Showing posts sorted by date for query Cardamom and Coffee Cake. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query Cardamom and Coffee Cake. Sort by relevance Show all posts
I just spent most of the day trying to do a video that I could post on line of this lovely breakfast cake. All the steps along the way, etc. It took me hours and hours, but I can't get it to load up and I am exhausted from trying. I don't know how these youngsters do it, I really don't! Never mind we can at least enjoy the fruits of my labours in this delicious breakfast cake. Apple Pie Coffee Cake!

They have some lovely frozen cherries at the grocery shops and I often pick up a pack and stick them in the freezer so that I can bake a pie or something when the mood strikes. The other day I decided to bake a delicious Cherry Kuchen with some. We both love Kuchen/cake.
Kuchen is German for Cake. In any language it is delicious. This recipe is loosely based on one which is in my old red plaid covered BHG cookery book. I have adapted it to make my own cherry filling. You can use a tin of cherry pie filling instead of the freshly made filling, but I love the homemade cherry filling best of all.


I almost didn't get to show you this.
The photos for this fabulous recipe were on my old broken laptop, but I have figured out a way to take photos off and upload them to an online storage spot without needing to use the keyboard. Whew! Lucky break.
I still have to try to get all of my art off . . . wish me luck.

I was really sad when I thought that I had lost the photos for this recipe as it is sooooo tasty and something which I really wanted to share with you all!
So, I am doubly happy that I have them to show you!

This is quite a sturdy cake . . . more like a tart really. The batter isn't soft and moist like a traditional cake, but then again you wouldn't want it to be.

This is quite a sturdy cake . . . more like a tart really. The batter isn't soft and moist like a traditional cake, but then again you wouldn't want it to be.
The sturdiness of the batter is what keeps that lovely cherry filling in the middle of the cake. You spread about 2/3 of the batter in the pan and prebake it . . . only for ten minutes or so . . .

Then you spread the filling over top and dollop the remaining cake batter over that. It's baked until done and then glazed with a delicious vanilla icing glaze. I use cardamom in the cake batter for a hint of spice and some almond in the cherry filling.
Altogether this is incredibly tasty. Break out the coffee/hot chocolate/tea mugs because you will want to enjoy this with a nice hot cuppa!

If you are a fan of breakfast cakes you might also enjoy these:
PINEAPPLE COCONUT BREAKFAST CAKE - OH, I do so love cake for breakfast. It seems like the most indulgent thing in the world, and after you taste this delicious cake you will wonder where it's been all your life. Pineapple and coconut are the perfect pairing, and they really shine in this super moist coffee cake!
CINNAMON ROLL BREAKFAST CAKE - Not at all difficult to make this cake goes together in a flash. With a lovely scone/biscuit type of base and a scrumptious brown sugar sweet and buttery cinnamon topping.

Cherry Kuchen
Yield: 9 - 12
Author: Marie Rayner
Prep time: 15 MinCook time: 45 MinTotal time: 1 Hour
A delicious cake with a plain batter bottom flavoured with cardamon, a lucious cherry filling and a cake topping. An almond and vanilla glaze finished it off. Serve warm for a real taste treat!
Ingredients
For the filling:
- 350g frozen sour pitted cherries (about 3 cups)
- 140g white sugar (3/4 cup)
- 1 tsp lemon juice
- 1 TBS cornflour (plus a bit of water to make a paste) (cornstarch)
- 1/4 tsp almond extract
- 1 TBS butter
For the batter:
- 120g of butter (1/2 cup)
- 110g of white vegetable shortening (1/2 cup)
- 335g of sugar (1 3/4 cup)
- 1 1/2 tsp baking powder
- 1/2 tsp ground cardamon seeds
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 3 large free-range eggs
- 1 tsp vanilla
- 420g plain flour (3 cups)
To glaze:
- 200g icing sugar, sifted (1 1/2 cups)
- 1/4 tsp vanilla
- 2 to 3 TBS milk
Instructions
- First make the filling. Put the cherries, sugar and lemon juice in a saucepan. Heat over medium heat until the sugar melts and the juices are released from the cherries.
