Bringing Out The Big Buns

July 29th, 2011

If you follow us on facebook you will know that I made cinnamon buns recently.  I have decided that this year will be the year I stop freaking out about yeast and pastry.  I’m not sure about you but I often overlook a recipe if it calls for either yeast or pastry because I am scared to death of it.  No more I say!  I mean really, how hard can it be?  In most cases you have to do very little to make it work – yeast just needs time and agitation, pastry time and a light hand.  (I sound all relaxed about it here but while I was waiting for the dough to rise I managed to work myself into a right panic – hey Fi?)  I just have to keep telling myself that all good things come to those who wait – and when working with dough, that statement certainly rings true.  And these things were so worth the wait!  Warm, doughy buns laced with brown sugar and cinnamon and then topped with cream cheese icing.  So if you have an afternoon handy then tackle these delicious buns – and rid yourself of the fear of dough forever…next step, a sourdough starter and real homemade bread then a valium and a lie down!

Cinnamon Buns with Cream Cheese Icing adapted from Smitten Kitchen 

Dough

1 cup milk

3 tablespoons butter

3 and 1/2 cups plain flour

1/2 cup sugar

1 egg

1 7g packet dry yeast

1 teaspoon salt

oil

Combine milk and butter in bowl and microwave until butter melts and mixture is between 50 to 55 degrees celsius. Pour into mixer blow with 1 cup of flour, sugar, yeast, egg and salt.  Mix on low speed for 3 minutes.  Add the remaining flour and beat on low until a soft dough appears.  Add more flour if dough is too sticky.  It should form a ball and pull away from the sides of the bowl.  Turn dough out onto a floured surface and knead for 8 minutes.  I should say that I have a dough hook for my mixer which makes this part easy but it is really good for your triceps and, let’s be serious here, you are about to eat a whole whack of badness so a little 8 minute workout for your arms helps make the buns more guilt free.  Lightly oil the bowl and turn kneaded dough into it and place in a warm dry spot for 2 hours or until doubled in volume.

Filling

3/4 cup brown sugar

2 tablespoons ground cinnamon

1/4 cup butter at room temperature

Pinch of salt

Mix all ingredients in bowl and set aside.

Once dough has doubled in volume press down and transfer to a floured work surface.  Roll out to a large rectangle and spread over butter and cinnamon mixture.  Roll up to make a log and then slice into eight pieces.  and place in a greased baking dish.  Cover with cling film and place in a warm dry spot for about 45 minutes or until they have again doubled in volume.  Preheat your oven to 190 degrees celsius.  When dough has doubled in size place in middle rack of oven and cook until golden or about 20 minutes.  When done flip out onto a rack and then turn over to cool.

Cream Cheese Icing

240 gms cream cheese

1/2 cup icing sugar

2 tablespoons butter

dash vanilla extract

milk

Whisk all ingredients until smooth and combined.  Add milk to ensure a drizzling consistency.  Put into piping bag and drizzled over cooled buns.  Serve and eat immediately.

Addiction

July 19th, 2011

Many of you may not know this about me but I am addicted to cheesecake.  It is one of those addictions that allows me to function fully in my everyday life and almost everyone I know would be none the wiser that I have this serious problem.  I am lucky that there are no outward signs, no trembling hands, no dilated pupils, no incoherent speech.  But, trust me, it is a very real and dangerous addiction.  Mark my words.  It started with the cookie-cutter cheesecakes of my youth – all loud with cream cheese, lemon, sour cream and almost unbreakable biscuit base.  These cheesecakes – they took no prisioners.  I was a goner from the first bite.  Like a moth to a flame, as my taste developed so too did my need for more adventure – the addition of sour cream, a ginger nut base, fruit or chocolate adornment – nothing could stop me.  Scanning menus at restaurants, peering into glass cabinets – I was the one who would suggest dessert, offering to share without really meaning it, I would bully my companion – just order the cheesecake, I would say.  “You’re allergic to dairy?  Oh well, more for me.”  Like all addictions, it crept up on me.  Soon I was driving kilometres out of my way to have that great cheesecake, almost weeping if it wasn’t available.  Sometime during the 90s I made a break – I’m not sure how but now it is back with a vengeance.  I blame this wholly on Pearl Cafe in Woolloongabba.  Their cheesecake – whoa nelly – is it good!  Smooth, light, not too rich, room temperature, soft crispy base – it is, hands down, the best cheesecake I have ever eaten.  And I have eaten A LOT.  It has become my Friday treat – a slice of this amazing cheesecake and a Genovese coffee – what a way to start the weekend!!  I have been scouring the earth for a recipe that comes close to the beauty of this cheesecake and I think I have it nailed.  I am hoping, praying, that by making it myself my laziness will manage to curb my addiction.  I know what you are thinking – I am just fooling myself.  Tis true.

Cheesecake

Packet of good quality Anzac biscuits or 20 homemade ones

Melted butter

550gms fresh ricotta

750gms cream cheese (that is 3 x 250 grams packets)

1 cup caster sugar

2 eggs

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

Preheat oven to 160 degrees celsius.  Line the base of a 24cm spring form pan with baking paper.  Process Anzac biscuits until crumbs.  Pour into a bowl and add melted butter till they loosely come together.  Tip into spring form pan and press down evenly around the base.  Make sure you don’t press down too much or you won’t be able to cut your cake.  Use an electric mixer to beat the ricotta, cream cheese, sugar, vanilla and eggs until combined.  Pour mixture into the spring form pan and smooth the top with a spoon.  Bake in oven for 1 hour and 20 minutes or until just set and lightly golden on top.  Cool then cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate for at least 4 – 5 hours.  Take out cake and allow to come to room temperature.  I served this with strawberries because, um, well that is another addiction.

Let me know what you think?  Do you have a recipe that beats all others?  Am I the only addict out there?  Whose in for forming a support group???  We could meet over a piece of cheesecake…oh no, I guess that would be a bad idea huh?

welcome

Studio Sixty Photography is Brisbane wedding photographer Jason Starr, and studio manager Sally Ogilvie.

Well known for creative, natural, candid photographs of both local and international weddings, Studio Sixty Photography is capturing now and forever.


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