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sourdough fruit buns

28 Nov 2016

I've always been a firm believer in the old adage, if at first you don't succeed then try, try again. This is the third time I've made these delicious fruit buns. The recipe isn't the problem, I just couldn't get them to brown in my new oven.



While looking at sourdough recipes on the internet, I saw lots of people advocated baking their bread in a covered dutch oven. I have 2 covered dishes so I wondered if it were possible to bake the fruit buns the same way. I figured the only way to find out was to give it a go.



I made the ferment 2 days before using it and the dough 36 hours before baking to help develop the sourness in the dough. Once the buns were shaped I transferred them to a baking paper lined low cast iron casserole dish then covered it for the first rise.



I baked the buns on the lowest rack in my oven, covered for 15 minutes then uncovered for 15 minutes. The end result - perfectly baked fruit buns. They smelt and tasted divine fresh from the oven topped with butter and jam.




If you don't have a low covered casserole dish I'm sure using a baking paper lined cast iron skillet or a pizza tray covered with a metal bowl would work.





Here's the recipe for you, adapted from this Mike McEnearney recipe. For all my recipes, I use a 250 ml cup and a 20 ml tablespoon. The eggs I use are 60 grams and my oven is a conventional gas oven not fan forced, so you may need to reduce your oven temperature by 20°C.

Sourdough Fruit Buns - makes 12. You'll need to begin this recipe 2-3 days ahead

Yeast Ferment
65g bread and pizza flour
¼ tsp instant yeast
2½ tbs warm water

Bun Dough
500 g bread and pizza flour
370 mls lukewarm water
2 tsp fine salt
100 g each sultanas and currants
200 mls boiling water
1 Earl Grey tea bag
2½ tsp ground cinnamon
1 tsp ground nutmeg
½ tsp each ground allspice and cloves
Finely grated zest of 1 orange

Easy glaze
¼ tsp gelatine
2 tbs strained orange juice
1 tbs sugar

To serve
Butter and jam

For the yeast ferment combine the flour, yeast and warm water in a large bowl. Cover with plastic wrap and set aside overnight to ferment. If you prefer a sourer tasting bun, return the ferment to the fridge for another 24 hours.

When you’re ready to make the buns gradually combine flour with 370 mls lukewarm water in a bowl. Slowly add to the yeast ferment and combine. Cover with plastic wrap and set aside for 30 minutes to rest. Add the salt and gently knead in the bowl until the salt is incorporated. Cover with plastic wrap and set aside for a further 30 minutes to rest. Working in the bowl, slightly stretch out one quarter of the dough and fold towards the middle, then take the opposite side and fold into the middle. Turn bowl 90 degrees and repeat with the remaining sides to complete a total of 4 folds. Cover with plastic wrap and set aside for a further 30 minutes. Repeat the folding and resting sequence 2 more times.

Meanwhile place the dried fruit, tea bag and 200 mls boiling water in a bowl. Set aside for 2 hours or until fruit is plump. Remove tea bag and drain fruit well discarding the liquid. Add the spices, zest and fruit to the dough and knead until evenly distributed. At this stage I put the dough back into the fridge, covered the bowl and left it overnight.

The next day remove the dough from the fridge and set it aside to rest in a warm place for 2-3 hours or until risen by one-third. Turn out dough onto a floured work surface. Knead for 1 minute, and then divide into 12 equal pieces (about 100g each). Use your hand to roll each piece on the work surface to form a round bun. Place buns close together on a baking dish lined with baking paper that has a close fitting lid. I used my Le Creuset covered casserole dish. Cover the dish with the lid and refrigerate overnight to ferment.

The next day, remove the buns from the fridge. Stand at room temperature for 1 hour or until slightly risen and soft to the touch.

Preheat oven to 220ºC (conventional). Place the covered dish into the oven and bake for 15 minutes or until the buns have risen slightly. Remove the cover from the dish, raise the oven temperature to 240ºC and bake for a further 10- 15 minutes or until dark golden.

Meanwhile while the buns are in the oven, make the glaze. Sprinkle the gelatine over the orange juice in a small saucepan until softened, then dissolve over a low heat. Add the sugar and stir until dissolved.


Remove the buns from the oven and then slide the baking paper and buns onto a wire rack. Brush hot cross buns with glaze and stand the buns in a warm place, such as near the opened door of the turned-off oven. This will help to set the glaze. Serve warm with butter and jam.




Christmas is just around the corner. Last weekend I started baking for Christmas Week, starting Monday December 19. There will be 5 days of Christmas baking featuring both desserts and festive bread recipes. I spent most of Saturday making the family Christmas pudding and Sunday I made an absolute showstopper of a cake.