- Whisk together the cornflour with water (about 2 TBS) Whisk this into the cherry mixture and then cook, stirring until the mixture bubbles and thickens and turns glossy. Cook, stirring for about 2 minutes.
- Take off the heat and whisk in the butter and almond extract. Set aside to cool.
- Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4. Butter a 15 by 10 by 1 inch cake tin.
- Cream the butter, shortening and sugar together for about 3 minutes until light and fluffy.
- Beat in the baking powder, cardamon and salt.
- Beat in the eggs, one at a time. Beat in the flour until it is completely incorporated, and the batter is smooth.
- Spread 2/3 of the batter in the prepared baking pan. Bake in the preheated oven for 12 minutes.
- Remove from the oven and spread with the cherry filling. Spoon the reserved cake batter over top of the cherry filling in dollops. Bake for 30 to 35 minutes longer until set and golden brown. (Start checking at 30 minutes.)
- Allow to cool. Whisk the drizzle ingredients together until smooth, using only enough milk to give you a comfortable drizzle icing. Drizzle this over top. Allow to set, then cut into squares to serve.
Notes
You can use tinned cherry pie filling rather than make your own if you wish. A large tin will do the job.
Did you make this recipe?
Tag @marierayner5530 on instagram and hashtag it # marierayner5530

Happy weekend! Bon Appetit!
The strawberries are coming fast and furious now and we are trying to get our fill of them while they last. It is a race to see who gets them first . . . the garden slugs or us. Most of the time we win. I thought it would be fun this morning to showcase some of my favourite strawberry recipes, the ones which we enjoy year after year without fail. My tried and true berry recipes. Enjoy!
Did you know that berries, especially strawberries have a special affinity for Balsamic Vinegar? They do and this is the perfect way to highlight that beautiful marriage.
*Strawberries With Balsamic Vinegar*
Serves 4
Printable Recipe
If you are looking for a dessert that is fresh, easy and delicious, then look no further. This tasty dish fills the bill on all counts!
750g of ripe small strawberries
60g of caster sugar (superfine sugar)
2 TBS good quality balsamic vinegar
125g of mascarpone cheese
Wipe the strawberries clean with a damp cloth, and then carefully hull them. If your berries are somewhat on the larger side, cut them in halves or quarters. Place them all into a glass bowl. Sprinkle the caster sugar on top and toss them gently to coat. Let sit, covered loosely with a cloth, for 2 hours to macerate. After 2 hours, drizzle the balsamic vinegar over top. Toss gently again, then refrigerate for 30 minutes.
Spoon the berries into 4 glass dishes. Drizzle each with some of the syrup left in the bowl. Spoon a dollop of mascarpone cheese on top of each and serve.
This is a delicious bread that I make at least once every strawberry season. It's not a great keeper, and needs to be eaten up within a day or so, but that's never been a problem around here. I usually send half of it to my good friend Doreen and we enjoy the other half ourselves. If you have a family it will be inhaled in no time at all. Great for elevensies, and for any time really. Note, it also freezes well, so you can also freeze what you don't eat for a later date.
*Strawberry Cardamom Bread*
Makes one 9 by 5 by 3 inch loaf
Printable Recipe
A deliciously moist bread stogged full of fresh strawberries and glazed with a tangy lemon glaze.
4 ounces unsalted butter ( 1/2 cup)
150g granulated sugar (3/4 cup)
3 large eggs
1 tsp vanilla extract
280g plain flour, sifted (2 cups)
1/2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt
1 tsp ground cardamom
(remove the seeds from green cardamom pods and grind them
with a pestle and mortar or a coffee grinder if you cannot find it already ground)
175g sour cream (1/2 cup) or plain yoghurt
55g toasted walnuts (1/2 cup), coarsley chopped
300g of fresh strawberries, chopped (1 1/2 cups)
For the glaze:
the juice of 1/2 lemon
enough icing sugar to make a drizzable glaze
Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4. Butter and lightly flour a 9 by 5 by 3 inch loaf. Set aside.
