The baba (rum baba, baba au rhum) traces its origin to the Polish babka — a tall, enriched yeast cake — brought to the court of Louis XV by the exiled Polish king Stanisław Leszczyński. The king reportedly found his Alsatian kugelhupf too dry and dunked it in wine — the moistened result pleased him. His chef at Lunéville refined the technique, and by the mid-eighteenth century the baba was established in Paris. The rum addition came later, likely through the naval trade routes that brought Caribbean rum to French ports. The modern baba au rhum — a small, individually sized yeast cake soaked in warm rum syrup and served with chantilly — is the Neapolitan pastry chef's most passionate argument. In Naples, the babà (the Neapolitan spelling) is considered a local birth right.
The baba's technique is the soak — a syrup of water, sugar, and dark rum (minimum 40% ABV, and the rum quality determines the baba's quality) heated to dissolve the sugar, cooled slightly, and then used to soak small, dry, fully baked babas. The soaking must be conducted at the right temperature (the syrup should be warm, 40–45°C — hot enough to penetrate the cake but not so hot that it dissolves the surface), for the right duration (until the baba has absorbed as much syrup as its structure can hold — it should feel saturated throughout, like a sponge that has reached capacity), and the baba must be completely dry before soaking begins (a warm baba absorbs less than a fully cooled, dry one). The test: squeeze a soaked baba gently. It should yield syrup under pressure. Release. No syrup should remain pressed out on the surface — if it weeps continuously, the soak was excessive. A dry baba placed in syrup sinks and absorbs; a correctly soaked baba rises and floats.
1. The baba dough is enriched (eggs and butter) but lean enough to produce an open, absorbent crumb — over-enriched babas have a tight crumb that resists absorption 2. The moulds (small cylindrical or barrel-shaped tins) are buttered and dusted with flour, not sugar — sugar on the mould surface caramelises and closes the pores of the crust, reducing absorption 3. The dry baba must be at room temperature for soaking — cold babas absorb less efficiently because fat and protein contraction reduces the crumb's porosity 4. Rum quality defines the baba — dark agricole rum (Martinique, Guadeloupe) has more complexity than industrial rum; the difference is permanent and uncorrectable at service Sensory tests: - **The float test:** Place a dry baba in the syrup. It sinks immediately. As it absorbs, it rises. When it floats at the surface, it has reached maximum absorption. Remove it. - **The squeeze test:** Gently press a soaked baba between two fingers. Syrup should yield — but only under pressure, not spontaneously. If syrup drips without pressure, the baba is over-soaked. - **Colour:** A correctly soaked baba is uniformly amber throughout — cut it and the colour should be consistent from edge to centre. White or pale areas at the centre mean under-soaking.
French Pastry Deep: Creams, Entremets, Sugar Work & Viennoiserie