Last Updated on August 29, 2021 by Chef Mireille
Gubana is a delicious Italian Sweet Bread packed with nuts and dried fruit. This festive bread is often enjoyed during Easter or Christmas.
This is a traditional bread that is a slow process, with several rises. However, it is so worth the wait when you taste this scrumptious bread – definitely fit for a holiday!
It’s time for #BreadBakers again and this month’s theme of Italian Breads is being hosted by Anshie of Spice Roots
I seem to be on a sweet bread kick – last month it was Barmbrack from Ireland and this month it’s Gubana. This bread is not for the bread making dabler. You have to be a dedicated and patient bread baker to go through the day long process of making this bread…but you won’t be sorry!
Gubana is a sweet bread from Northern Italy, specifically the region of Friuli. This is an autonomous region in northeastern Italy officially known as Friuli-Venezia Giulia. This part of Italy has a lot of German and Slavic influences in cuisine and culture. In fact, you can even call this nut and fruit packed bread Italy’s version of a strudel.
OMG – is this bread a time consuming process and not resting time either because while the bread is resting, you are working on prepping the ingredients for the filling and putting that together. So when you decide to make this bread, be sure you have set aside a day to devote to it. However, I promise you that it is well worth the effort!
If you have some little helpers around who can toast and chop walnuts, toast breadcrumbs, and chop fruit, then the time devoted to this bread will be largely reduced. Let them make the filling while you put your feet up & and wait for the dough to rise…again…and again….and again!
…and since we are celebrating Italian breads this month, check out some of the others I’ve baked in the past:
Italian Bread Recipes
- Florentine Torte
- Rosemary Asiago Focaccia
- Tuscan Coffee Cake
- Spinach Pesto Pizza
- Semolina Bread
- Taralli
- Whole Wheat Pesto Knots
- Vegetable Focaccia
How to make Gubana – an Italian Sweet Bread
This delicious Sweet Bread is loaded with nuts and dried fruit. It’s perfect for any celebration for serving as an Easter Bread or holiday bread.
Is it cake or bread? You decide!
Gubana – Italian Sweet Bread
Ingredients
Sponge Ingredients
- ½ cup milk – heated to 110F
- 2 ¼ teaspoons instant yeast
- ¾ cup bread flour
Dough Ingredients
Filling Ingredients
- ½ cup golden raisins
- ¾ cup chopped candied orange peel
- ¼ cup dark rum
- ½ cup firmly packed brown sugar
- 4 tablespoons butter
- ½ cup breadcrumbs I used Panko pulsed in the coffee/spice grinder
- 2 cups toasted and finely chopped walnuts
- 1 beaten egg
Instructions
- To make the sponge, sprinkle yeast on top of warm milk. Wait until it becomes frothy.
- Add flour and mix using a rubber spatula. Cover with plastic wrap sprayed with non stick spread or lightly greased with oil. Cover with a kitchen towel and leave for 30-40 minutes, until doubled in volume.
- Meanwhile, work on the filling.
- Place raisins in a saucepan with enough water to cover, about 1 cup. Bring to a rolling boil. Drain and transfer to a bowl.
- Add orange peel and rum to the bowl. Sprinkle brown sugar on top.
- In a skillet, melt butter. Add breadcrumbs and cook until breadcrumbs are golden, 2-3 minutes.
- Add breadcrumbs to the bowl, along with the nuts. Mix until thoroughly combined.
- Add egg. Mix until thoroughly combined
- In the bowl of an electric mixer, combine eggs, egg yolks, sugar, vanilla and lemon zest. Mix to combine.
- Using a rubber spatula, add the sponge.
- Add flour and salt. Using dough hook attachment, mix until smooth. Cover with plastic wrap. Let it rest for 15 minutes.
- Add the butter a little at a time and knead for 5-6 minutes, until the butter is well incorporated. This is a very soft and tacky dough, so don’t expect a light and elastic dough.
- Place in a lightly oiled bowl and cover with greased plastic wrap and a kitchen towel. Leave to rise in a warm place until doubled in size, about 1 hour.
- Lightly flour a cookie sheet and spread dough, using your fingertips, to a rectangle. It should almost fill the entire cover sheet. Cover with lightly oiled plastic wrap and leave in the refrigerator for 1 hour.
- Spray a 3” deep cake pan with non stick spray or line with parchment paper.
- Flip over onto a work surface dusted with flour. Roll into a rectangle 12×18”.
- Spread nut mixture over the dough, leaving a 1” border. Roll into a cylinder. Shape it into a coil and drop into the prepared pan. Cover with greased plastic wrap and a kitchen towel. Leave to rise until doubled in size, about 10-12 hours.
- Preheat oven to 350 F.
- Bake for 60 – 75 minutes, until bread is golden and puffy and internal temperature reads 200 F on an instant read thermometer.
Nutrition
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Ansh
This was one the breads I had shortlisted to make this month. great minds think alike! I love the whole process of making this bread and yours has turned out so gorgeous! Thank you for participating
Chef Mireille
thanks and thanks for the theme which provided the inspiration
Wendy
It looks like it is absolutely worth all the time and effort.
Julie
This bread looks so soft and tender and the filling amazing! We have a similar nut stuffed pastry from my husband’s Italian grandmother but nothing like this one. I’ve got to give it a try!
Chef Mireille
these kind of breads are very popular in Mediterranean and Slavic Europe so I am sure there are many different regional versions in Italy
Anne@ASaladForAllSeasons
What a lovely bread! And that sweet filling sounds and looks amazing!
Chef Mireille
it is and it is complimented when eaten with a hunk of nutty aged cheese – i.e. Asiago, Romano, Parmesan
Robin @ A Shaggy Dough Story
What an interesting bread! It may be a long process but good things are worth waiting (and working) for, right?
Chef Mireille
absolutely and for the last rise you can just leave it overnight – so you can be sleeping while it is rising so not really the whole day you are there waiting for the bread
karen
Some days, an all day bread project is so therapeutic! I can totally understand the attraction. Your crumb shot is captivating!
Chef Mireille
thanks – yes it was more than I knew I was in store for but it worked out wonderful in the end and I am so glad I stuck with it
Mayuri Patel
Reading through the ingredients had me wowing and ahhing all the way down. I love sweet breads and this will be on my ‘to do list’. However not soon otherwise I think my hubby will revolt as lately I’ve made too many sweet breads 🙂
Veena
I love sweet breads and this looks absolutely delicious Mir!!
Chef Mireille
thanks – yes it was so good
Pavani
Wow, that Italian bread sure seems to be very time consuming but it looks like it is well worth the effort.
Chef Mireille
it was…yet I dont know if I would make it again with all the time involved