Beat the butter until softened. Add the sugar and continue to beat until light and fluffy. Beat in the eggs one at a time. Stir in the vanilla.
Whisk the flour, baking soda, baking powder, salt and cardamom together. Add to the creamed mixture alternately with the sour cream, beginning and ending with the flour. Mix only to combine. Gently fold in the chopped strawberries and the nuts.
Spoon into the prepared and bake for about 1 hour, or until the bread is golden brown and a toothpick inserted in the centre comes out clean. Let stand in the pan for 10 minutes before removing from the pan to a wire rack to cool.
Whisk together the lemon juice and enough icing sugar to make a drizzle glaze. Drizzle over the cake. Let set.
Serve warm or at room temperature. This bread also freezes very well.
I usually like to make a special breakfast at the weekend and during strawberry season these buttermilk pancakes are a real favourite of ours, especially when I serve them with my special honey and vanilla butter! The Toddster just loves these and I reckon the Toddster in your life will too!
*Strawberry Buttermilk Pancakes with Honey & Vanilla Butter*
Serves 4
Printable Recipe
In honor of fresh berries and strawberry season. Feel free to substitute other berries for the strawberries. Blueberries, raspberries and even sliced banana works well!
100g self raising flour (14 1/2 TBS)
1 tsp baking powder
25g caster sugar (2 TBS)
pinch fine sea salt
2 large free range eggs,separated
175ml butter milk (scant 3/4 cup)
40ml whole milk (3 TBS)
45g sweet butter, melted (3 TBS)
In honor of fresh berries and strawberry season. Feel free to substitute other berries for the strawberries. Blueberries, raspberries and even sliced banana works well!
a handful of fresh strawberries, chopped
First make the butter. Tip all of the ingredients for the butter into a bowl and simply beat together with an electric mixer until pale and creamy. Spoon into a small bowl and cover. Chill in the refrigerator for about an hour to firm up.
Sift the flour, baking powder, sugar and salt into a bowl. Whisk together the egg yolks, buttermilk and milk. Make a well in the middle of the flour mixture. Tip in the wet ingredients along with 15g of the butter (1 TBS). Whisk together until smooth. Whip the egg whites until they form soft peaks. Fold these into the pancake batter.
Heat a large non-stick skillet over medium heat. Brush with some of the remaining melted butter. Add 3 to 4 large spoonfuls of the batter, spacing them well apart. Scatter the tops of each with a few slices of berry. Cook for several minutes, until the surface is covered with bubbles and the bottom side is golden brown. Flip over and cook for another minute until cooked through and golden brown on the underside as well. Place onto an ovenproof platter, cover with a clean tea towel and keep warm in a low oven until you have cooked them all.
Serve hot at the table with the butter. Delicious. Crisp slices of streaky smoked bacon go very well! (It's that sweet and salty thing you know . . . )
Note: If you really want to be decadent you can add crumbled crisp meringues and then call them Eton Mess Pancakes!
You just have to have strawberry shortcake at least once or twice during the season. I showed you my mom's the other day, and here today I want to show you another delicious version which uses elderflower and black pepper. This is fabulously delicious! You pepper the berries and infuse the cream with elderflower cordial, but don't worry if you can't get the elderflower cordial, you could also use rose water and it would be just as gorgeous!
*Strawberry Shortcakes with Black Pepper and Elderflower Cream*
Serves 4
Printable Recipe
A unique and delicious twist on the traditional dessert, with the addition of snappy black pepper and a delicate elderflower cordial infused cream.
4 large buttermilk biscuits, topped with some demerara sugar before baking
(I use my recipe which you can find here)
1 pound (16 ounces) fresh strawberries
3 TBS caster sugar
freshly ground black pepper to taste
For the cream:
225ml of double or whipping cream (1 cup), well chilled
3 to 4 TBS elderflower cordial
3 TBS caster sugar
Wash the berries and gently dry them. Hull and then slice into a bowl. Stir in the sugar and some freshly ground black pepper to taste. Set aside to macerate for about 15 minutes.