I hope you're looking forward to this annual event.

See you all again next week.

By for now,
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sourdough hot cross buns

28 Mar 2016

I just love a good hot cross bun.



Most Easters coincide with Passover putting hot cross buns off the menu but not this year. I'd not planned to make hot cross buns this year but when I saw this Mike McEnearney recipe in the April 2016 issue of Delicious Magazine I went out and bought currants and raisins and set to work.



This is not a 'I'll just whip these up' kind of recipe as you need to make the ferment at least 2 days in advance. There are also many, many steps in the recipe so by Sunday morning I ran out of puff and swapped the glaze for a very simple version. The buns have no added fat or sugar and are certainly more solid than the traditional hot cross bun but boy are they tasty warm from the oven, topped with some butter and a dollop of home made jam. I cooked half the batch and I've frozen the remaining buns to bake when the need arises.




I haven't quite sorted out my oven and even at my oven's maximum temperature, the buns took 40 minutes to bake. The bottoms were well cooked but the tops weren't even close to brown so I had to resort to the fan grill setting to colour the tops resulting in slightly crunchy crosses. You'll also notice I piped a less than traditional cross. It's a family thing.




Here's the recipe for you which you'll have to start 2 days ahead. For all my recipes, I use a 250 ml cup and a 20 ml tablespoon. All eggs are 60 grams and my oven is a conventional gas oven not fan forced, so you may need to reduce your oven temperature by 20°C.

Sour Dough Hot Cross Buns - makes 12

Yeast Ferment
65g bread and pizza flour
¼ tsp instant yeast
2½ tbs warm water

Bun Dough
500g bread and pizza flour
370 mls lukewarm water
2 tsp fine salt
100g each sultanas and currants
200mls boiling water
1 Earl Grey tea bag
2½ tsp ground cinnamon
1 tsp ground nutmeg
½ tsp each ground allspice and cloves
Finely grated zest of 1 orange

Glaze
juice of 1 orange, strained
100g caster sugar
2 tbs water

Piping Mixture
⅓ cup (50g) bread and pizza flour
½ tbs caster sugar
50 mls water

To serve

Good quality cultured butter

For the yeast ferment combine the flour, yeast and warm water in a large bowl. Cover with plastic wrap and set aside overnight to ferment. The next day gradually combine flour with 370 mls lukewarm water in a bowl. Slowly add to the yeast ferment and combine. Cover with plastic wrap and set aside for 30 minutes to rest. Add the salt and gently knead in the bowl until the salt is incorporated. Cover with plastic wrap and set aside for a further 30 minutes to rest. Working in the bowl, slightly stretch out one quarter of the dough and fold towards the middle, then take the opposite side and fold into the middle. Turn bowl 90 degrees and repeat with the remaining sides to complete a total of 4 folds. Cover with plastic wrap and set aside for a further 30 minutes. Repeat the folding and resting sequence 2 more times.

Meanwhile place the dried fruit, tea bag and 200mls boiling water in a bowl. Set aside for 2 hours or until fruit is plump. Remove tea bag and drain fruit well discarding the liquid. Add the spices, zest and fruit to the dough and knead until evenly distributed. Cover bowl and set aside to rest in a warm place for 2-3 hours or until risen by one-third. Turn out dough onto a floured work surface. Knead for 1 minute, and then divide into 12 equal pieces (about 100g each). Use your hand to roll each piece on the work surface to form a round bun. Place buns close together on a baking tray lined with baking paper. Cover tray with a clean tea towel and refrigerate overnight to ferment.

The next day, remove the buns from the fridge. Stand at room temperature for 1 hour or until slightly risen and soft to the touch. Meanwhile to make the glaze, place sugar and 2 tbs water in a small saucepan over a medium heat. Stir until dissolved and then boil without stirring for 3-4 minutes until a golden caramel. Remove from heat and then carefully stir in strained orange juice. Set aside to cool.

For the piping mixture, place the flour, sugar and water in a bowl. Whisk to combine. Transfer to a piping bag fitted with a small plain nozzle and pipe lines horizontally across the buns then vertically until each is decorated with a cross.

Preheat oven to 220ºC. Splash a little water in the oven to create steam (this helps the bun expand before forming a crust) and then bake for 10 minutes or until slightly risen. Reduce oven to 200ºC and bake for a further 7-10 minutes until dark golden. Remove from the oven and then slide the baking paper and buns onto a wire rack. Brush hot cross buns with glaze and serve warm with butter.



I used this much easier glaze recipe from The Margaret Fulton Cookbook.

