How Long To Bake Challah At 350? | Bake Time That Nails It

A 1-pound braided loaf usually needs 30–35 minutes at 350°F, or until the center hits 190–195°F.

Challah can look done long before it’s baked through. The glossy egg wash browns fast, braids hide pale seams, and a soft crumb can stay gummy in the middle if the loaf is tall. Baking at 350°F is a steady choice, so the trick is matching time to loaf size and knowing what “done” feels like.

This article gives you a clear time range, the checks that beat guesswork, and small adjustments for pans, braids, and sweet dough. You’ll also get a troubleshooting section for the common “looks great, still raw” moment.

How long to bake challah at 350? Time by loaf size

Use these times as your starting point, then confirm with one of the doneness checks below. Challah dough varies with flour, egg size, sugar, and how tight you braid, so a thermometer and a quick tap test save a lot of second-guessing.

Baseline bake times

  • Small challah (10–12 oz / 280–340 g dough): 22–28 minutes.
  • Medium challah (1 lb / 450 g dough): 30–35 minutes.
  • Large challah (1.5 lb / 680 g dough): 38–45 minutes.
  • Extra-large challah (2 lb / 900 g dough): 45–55 minutes.

If you’re using a recipe that’s written for 375°F, dropping to 350°F often adds about 5–10 minutes for the same dough weight. That’s why checking doneness matters more than chasing an exact minute.

What changes the time most

Loaf height is the big one. A thick, tall loaf bakes slower than the same weight spread wider. A tight braid also slows heat from reaching the center. Pans matter too: a dark sheet pan browns faster than a light one, and a loaf tucked into a high-sided pan can need extra time.

Set up your oven so 350°F means 350°F

Challah is forgiving, but temperature swings can throw off your timing and your crust. A few setup steps keep your bake steady.

Preheat long enough

Give the oven 20–30 minutes after it beeps. Many ovens hit the air temperature early while the walls and racks are still cool. That extra time makes your first 10 minutes more predictable, which helps oven spring and braid definition.

Use the middle rack

Middle rack gives you the most even top-and-bottom heat. If your oven runs hot on top, moving the rack down one notch can keep the crust from getting too dark before the center is ready.

Choose the right pan

A light, rimmed sheet pan is the most common choice for braided challah. Parchment helps with release and keeps the bottom from over-browning. A silicone mat works too, though it can soften the base a touch.

Doneness checks that beat color alone

Challah’s deep brown top is not a guarantee. Use at least two checks and you’ll stop underbaking without drying the loaf out.

Internal temperature

Push an instant-read thermometer into the thickest part of the loaf, aiming for the center of the braid rather than a seam. For most enriched breads, a center temperature around 190–195°F is a reliable finish point. King Arthur Baking notes that many bread recipes call for a target internal temperature to confirm doneness. How to tell if bread is done explains how temperature checks remove guesswork and help you repeat results.

Tap and sound

Lift the loaf with a towel and tap the bottom. You’re listening for a hollow, drum-like sound. It’s not as precise as a thermometer, but it’s fast and it works well once you’ve baked a few loaves.

Weight and feel

A finished challah feels lighter than it looks. The crust should feel set, not soft and bendy. If the loaf feels heavy and the sides look pale, give it more time.

Table: Challah baking times at 350°F by dough weight

Use this table as a quick chooser, then confirm with internal temperature and crust cues. The “finishing checks” column is where you fix the problems that show up in real kitchens.

Dough weight and shape Time range at 350°F Best finishing checks
8–10 oz mini braid (single) 20–25 min 190°F center; bottom sounds hollow
10–12 oz mini braid (single) 22–28 min 190–195°F; crust set and glossy
1 lb medium braid (single) 30–35 min 190–195°F; seams no longer pale
1.25 lb medium-thick braid 34–40 min 190–195°F; tap test plus firm sides
1.5 lb large braid (single) 38–45 min 195°F center; tent if browning early
2 lb extra-large braid 45–55 min 195°F; rotate pan at minute 25
2 x 1 lb loaves on one tray 32–40 min Check each loaf; outer loaf may finish first
Challah in a loaf pan (1–1.25 lb) 35–45 min 195°F; center stays pale longer

Keep the crust golden without drying the inside

The most common challah problem at 350°F is a dark top with a soft center. A few small moves fix that without turning your loaf into a brick.

Tent with foil at the right moment

If the top is deeply browned by minute 20–25 on a medium loaf, loosely lay foil over the loaf. Don’t press it down. You’re slowing browning while the center catches up.