Whisk the cream along with the caster sugar, until it forms soft folds. Gently fold in the elderflower cordial.
Split the buttermilk biscuits and place the bottom half of each onto a dessert plate. Top with one forth of the macerated berries. Divide the elderflower cream between each, placing on top of the berries. Top with the biscuit tops. Serve immediately.
Note: The cream can be whipped ahead of time and kept covered and chilled in the refrigerator. I do not advise preparing the berries too far ahead of time as they will become too soft and release too many of their juices. You don't want to leave them to macerate much longer than 15 minutes for optimum flavour and texture. The biscuits are best made ahead and stored in an airtight container until you are ready to use them. When baking simply brush the tops with some milk and sprinkle with some demerara sugar for a nice look and texture.
Rock Cakes may be one of Harry Potter's favourite teatime treats, but I have news for you. They are one of our favourites too, especially these fresh Strawberry Shortcake Rock Cakes! These . . . pardon the pun . . . quite simply ROCK!
*Strawberry Shortcake Rock Cakes*
Makes about 3 dozen
Printable Recipe
Tender, sweet and chock full of sweet strawberries! As with any rock cake, they are best eaten on the day, but will keep in an airtight container for up to one day.
12 ounces fresh strawberries cut into 1/4 inch dice (about 2 cups)
1 tsp fresh lemon juice
9 TBS granulated sugar, divided
8 1/2 ounces plain flour (2 cups)
2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp fine seasalt
6 TBS cold butter, cut into small bits
5 1/2 fluid ounces double cream (about 2/3 cup)
demerara sugar for sprinkling
Preheat the oven to 190*C/375*F/ gas mark 5. Line a couple of baking sheets with parchment paper. Set aside.
Stir together the diced berries, lemon juice and 2 TBS of the sugar. Set aside.
Whisk the flour, remaining sugar, baking powder and salt together in a bowl. Drop in the butter and then rub it into the flour mixture with your fingertips, until the mixture resembles coarse crumbs. Stir in the cream just until the dough begins to come together and then fold in the berry mixture until combined.
Drop the dough onto the prepared baking sheets by heaped tablespoons, leaving some space between each one. Sprinkle with some demerara sugar.
Bake for 20 to 25 minutes, until well risen and golden brown. Transfer to a wire rack to cool completely before eating. Your family will love you.
A good crumble never goes amiss. We do love our crumbles and this Strawberry Rhubarb Oat and Walnut Crumble is one of the best, I kid you not! Lashings of custard or cold ice cream . . . or if you are feeling a bit indulgent, clotted cream are a MUST!
*Strawberry, Rhubarb, Oat and Walnut Crumble*
Serves 8 to 12
Printable Recipe
This is worth waiting all year for. Delicious, delicious, DELICIOUS!
For the Crumble Topping:
3.75 ounces plain flour (3/4 cup)
2 ounces rolled oats (1/2 cup)
3.75 ounces soft light brown sugar (1/2 cup packed)
3 ounces of chopped toasted walnuts ( generous 1/2 cup)
1/2 tsp fine sea salt
2 ounces butter, melted (1/4 cup)
For the filling:
7 ounces granulated sugar (1 cup)
2 TBS cornflour
16 ounces rhubarb, cut into 1 inch pieces (a generous 6 cups)
16 ounces strawberries, cut in half (a generous 6 cups)
1 TBS pure vanilla extract
Pouring cream to serve
Preheat the oven to 190*C/375*F/ gas mark 5. Butter a large glass baking dish and set aside.
Make the crumble first. Mix the flour, oats, sugar, salt and walnuts together in a bowl. Pour the melted butter over top. Stir and press together to make a few clumps. Put in the freezer while you make the filling.
Stir together the cornflour and sugar, mixing it together well. Add the fruit and vanilla. Toss together gently to coat. Pour into the prepared baking dish. Remove the crumble from the freezer and sprinkle over the top.