Glaze Recipe
¼ tsp gelatine
2 tbs warm water
1 tbs sugar

To make the glaze, sprinkle the gelatine over the water in a small saucepan. When softened, dissolve over a low heat. Add the sugar and stir until dissolved. Remove from the heat. Remove the buns from the oven and brush with the glaze while still hot. Stand the buns in a warm place, such as near the opened door of the turned-off oven. This helps to set the glaze.



The buns were a lot of work but they were delicious.

I hope you all enjoyed the Easter break with your families. I had a busy weekend catching up with friends and visiting Farmer Andrew in Dungog, so there was lots of baking and driving involved.

See you all again next week,

Bye for now,

Jillian
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Blood Orange Marmalade and Almond Thumbprint Cookies

15 Sept 2014



Those 2 pots of blood orange and vanilla marmalade have been sitting on the kitchen bench untouched since they were made. Early on Sunday morning I remembered these raspberry thumbprint cookies I made back in 2012 were originally made with marmalade and now that I've belatedly decided I do like marmalade, I decided it was time to revisit the recipe.



I just made one small but important change to the recipe. I figured oranges go really well with almonds so instead of using hazelnut meal, I ground some unskinned almonds in the food processor to make whole almond meal. I don't know if you can get whole almond meal in your grocery store, but I can't. Instead I ground the whole almonds with a spoonful of sugar to help the grinding process.



Here's the recipe for you.

Blood Orange Marmalade and Almond Thumb Print Cookies, adapted from this recipe by Mike McEnearney of Kitchen by Mike fame.

Makes 16
Ingredients

125 gm softened butter
50 gm (½ cup) pure icing sugar, sifted plus extra to serve
½ tsp vanilla extract
110 gm (¾ cup) plain flour plus extra for dusting
45 gm cornflour (cornstarch)
35 gm ground whole unskinned almonds or whole almond meal
blood orange marmalade

Method

Beat butter and sugar in an electric mixture until light and fluffy, add vanilla and beat to combine. 

Sift the plain flour and cornflour together. Stir the flours in followed by the whole almond meal to form a soft dough.


Wrap in plastic and refrigerate the mixture for 1 hour.


Preheat oven to 180ºC/350ºF. Line 2 oven trays with baking paper.


Roll the mixture into walnut size balls (20 gm) between floured palms.  Flatten the biscuits with the base of a floured drinking glass leaving space for biscuits to spread. Bake for 5 minutes. 


Make an the indent in the cookie with the handle of a wooden spoon, then spoon a teaspoon of the marmalade into the indent.


Return the jam filled cookies to the oven and baked until they're golden, a further 
10-15 minutes. 


Cool on tray, then dust the cookies with icing sugar and serve.





These are best served on the day they're made but they're still pretty good a few days later.




I crumbled one of the cookies for the photograph (I call it my 'stunt' cookie) which of course meant I had to eat it, because I can't tolerate waste. These cookies are really, really good. I think they're probably even better than the raspberry jam version and that's saying something. Just in case you were wondering, I picked up the platter on Saturday at Small Spaces in Redfern while I was out furniture shopping.

As I spent last weekend cooped up in a Physiotherapy Department attending a workshop, this past weekend I went out sourcing furniture and light fittings for my living room refurbishment. I bought a new sofa and installed new blinds soon after I came back from my holidays. I've now decided I need to change the rug in the living room, the light fitting and the side tables and would like to buy a storage unit as well. I actually think I'm close to making a decision about the rug, the side table and floor lamp and as my middle name is 'indecisive', that's quite a big statement. Next month the living room is being repainted so the refurbishment is definitely on it's way.


I hope you all had great weekends. See you again next weekend,

Jillian


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raspberry thumbprint cookies - passover week

8 Apr 2014

When I looked back through my recipes, this recipe for thumbprint cookies was prime for passover renovation. I looked in my cupboards, rifled through the freezer where I'd stored the superfine matzo meal and I had everything I needed. After I assembled the ingredients, it literally took me 3 minutes to make the dough in the food processor before running out the door to get to the gym.



Rather than raspberry jam I used the homemade summer berry jam I made a few months ago. The original recipe used marmalade so just use whatever jam you prefer. The recipe also calls for vanilla extract. The regular kind can't be used during Passover so if you can't find a Passover version in the supermarket, you could omit the vanilla or use home made vanilla sugar instead (vanilla pod stored in jar of sugar). Similarly there is no Passover friendly icing sugar so you can make it at home by blitzing regular sugar in the food processor.



Here's the recipe for you -

Passover Raspberry Thumb Print Cookies - makes 16
125 gm unsalted butter
50 gm caster sugar
½ tsp Passover vanilla extract 
1 cup Passover baking mix (equal quantities superfine matzo meal and potato flour)
⅓ cup hazelnut meal
Raspberry jam
Optional - homemade icing sugar

Preheat oven to 180ºC/350ºF (conventional). Line 2 oven trays with baking paper.

