Important notes: I use certain products from King Arthur Flour.com when I bake and I have stuck with them for years because it works for me. I like to use SAF Gold Instant Yeast for sweet bread dough and I also have the SAF Red for regular bread dough, because I can store them in my freezer forever and it still works fine and I don't have to let it come to room temperature. I've had this yeast for almost 18 years and I've kept it in the freezer until I need it. It never goes bad. NOTE : This is not a plug for their products, seriously, I'm not getting anything out of this from the King Arthur Flour company. I'm just telling you what I use here in my kitchen. So, if you have something that works for you, go ahead and tweak my recipe to make it easier for whatever works better for you.
First, before you get things started, proof the yeast. This is most important because if you want a nice rise from your dough you will want to proof the yeast to wake it up so it starts to do it's magic right away. This recipe calls for 2 1/2 teaspoons of active dry yeast. So in a small mixing bowl add the yeast to 1/4 cup of warm water, about 110 degrees F. If the water is too warm or hot it will kill the yeast. You need to feed the yeast so add 1 teaspoon of sugar to that and stir. Let this sit for about 5 to 10 minutes while you get the dry and wet ingredients together and prepped.
Second, you should know this for all baking of bread recipes, sweet bread dough rises a bit slower than the usual bread dough because of the higher sugar content. So let the dough rise and don't rush it. Just let this dough rise until it's double in size in a warm place, covered with plastic wrap and a kitchen towel.
Yeast proofing in the bowl - halfway up the bowl at 3 minutes. It almost filled the bowl at 7 minutes. |
Second, you should know this for all baking of bread recipes, sweet bread dough rises a bit slower than the usual bread dough because of the higher sugar content. So let the dough rise and don't rush it. Just let this dough rise until it's double in size in a warm place, covered with plastic wrap and a kitchen towel.
This recipe makes 16 - 1 1/2 inch thick cinnamon buns or 20 - 1 inch thick rolls.
The Dough
flour mixture and proofing yeast on the right side |
wet ingredients added to dry I mixed this mess with a spoon and then my hands |
turned out dough ready to knead |
Ready to cover and rise - this bowl is 15 inches wide |
** This is an optional item. I use the powdered milk (not the Carnation powdered) because it adds richness to my sweet dough. Makes it taste exceptionally good too.
The Filling
While the dough is rising, take out 1 stick of unsalted butter and let it come to room temperature. Then in a medium bowl sift together 2 to 3 tablespoons of cinnamon (it depends on how much you really want, I use 2 tablespoons) and 1 cup of packed brown sugar. Make sure the brown sugar is flaky and there are none of those tiny hard nuggets.
3 times the size I started with ready to roll out |
Spreading the cinnamon sugar over the butter |
After you have rolled it out to the size you want, take the stick of room temp butter and mash it into a bowl with a spatula, if it is still not soft enough put the butter into the microwave oven for 2 to 3 seconds then add 1 teaspoon of vanilla and mix it as best you can and then smear the butter mixture with a rubber spatula onto the dough, covering the dough completely.
Then pour the cinnamon/brown sugar mixture onto the buttered dough and move it around lightly so that it covers all of the butter. Use clean dry hands to do this. Don't worry about excess sugar mixture, just sprinkle it on top of each rolls before baking
Now, wash your hands and make sure they are dry. start at the side left or right nearest you and roll and pull the dough little by little as you go down the line. Don't be in a hurry. just roll and pull slightly on the dough. When you have a one-inch thick dough snake, just roll the dough log until the whole thing is rolled up into a long tube. Pull the tube longwise just a little bit. No need to seal the dough along the roll when done rolling because you will tuck the ends under the buns as you cut them. Take a sharp knife and cut the ragged ends off and reserve.
Cut the dough log in half and then position the dough logs together like an equal sign and start making even width, cuts. However thick that you want the buns to be is what will be the final bun count baked. I like the buns I make to be 1 1/4 inches wide.
That's almost two of my fat fingers wide. Yeah, I like big buns and I can not lie. . .
I measure out with 2 fingers and cut the dough |
Okay, in a greased baking aluminum pan or deep glass baking pan,
take the cinnamon buns one by one and tuck the end piece slightly under the bun and place the buns about a finger width apart because you will be covering them with plastic wrap and letting them rise again for 30 minutes to an hour in a warm place. They will get big.
If you want to wait and bake the buns the next morning or later in the day, just put the buns in the refrigerator covered with plastic wrap. When ready take them out and let them come to room temp and rise in a warm place.
Now preheat your oven to 400 degrees F and take the plastic wrap off the buns and bake on the center rack in your oven for about 14 minutes depending on your oven. Keep an eye on them because they can brown fast which means hard crunchy rolls. They should come out nice and puffy but browned slightly.
on the left of the picture I have tucked the end of the dough of each roll under to make it look nicer. |
before the final rise |
Now preheat your oven to 400 degrees F and take the plastic wrap off the buns and bake on the center rack in your oven for about 14 minutes depending on your oven. Keep an eye on them because they can brown fast which means hard crunchy rolls. They should come out nice and puffy but browned slightly.
baked for 14 minutes |
Let them cool for about 15 to 20 minutes in the pan then take a knife and cut them out of the pan one by one and place on a serving tray or plate.
In a medium-small mixing bowl take 8 ounces of room temperature cream cheese, 1 stick of softened unsalted butter, 1 tablespoon of vanilla extract and 1/2 to 1 cup confectioner's sugar and mix slowly with an electric mixer. You can add more confectioner's sugar depending on the sweetness you prefer. The consistency is soft and smearable without tearing the cinnamon buns.
Ice the tops of the individual buns generously. place on the serving plate and serve warm or store in the refrigerator until ready to pig out. This is a really sweet treat so be advised if you are diabetic.
I couldn't wait - I ate one of the end pieces DAYUM GOOD! |
7 comments:
oh jayzus, I wanna lick the pictures on the screen! you are a master baker! I bet your house smells so good while those bake!
Thanks for the recipe. My hubby loves them, but I should not eat them.
They look delicious.
Love all the tips too.
I've updated my weekly shopping list! Sweet rolls in the future!
OMG those look delicious! I'm on the next plane to Texas -- save one for me!
those look amazing.now I"m hungry..
Awesome thank you so much Leanna! I'm going to be making this for sure and I'll let you know how they turn out! I will have to make a small change though, confectioner's sugar gives us tummy troubles but I have a recipe for an icing with brown sugar, yogurt, maple syrup and vanilla. I use that for my cinnamon crunch knots. They look so good, and way to go with the instructions! Very easy to follow!! :)
Looks so good! My mouth is watering! Thanks for the detailed recipe! You've got great nails girl! Big Hugs!
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