Bake for 45 minutes, or until the topping is golden brown and the filling is bubbling around the edges. Cool for about 20 minutes before serving.
Spoon out into bowls to serve and pass the cream!
Note: This is best eaten on the day. You can halve the recipe quite successfully if you don't want to make that much. Chill any leftovers, wrapped in the refrigerator. They're quite nice eaten for breakfast the morning after. *blush*
This is a lovely dessert of simple pan roasted berries served warm with a nice dollop of softly whipped honey cream. Sometimes it's the simple things in life which bring us the most joy, and this certainly is one of those!
*Roasted Summer Berries, with Honey Whipped Cream*
Serves 4
Printable Recipe
One of the tastiest of summer treats!
500g of English Strawberries (about 1 pound)
2 TBS butter
4 TBS soft light brown sugar
1/4 tsp ground cardamom
For the Cream:
225ml of double or whipping cream (1 cup)
2 TBS runny honey (I like wildflower or clover)
a few drops of vanilla extract
Preheat your oven to 190*C/375*F/ gas mark 5. Wash and then gently dry the berries with some paper towelling. Hull them and if they are large, cut in half.
Whip the cream with a wire wisk until it just starts to peak. Stir in the honey and vanilla. Set aside and keep cool.
Melt the butter in an ovenproof skillet. Add the sugar and cardamom and stir to melt the sugar. Once the sugar is melted, turn off the heat and add the berries, tossing them gently to coat them in the mixture. Bang the pan into the oven. Roast for 2 to 3 minutes, give them a stir, and roast for a further 2 minutes. Remove from the oven.
Spoon the roasted berries into serving dishes and top each serving with a dollop of the honey cream. Drizzle any juices over top. Serve immediately.
We don't just eat them for desserts either. You can't beat a delicious salad, especially when it's composed of lovely ripe berries, proscuitto, rocket and mozzarella! This always goes down a real treat. The pickled shallot dressing is a winner/winner! We love THIS fresh and tasty salad!
*Strawberry and Mozzarella Salad*
Serves 4
Printable Recipe
A delicious salad, which is not only simple and quick to make but makes a great and unsual use of seasonal berries.
2 TBS Apple Balsamic Vinegar
3 TBS extra virgin olive oil
1 tsp caster sugar (fine sugar)
2 shallots, peeled and thinly sliced
Freshly ground black pepper
2 X 80g packs or Italian Proscuitto Crudo (about 8 thin slices)
1 ball of Buffalo Mozzarella Cheese, drained and torn (about 1/4 pound)
250g of strawberries, rinsed, hulled and sliced (1/4 pound)
2 X 50g packs of wild rocket leaves, washed and dried (about 4 cups, arugula)
Whisk the balsamic vinegar, olive oil, sugar and shallots together in a large bowl. Season well with black pepper. Set aside.
Divide the proscuitto between 4 chilled salad plates. Scatter with the mozzarella. Toss the strawberries and rocket into the bowl with the dressing. Toss gently to coat. Divide equally amongst the salad plates, placing it on top of the meat and cheese. Drizzle any leftover dressing over top . Serve immediately.
Note - You won't need any salt as the proscuitto is quite salty.
I hope that I have wet your berry whistle and that strawberries will be on your menu this weekend like they are going to be on ours!
Hooray for Strawberry Season!! My favourite time of year! I know we can get strawberries pretty much all year round here, with berries being flown in from Africa and Spain, but . . .
Let's be honest here though. They are not a touch on the flavour of a freshly picked home-grown English Strawberry.
The warmth of the sun still resting on it's sweet red flesh and pieces of straw still clinging to it's bright green leaves . . . ok, so you will only get that if you pick your own, but still . . .
A berry that has only just been picked and transported a few miles tastes infinitely better than one that's been flown thousands of miles and held in a cold warehouse for days before it reaches the store shelves!
