It’s been a while since I posted any Amish Friendship Bread recipes, and that’s because this is the last one I made and I wanted to save it for December, since the flavor combination reminded me of Christmas.
Are you one that identifies certain foods with certain seasons and holidays, like I do? For me, pumpkin and pies are fall and Thanksgiving. December and Christmas is cookies, chocolate, and anything spiked with alcohol. Like this bread!
This was actually my favorite variation that I came up with, though I haven’t made very many yet. The bread is so incredibly moist, is nice and chocolatey with a punch of rum and just a hint of cinnamon from the sugar coating. Very festive, and so yummy! This would make great gifts, and I plan to break out one or two of the starters I froze in order to give some away this year. (If you don’t have any starters in your own freezer, you can click here to learn how to make your own.)
Double Chocolate-Rum Amish Friendship Bread
Printable recipe
Printable recipe with picture
¼ cup sugar
1 tablespoon cinnamon
1 cup Amish Friendship Bread starter (or whatever is left after you’ve divvied it up)
3 eggs
1 cup oil
½ cup dark rum
¼ cup Dutch process cocoa
1 small box instant chocolate pudding
1 cup sugar
2 cups flour
1 ½ teaspoons baking powder
½ teaspoon baking soda
½ teaspoon salt
1 cup semi-sweet chocolate chips
¼ cup mini semisweet chocolate chips
Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Combine sugar and cinnamon in a small bowl. Generously butter two loaf pans, then dust with the cinnamon sugar. Tap out excess and save for topping.
Whisk the eggs into the starter, then whisk in the oil and rum. Add everything but the chocolate chips and whisk until blended. Stir in 1 cup chocolate chips. Divide batter between pans, then sprinkle remaining cinnamon sugar over the tops. Sprinkle mini chocolate chips over the top and bake for an hour. Cool in pans for 10 minutes, then turn out to cool completely on wire rack.
Recipe source: adapted from Friendship Bread Kitchen
So you’re saying the holidays drive you to drink alcohol? Haha, just kidding! This looks awesome and I would eat it anytime of the year. :-)
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I also think of spiked things as particularly Christmasy, though for the life of me I can’t think why. And mulled wine! Though that’s not exactly spiked . . . it’s just alcohol all the way. =) But it’s so tasty and seasonal! I need to brew some up soon.
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Beautiful bread! Wishing I had a slice right now. :)
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Yep, I think the same way fall is pumpkin pies and apple cider and winter is lots of sweets. We get so much candy at work it’s crazy. The vultures eat it all though…lol!
The bread looks awesome, thinking of shipping some to TX for Derek :) He’s always asking for food! I have to send lots of goodies for Christmas because he’ll be deployed by Jan. 15th we just found out.
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wowowwow!!!
you made a recipe with sourdough! didn’t you say you do not like the taste? so happy you posted this… how’s this Amish thing works exactly? can any type of starter be used instead?
the bread looks super-yummie… definitely something I want to bookmark… sourdough and chocolate? you’re kidding me! :)
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No, I don’t like sourdough, but this isn’t sourdough. I bet you could use sourdough starter instead though! If you try, let me know if it turns out OK.
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ahah… I really am a jerk :) was so positive that the Amish starter was a sourdough starter… but what is it instead?
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LOL, you’re so not a jerk! I did put a link to the starter but it’s just equal amounts flour, sugar and milk-1 cup of each, and then you feed it like you do a sourdough for ten days, then divide the batter to give to two friends and keep the rest to make your bread. It’s a neat idea, and fun until you get so sick of friends pawning their Amish Friendship Starter off on you that you go into hiding to avoid them. LOL!
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oh my… I remember this thing! I think I have been part of it once in Italy when I was 12 or so… wow… I think I may even recollect the taste of the starter… slightly sour, right?
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Wow, that’s cool they do this worldwide! Well, I’m not sure. I never tasted the starter by itself. But it doesn’t make the bread sour at all. It smells sweet and fermented.
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I must not be popular because I have never had amish starters pawned off on me! lol Amish and rum…hmmm oxy moronic yet delicious! my favorite! hahahaha!:D
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I was thinking the same thing–I think the Amish might be aghast if they ever saw this, which thankfully they won’t since they don’t use the internets. lol
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