Categories for recipes

March 30, 2026

My recipes: Polish Easter Cake ‘Babka’ (March 2026)

In December I shared here one of my favourite Christmas cakes and today I want to add a recipe of the Polish Easter cake called ‘Babka’. It has some of my favourite ingredients: raisins and tangerine oil. I made it with my sourdough starter and I used wholemeal spelt flour. It baked in a lovely way. ‘Babka’ tastes scrumptious out of the oven with some butter spread on it. Yum! It’s simple to make, but as it’s a sourdough / yeast cake, it takes a day to make it. Enjoy!

This was my inspiration for this recipe.

Here is the recipe:

Ingredients

200g sourdough starter or 20g fresh yeast (plus one teaspoon of sugar, two tablespoons of milk and two tablespoons of flour)

480g flour

220ml milk

50g sugar (could be more / less)

6 egg yolks

120g butter melted and cooled

Zest from a half lemon

150g raisins (soak them in water and once drained, cover in potato flour)

2 drops of tangerine oil (optional)

Equipment: bundt baking pan greased with butter and sprinkled with fine-grained breadcrumbs.

Preparation

Mix a teaspoon of sugar with lukewarm milk and add it to sourdough starter (or yeast), then add 2 tablespoons of flour and set aside in a warm place for 30 minutes (or until it doubles in size). When waiting, beat the egg yolks with the sugar until creamy. Add tangerine oil to milk. Pour the flour into a bowl, make a hole in the middle, fold in the starter (sourdough or yeast), milk, lemon zest, melted butter and egg mixture. Knead the dough until loose but smooth. Place the dough in a large bowl covered with a cloth, cover with a damp tea towel and leave it aside in a warm place for 2-3 hours (or until it doubles in size).

Take the dough out of the bowl, knock the air out by bashing it with your fist. Add the raisins and knead into the dough for 1-2 minutes. Grease the bundt pan with butter and sprinkle with fine-grained breadcrumbs and put in the dough. Cover it with the tea towel then leave in a warm place for 1-2 hours (or until it doubles in size).

Preheat the oven to 180°C.

Place the bundt pan in the pre-heated oven and bake for 45-50 minutes (check the cake with a wooden skewer before removing from the oven). When baked, wait until cooler before taking the cake out of the bundt pan. And now you can enjoy your first slice!

I also want to mention another Easter recipe of the German Osterbrot Bread which is available here in English and in German and my step-by-step recipe for a sourdough starter on buy me a coffee, so if you’ve always wanted to start making your own starter, it might be your moment. Follow this link to my starter-making guide.

As I’m publishing my recipe in March, I’m taking this opportunity to wish you a wonderful Easter. Let’s find time for rest, fun and of course, dolce far niente. Thank you for reading my blog!

What is your favourite Easter cake? Please let me know in the comments below.

Till next time.

Kinga

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December 3, 2025

My recipes: Gingerbread cake (gf, lower sugar)

This is one of my favourite Christmas cakes and I’ve been making it for many years now. I often bake the first gingerbread cake of the winter season at the beginning of December to start Advent and pre-Christmas preparations. Then I usually bake it every weekend in December, as it’s easy to make and yummy to eat. It’s a Polish tradition to eat gingerbread cake at Christmas and the recipe was inspired by Kwestia smaku. It’s gluten-free and you can make it healthier without sugar, eat it as it is, or make it fancy with plum jam and covered in melted chocolate. Enjoy!

Here is the recipe:

Ingredients

130g butter, ghee or coconut oil

80g honey

30g sugar (you can add more / less or even omit it)

1-2 spoons of gingerbread spices

2 teaspoons of soda

300g flour (100g rice flour, 50g coconut flour, 50g almond flour (or grounded almonds), 50g potatoes flour, 50g corn flour)

250g milk (diary or plant, e.g. almond or hazelnut)

½ glass of finely chopped walnuts (optional)

2 eggs

Extra: you can fill it with plum jam and / or cover the cake in melted chocolate (1/3 glass of a coconut cream or diary cream and 100g of dark chocolate)

Preparation

Pre-heat the oven to 175 degrees. Use a loaf tin (cca 12x25cm) and line it with paper parchment. In a pan using a little heat, melt butter with honey, sugar (if used) and gingerbread spices. Take the pan off the heat and add all the flours and soda and mix it with a spoon. Add milk and walnuts (if used) and mix it and finally, add eggs and mix it again. Pour the dough into the loaf tin and put it into the pre-heated oven. Bake it for 40-45 mins: check if the cake is ready with a wooden skewer. Once ready, take it from the oven and cool it down. Keep it in a cake box.

You can fill the cake with a plum jam and/or cover it with melted chocolate (warm cream with chocolate up and keep stirring till it’s finely combined). 

What’s your favourite Christmas cake? Please let me know in the comments below.

PS. If you’d like to try another Christmas recipe and bake ‘pierniczki’, Polish gingerbread biscuits, my recipe is on the school’s blog.