Rotate once, not five times

Many ovens have a hot spot. Rotate the pan 180° once, around the halfway mark. Too many door opens dump heat and stretch your bake time.

Use a thinner egg wash

A thick egg wash browns fast. Try one whole egg beaten with a teaspoon of water and a pinch of salt. The salt breaks the egg down a bit, giving a smoother coat.

Skip extra sugar on top until you know your oven

Honey, sweet toppings, and thick egg wash all push browning. If you’re new to your oven, bake plain the first time, then add the extras once you’ve nailed the timing.

Why challah can be raw in the middle

When the center stays doughy, it’s almost never one big mistake. It’s a stack of small things: a tall braid, underproofing, and a crust that’s browning early.

Underproofing

If the loaf goes into the oven too soon, the dough can split at the seams and stay dense. Dense dough takes longer to heat through. Your final rise should leave the loaf puffy and airy, with braids that look rounded rather than sharp-edged.

Over-braiding and tight seams

A very tight braid looks neat, but it can trap raw dough in the center. Braid with gentle tension and pinch the ends well, then tuck them under so the loaf holds its shape.

Oven running hot

If your oven is 25°F hotter than the dial, the crust will race ahead. A small oven thermometer on the rack is an easy check. If you find the oven runs hot, set it 15–25°F lower and bake a little longer.

Food safety notes for egg-rich dough

Challah dough has eggs, and that can make bakers nervous about the center. The good news: bread baking easily reaches temperatures that exceed standard egg safety targets. The U.S. Department of Agriculture notes that egg mixtures should reach 160°F when cooked. Egg products and food safety lays out that 160°F thermometer check for cooked egg products. A challah baked to 190–195°F clears that threshold with room to spare.

Safe handling still starts before the oven. Keep eggs cold, avoid leaving raw dough out for long stretches, and wash hands and surfaces after mixing. The USDA’s guidance on handling shell eggs covers refrigeration and general handling steps that cut the risk of contamination. Shell eggs from farm to table is a solid reference for storage and basic handling.

Table: Fast fixes for common 350°F challah problems

This table is meant for mid-bake decisions. Use it when you’re standing at the oven door, trying to decide what to do next.

What you see Likely cause What to do next time
Top very dark by minute 20 Thick egg wash or hot top heat Thin egg wash; tent at minute 20–25; lower rack one notch
Center gummy, crust looks done Loaf too tall or braid too tight Braid looser; flatten slightly; bake to 190–195°F
Seams split wide Final rise too short Proof until puffy; gentle poke springs back slowly
Bottom too dark Dark pan or rack too low Use light pan; double-sheet; move to middle rack
Crumb dry Overbaked or low hydration Pull at 190–195°F; weigh flour; don’t add extra during knead
Loaf spreads flat Overproofed or weak gluten Shorten final rise; knead to smooth, stretchy dough
Uneven browning Oven hot spot Rotate once at halfway; preheat longer

Cooling and slicing so the crumb stays soft

Challah keeps baking for a few minutes after it leaves the oven. If you slice too soon, steam escapes fast and the center can turn tacky. Let the loaf cool on a rack for at least 45 minutes. For a large loaf, give it a full hour.

If you want neat slices for French toast or sandwiches, cool fully, then wrap and slice with a serrated knife. For same-day serving, a clean tear at the braid looks rustic and keeps the crumb tender.

Storage and reheating that keep the crust pleasant

Once cool, store challah at room temperature in a bag or airtight container for up to two days. If your kitchen is warm, the crumb can stale faster, so consider freezing sooner.

Freezing slices beats freezing a whole loaf

Slice the loaf, wrap stacks of slices, and freeze. You can pull what you need and toast straight from frozen. A whole loaf takes longer to thaw and can pick up freezer odor if it’s not wrapped well.

Reheat without drying

For a whole loaf, wrap in foil and warm at 300°F for 10–15 minutes. For slices, a toaster or skillet does the job. If the loaf feels dry, a light mist of water on the crust before reheating can bring back some softness.

Challah bake checklist

  • Weigh your dough so your timing has a real anchor.
  • Preheat 20–30 minutes past the beep.
  • Bake on the middle rack on a light sheet pan.
  • Start checking at the low end of the time range.
  • Pull when the center reaches 190–195°F and the bottom sounds hollow.
  • Cool on a rack 45–60 minutes before slicing.

A solid starting recipe

If you want a dependable baseline, start with a reputable test-kitchen style recipe, then adjust bake time by dough weight. King Arthur Baking’s classic challah recipe lists a straightforward bake window and notes it has been tested and updated over time. Classic challah recipe is a good reference point for ingredient ratios and expected bake timing.

References & Sources