I just can't get enough of them!! I love them fresh and eaten out of hand . . .
sliced and sprinkled with a bit of sugar and then doused in cream, dipped in chocolate, baked into pies and cakes, made into jam, crushed and dolloped on top of fresh scones . . .
oh the possibilities are endless!!!
One of my favourite ways is to bake them into this delicious, moist tea bread.
There is no tea in it, that is just what we call a quick bread over in North America. I reckon that's because they go so well with a cup of tea . . . in my case herbal tea . . . Mint tea is lovely with it!
It smells heavenly when it is baking . . . the cardamom is so sweetly fragrant . . . the lemon drizzle adds just an extra touch of sweetness.
All in all it is a real winner. I guarantee!
*Strawberry Cardamom Bread*
Makes one 9 by 5 by 3 inch loaf
Printable Recipe
A deliciously moist bread stogged full of fresh strawberries and glazed with a tangy lemon glaze.
4 ounces unsalted butter ( 1/2 cup)
150g granulated sugar (3/4 cup)
3 large eggs
1 tsp vanilla extract
280g plain flour, sifted (2 cups)
1/2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt
1 tsp ground cardamom
(remove the seeds from green cardamom pods and grind them
with a pestle and mortar or a coffee grinder if you cannot find it already ground)
175g sour cream (1/2 cup) or plain yoghurt
55g toasted walnuts (1/2 cup), coarsley chopped
300g of fresh strawberries, chopped (1 1/2 cups)
For the glaze:
the juice of 1/2 lemon
enough icing sugar to make a drizzable glaze
Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4. Butter and lightly flour a 9 by 5 by 3 inch loaf. Set aside.
Beat the butter until softened. Add the sugar and continue to beat until light and fluffy. Beat in the eggs one at a time. Stir in the vanilla.
Whisk the flour, baking soda, baking powder, salt and cardamom together. Add to the creamed mixture alternately with the sour cream, beginning and ending with the flour. Mix only to combine. Gently fold in the chopped strawberries and the nuts.
Spoon into the prepared and bake for about 1 hour, or until the bread is golden brown and a toothpick inserted in the centre comes out clean. Let stand in the pan for 10 minutes before removing from the pan to a wire rack to cool.
Whisk together the lemon juice and enough icing sugar to make a drizzle glaze. Drizzle over the cake. Let set.
Serve warm or at room temperature. This bread also freezes very well.
I was recently asked to participate in the Sunvil Supper Club for the month of October. For this month’s Sunvil Supper Club, they teamed up with the Swedish Tourist board to use one of their recipes to celebrate one of Sweden’s most famous culinary exports . . . the cinnamon bun.
I have a confession to make. I am not a great yeast bread baker. In fact, I would be the first one to tell you that I make great doorstops . . . but I do not make great bread. This recipe did look however, like something I could rise to. (Every pun intended!)
I realized when I first began to work through the recipe though . . . 25g of yeast . . . it was far too much, it was almost half the tin of my granulated yeast. I decided that the recipe must be referring to fresh yeast, which obviously would be quite different. And so I measured out 1 1/2 tsp of yeast which is what is in most packets of dried yeast, or 7g. I also added a bit of sugar to the milk and warmed it a bit so that it would get started properly.
Then when I was kneading it together, the dough was very, very stiff . . . and so I decided to add a bit more milk to it until I had a dough which I felt was the right consistency. Firm, but not too solid . . . and neither too sticky. Firm and smooth.
It took my dough roughly twice the recommended time in the original recipe to rise to what I thought it should in the first rising. I was very nervous about this, wondering if I had done something wrong . . . it was a nail biting, on the edge moment, but I persevered.
Rolled it out as required, spread it with butter, yada, yada, yada . . . I had severe doubts if I would be very successful with these buns, but in for a penny in for a pound.
For the second rising, I put them into my oven on the dough rise program. I still wasn't sure if these were going to turn out. Call it a lack of faith in my yeast baking prowess . . . call it whatever you want. I am not very confident when it comes to baking with yeast.