In a food processor combine the butter and sugar and vanilla. Add the baking mix then the hazelnut meal and process until a soft dough forms. Refrigerate the dough for 1 hour.

Roll into walnut size balls (20 gm) between floured palms. Flatten the biscuit with your palm then press your thumb into the centre of each biscuit to form an indent. Place on the tray leaving space for biscuits to spread and bake for 5 minutes.

Reinforce the indent with the handle of a wooden spoon, and then spoon ½ teaspoon of jam into the indent. Return the jam filled cookies to the oven and baked until they’re golden, another 10-15 minutes. 

Cool on tray, then dust with home made icing sugar if desired and serve.



I took the cookies into work and the girls really loved them because they were both delicate, not too sweet and 'just right' as one colleague declared. You know sometimes, the passover version is better than the original.

I hope you get the chance to make these,

See you tomorrow,

Jillian
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raspberry thumbprint cookies

24 Oct 2012

As promised, now that I'm back home in Sydney I've returned to the kitchen to do some baking. The latest issue of Gourmet Traveller was waiting for me when I returned and one of the features was by Mike McEnearney of Kitchen by Mike fame.



I photographed Kitchen by Mike a few months ago but was too busy snapping to try any of the food. I scanned through the featured recipes in the magazine and decided to make a version of Mike's Marmalade and almond jammy dodgers. I don't know if it's a typo because the recipe doesn't include almonds at all but uses hazelnut meal instead. I don't like marmalade, so I thought raspberry jam would be the perfect pairing with the hazelnut cookie.



I made the dough in my food processor and as I was meeting a friend for an early brunch, I left the dough in the fridge for a few hours before I baked the cookies. The dough is very soft so I think refrigerating it was a good option anyway.



The original recipe suggests filling the baked cookies with the jam, but I wanted to bake the jam a little to set the filling. Once I made the indents in the cookie dough, I filled the holes with the jam then returned the cookies to the oven to bake until they were golden.



Do you like my new little pot? I bought it from the Canvas Chelsea store when I was in New York last week. It was the last one left in the shop, so we had to take it out of the window display.



I decided to taste test the cookies before taking them into work to share them with my work mates. They were absolutely delicious so now I'm wondering whether I should be selfish and keep them all to myself.

Here's the recipe for you.
Raspberry Thumb Print Cookies printable recipe
(adapted from a recipe for Marmalade and almond jammy dodgers by Mike Mc Enearney, Australian Gourmet Traveller October 2012) - makes 16

Ingredients
125 gm softened butter
50 gm (½ cup) pure icing sugar, sifted plus extra to serve
½ tsp vanilla extract
110 gm (¾ cup) plain flour plus extra for dusting
45 gm cornflour
35 gm (⅓ cup) hazelnut meal
Raspberry jam

Preheat oven to 180º C/350º F. Line 2 oven trays with baking paper.

Beat butter and sugar in an electric mixture until light and fluffy, add vanilla and beat to combine. Stir in the flours, then the hazelnut meal. Roll into walnut size balls (20 gm) between floured palms, leaving space for biscuits to spread. Flatten the biscuit with your palm and bake for 5 minutes.

Press your thumb into the centre of each biscuit to form an indent and bake until golden (10-15 minutes). Cool on tray, spoon jam into each indent then dust with icing sugar and serve.

Changes I made.
· The original recipe was made using home made Seville orange marmalade. I don’t like marmalade so I used raspberry jam instead.
· Once the dough was made, I refrigerated it for a few hours as it’s very soft.
· I baked the dough for 7 minutes and made the indent in the cookie with the handle of a wooden spoon, then spooned a teaspoon of the jam into the indent.
· I returned the jam filled cookies to the oven and baked until they were golden, another 15 minutes in my oven.
· Once the cookies were cooled, I shielded the jam with a teaspoon before dusting the cookies with icing sugar because I thought they looked better that way.
· I had one with a cup of tea and it was seriously yummy! The cookies are best served the day they're made but they're still delicious the following day.

Meanwhile, I'm thinking of doing another week of Christmas treats like I did last year. If you have a recipe you'd like me to bake, style and photograph for the blog please email a copy of the recipe to me, including the source of your recipe. My email address is located at the top of the blog and in the 'about me' section of the blog. I'm sorry not to provide a link in the text but that's apparently how I get targetted by spammers. They're unrelenting.

I'm really looking forward to seeing what you come up with.

Bye for now,

Jillian

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