If you’ve stood in the grocery store wondering whether brioche and challah are basically the same thing, you’re not alone. They look similar in a recipe but they’re not the same, and using one when you should use the other will change the dish. Here’s what I have learned cooking with both for years.
Quick Answer
Both are wonderful enriched breads. Brioche is the richer French option, challah is the slightly leaner Jewish tradition. For French toast and bread pudding, either works beautifully. For burger buns, brioche wins (more tender).
What Is Brioche?
Composition: French enriched bread with butter, milk, eggs – very high fat content (~30% butter)
Best uses: Burger buns, French toast, bread pudding, dinner rolls, hamburger sliders
Pros:
- Incredibly rich buttery flavor
- Tender pull-apart texture
- Pairs with sweet and savory
Cons:
- High calorie
- Goes stale fast
- Not kosher for Shabbat (contains butter)
What Is Challah?
Composition: Jewish enriched bread with oil, eggs, water – no dairy (parve)
Best uses: Shabbat dinner, French toast, bread pudding, sandwich bread
Pros:
- Beautiful braided presentation
- Slightly drier (better French toast)
- Kosher for Shabbat
Cons:
- Less rich than brioche (some prefer this)
- Takes longer to make
Can You Substitute One for the Other?
Using Challah instead of Brioche
Brioche for challah: works in French toast (richer result). Don’t bring to a kosher Shabbat dinner.
Using Brioche instead of Challah
Challah for brioche: slightly less rich but acceptable in most recipes.
My Honest Take
Both are wonderful enriched breads. Brioche is the richer French option, challah is the slightly leaner Jewish tradition. For French toast and bread pudding, either works beautifully. For burger buns, brioche wins (more tender). Both have their place. Knowing the difference is what separates a frustrated cook from a confident one.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are brioche and challah interchangeable?
Sometimes yes, sometimes no. For most casual recipes you can swap them with the adjustments above. For dishes where the specific ingredient matters, you really should use what the recipe calls for.
Which one is healthier?
Depends on the metric. Lower-fat options are lower calorie. Higher-fat options often have more flavor for the same calorie cost. Either fits in a balanced diet.
Which one tastes better?
Personal preference. I keep both in my kitchen because they serve different dishes. The right one depends on what you’re cooking.
Which is cheaper?
Generally, the more refined or specialty version is more expensive. The everyday workhorse is cheaper.
Can I store them the same way?
Mostly yes, but check the label. Both should be refrigerated after opening if they’re perishable. Dry ingredients can stay in the pantry.
I'm Julia. I cook restaurant copycat recipes at home and share what works. Every recipe on this site is tested at least three times in my own kitchen before I publish it.