Brushed with egg and sprinkled with some candy pearl cake sprinkles . . . I baked them and wowsa, wowsa . . . I was so surprised. These turned out really nicely! Perhaps not quite as light and fluffy as the ones you buy in the shops . . . but quite, quite edible.
Todd ate three while they were still warm with his mid-afternoon cuppa . . . I feel a lot more confident about my yeast bread baking prowess.
I wonder what they will be baking in November??? Hmmm . . . the Sunvil Supper Club. I'll have to check back to see what they are doing. Fingers cross no yeast is involved!
*Swedish Cinnamon Buns*
Makes 12
Printable Recipe
A Swedish national favourite! Fabulous!
Wheat Dough:
25g yeast (I am assuming this is fresh yeast. I used
1 1/2 tsp of dried yeast)
75g butter (5 1/4 TBS)
250ml of milk (1 cup)
50g of granulated sugar (generous 4 TBS)
pinch salt
1 tsp ground cardamom
600g wheat flour (6 cups)
Filling:
100g butter, softened (scant 1/2 cup)
100g sugar (generous 1/2 cup)
4 tsp cinnamon
Glaze:
1 free range egg
2 TBS water
pearl sugar (I used sugar crystals)
In a bowl, mix the yeast and a few tablespoons of the milk. Leave for a few moments, whilst you melt the butter and combine with the remainder of the milk. Add in the yeast mixture, and then the sugar, salt, cardamom and flour. Knead the mixture until the dough is firm and smooth. (either in a machine using a bread hook or by hand) Cover the dough with a tea towel and allow to rise for 30 minutes at room temperature. (I had to add more milk to make the mixture of the right consistency. I shaped it into a smooth ball after kneading and placed it into a greased bowl, turning it to grease the top before covering it and leaving it in a warm place. Mine was left for one hour to rise.)
Once risen, briefly knead the dough again and then roll it out to a rectangle around 3mm thick. (1/2 inch). Carefully spread the dough with the softened butter. Combine the sugar and cinnamon and sprinkle it all over the top of the butter. Roll the dough up tightly along the longest edge to create a long sausage. Slice into approximately 25 rounds, 1/2 inch thick.
Place the rounds into paper muffin cases, with the cut edge facing upwards. Place onto a large baking sheet. Cover with a tea towel and allow to raise again for another hour, in a warm place until doubled in size.
Once risen, beat together the egg and water and brush the tops of the buns carefully with this mixture. Sprinkle with the pearl sugar (or more cinnamon) and bake in a 225*C/425*F/ gas mark 7 oven for around 10 minutes.
This humble sweet treat, more commonly known as kanelbulle in Sweden is a national favourite, and one that has been copied across many parts of the world. They have been covered with a layer of icing in Belgium and the United States, and filled with raisins in the UK, but those with a simple scattering of sugar on the top are the original Swedish favourite. Often made when guests are expected over for coffee, they have become so popular that in recent years it has been given its very own day – kanelbulle dag. Literally translated as ‘cinnamon bun day’, it is now celebrated in Sweden and around much of northern Europe each year on the 4th October.
On a more Festive note, it may only be the beginning of November, but Christmas will be here before we know it and once again, I have created a lovely little Christmas Cook-booklet just in time for the holidays, entitled Christmas In The English Kitchen. Larger than my previous booklets, this one is 47 pages, filled with lots of tasty recipes for everything from soup to nuts, lots of recipes to take you through the Holiday Season.
Gifts From the Kitchen. Delicious Starters, Mains, Sides and Desserts from my very own holiday kitchen. English Folklore and Traditions for the Holidays. Interspersed throughout are twinklings of my own artwork and this one even has several photographs of the food included. Inspiring Quotes, Free Printables and everything you need to know about the Christmas Celebrations in an English Kitchen.
Available for the same low price as my previous cook-booklets at only £5, this delightful little booklet will be delivered within 24 hours of receipt of your payment as a downloadable PDF, printable booklet. All who have purchased my past booklets, and this one have been well pleased, and when my readers are happy . . . that makes me happy too!!
For more information and a buy now button, please look HERE.
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