom of each indent about 1 inch across. Is this what he means? Or should I use my regular muffin pan, where the bottom of each indent is maybe 2 inches across? Are there really ramekins that are only 1 inch wide?

I bought a “mini” muffin tin for this. After cramming my 55g balls into the cups I realized that “mini” is relative. I think American mini muffins are a regular muffin tin for Canadians. I have them in the oven now. As I type though I’m wondering if 24 smaller profiterole sized buns might be more approachable. Hmmm. Thanks to the nytimes for the recipe. The syrup is delish and I now have some nice rum.

Boozy? Yes please. Delicious!! Happy birthday Mr. Tanis!

There is absolutely no place for cinnamon in classical Baba au Rhum. Keep it French, thanks.

Why, if some people find the cinnamon delicious?

I guess some dedicated bakers have mini-muffin pans or 12 mini-ramekins in their tiny city apartment - but I don’t. Any tricks for how this recipe can be made without the special bakeware?

It’s still not clear to me which pan is called for. In any case, I wonder if you could cut the dough into 12 pieces, roll them into balls and just bake them like cookies. Or make little molds for them out of heavy duty foil.

These are delicious! I found the 55 gram size filled a regular muffin tin perfectly, but I wish I had cut the size in half and been able to use my mini muffin tins. I have 12 muffin sized babas rather than 24 mini-muffin sized ones which would be nicer to serve.

We're in Rumsville (the Caribbean) but on a GF diet. Is anyone brave enough to tackle and volunteer a GF version of this? I would make it in a heartbeat.

Can I make 6 large baba in a regulate muffin tin? Do I need to do anything differently?

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