Hello everybody, it’s John, welcome to our recipe page. Today, I will show you a way to prepare a distinctive dish, kanelbullar — swedish cinnamon buns. One of my favorites. For mine, I am going to make it a bit tasty. This will be really delicious.
Kanelbullar are beautiful, soft buns with a hint of cardamom and a delicate buttery cinnamon filling. I haven't tried many Swedish buns in my life, but the few I have tried left a strong enough impression on my taste buds to make me want to. This traditional Swedish kanelbullar (cinnamon buns) recipe is made with a perfectly soft and chewy cardamom dough, a buttery cinnamon-sugar filling, and twisted into cute little knots.
Kanelbullar — Swedish cinnamon buns is one of the most well liked of current trending meals on earth. It is enjoyed by millions every day. It is simple, it’s quick, it tastes delicious. Kanelbullar — Swedish cinnamon buns is something that I have loved my whole life. They are nice and they look fantastic.
To begin with this particular recipe, we have to prepare a few ingredients. You can have kanelbullar — swedish cinnamon buns using 20 ingredients and 14 steps. Here is how you can achieve that.
The ingredients needed to make Kanelbullar — Swedish cinnamon buns:
- Take Dough:
- Get 8 g instant yeast
- Get 250 ml milk
- Get 570 g white bread flour
- Get 1/2 tsp salt
- Get 5 g ground cardamom
- Get 90 g white sugar
- Get 1 egg
- Make ready 110 g butter (at room temperature)
- Get Cinnamon and almond filling:
- Prepare 200 g marzipan (or 100 g ground almonds and 100 g white sugar)
- Take 30 g cinnamon (Cassia cinnamon is recommended. This is the default type in the USA. In the UK it's sometimes called sweet cinnamon.)
- Prepare 10 g vanilla sugar (or 10 g white sugar and 1 tsp vanilla extract or paste)
- Get 150 g butter (at room temperature)
- Make ready Decoration:
- Make ready 1 egg, beaten (for glazing before baking)
- Get pearl sugar to sprinkle on top
- Prepare Syrup:
- Prepare 150 ml water
- Get 95 g white sugar
Even in Swedish supermarkets you can either get fresh or Swedes really love their kanelbullar. So much, they decided to dedicate a whole day to its existence. Now they celebrate cinnamon rolls every year. Unsurprisingly, the authentic swedish cinnamon buns in Stockholm were infinitely better than the Ikea version.
Steps to make Kanelbullar — Swedish cinnamon buns:
- Start by making the dough: add the yeast, flour, salt, cardamom and sugar to a large bowl. In a separate container beat together the milk and egg. (To speed up rising you can microwave the milk/egg mixture until lukewarm — approx 35 degrees celsius.)
- Pour the egg/milk mixture into the flour mixture and mix until roughly combined using your hands, or a stand mixer with a dough hook. Mix in the butter gradually in 3 or 4 stages. Knead the dough for 10 minutes to develop the gluten. (Initially mixture will be quite sticky, but after a minute or so it should become a smooth dough. Sprinkle on some extra flour if it seems too sticky to Knead.)
- Put the dough back into the bowl, cover and leave somewhere warm for 20 minutes for a first rise.
- Meanwhile, make the cinnamon filling: add the marzipan/almond & sugar, cinnamon, vanilla sugar/sugar & vanilla and butter to a bowl. Beat together until well combined and smooth.
- Finish the dough: Sprinkle some flour on a worktop and turn out the dough onto it. Pat the dough into a rough flat rectangle, then roll out with a floured rolling pin to a 3–4mm thick rectangle, a little taller than wide. Spread the cinnamon mixture evenly over the dough, then fold the dough in half (cinnamon inside, short edge to short edge). You should have a rectangle of dough roughly twice as wide as it is tall.
- Slice the dough: Using a pizza cutter or sharp knife, slice your dough rectangle into strips about 1cm wide, or according to the number of buns you want. (Slice from the edge opposite the fold towards the fold. I.e. slice from the long edge of your rectangle to create more short strips rather than fewer long strips.)
- Assemble the buns: To make the buns we coil a strip of dough around two fingers held slightly apart in a Bhi shape. Take a strip of dough, hold each end and gently shake and stretch it to about 30–40cm long. (If the strip is uneven, stretch wider parts more.) Holding one end of the strip between your thumb and one of the two fingers, begin coiling the strip around the two fingers. Wrap at least twice, ideally 3 or 4+ times. Each coil should create a twist in the strip….
- … After the coils, wrap the strip around the coil in the opposite direction once or twice with the strip ending on the underside. (This is decorative but also holds the coil together.) Slightly pinch the end of the strip into the bun to secure it. Place the bun on a baking tray lined with baking paper. Repeat with the rest of the strips.
- Rising the dough: (You can delay at this point by refrigerating the un-risen buns overnight before continuing with the rising in the morning.) Place the baking trays in a warm place for 1–2 hours. The buns should roughly double in size.
- (Tip: I use my oven to rise the dough: place the buns in a COLD oven with a digital instant-ready thermometer inside the oven so that you can see it though the door glass. Turn on the oven to the lowest temperature for 5–10 seconds at a time until the thermometer reads 35 celsius. Leave the oven off, but check the temperature every 20 minutes or so and re-warm as required.)
- Decorate before baking: Pre-heat your oven to 180 degrees celsius (fan). Paint beaten egg over each bun with a pastry brush, then sprinkle with your pearl sugar. - - Tip: You can make pearl sugar yourself, see: http://whilehewasnapping.com/2015/02/how-to-diy-pearl-sugar/
- Bake for about 10 minutes. I recommend watching the buns through your oven door from about 8 or 9 minutes and take them out as they develop a medium brown colour. There's quite small time window between undercooked and burnt! Transfer the cooked buns to a wire rack to cool after a few minutes.
- Prepare the syrup: While the buns are cooking add the sugar and water to a sauce pan (ideally with a heavy base) and place the pan over a medium–high heat. Once the mixture starts to boil, stir it every 30 seconds or so. After a few minutes it should thicken a little into a runny syrup. Take it off the heat. (Note that it should not caramelise — if it does you've heated it too much.)
- Paint the warm syrup over the warm buns on the cooling rack.
Here you go - a cinnamon buns recipe that's very forgiving! A Swedish cinnamon bun or cinnamon roll or kanelbullar are rolled pieces of yeast-leavened dough, coated with butter and sprinkled with a generous amount of sugar and cinnamon. The rolls gets cut into smaller pieces which resemble snails. That is the reason why the cinnamon rolls or buns are cold. A traditional Swedish pastry filled with cinnamon, butter and almonds.
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