Easter time as a child was always hot crossed buns season (Although
now you seem to see them all year round, which is a shame in my opinion). I don’t
remember my mother ever making them, it doesn’t mean she didn’t, it just means
that my only memory, is of the ones she bought. She would toast them and slather
them in butter and jam – and I used to look forward to Easter time so much.
Easter egg hunts through the woods, pot luck lunches at church, or caravanning,
usually in Holland. A lot of my childhood was miserable, so those special
moments, the good memories are the ones I cling on to and they all have something to do
with my mother. She is a very special lady, at times completely and utterly
barmy, as mad as a hatter, but she is wonderful. She
doesn’t seem to care what people think of her, from an outsider looking in, she
looks liberated. My mother is kind, caring, generous, she always has time to do
something for someone else, even when she really doesn’t. She is loopy, she
jumps around like a crazy woman, regularly has hair like Einstein, she has no
sense of fashion, from any era, let alone today’s but she looks beautiful all
the time. She has something wrong with one of her hips and when she stands for
too long it causes her pain, so she stands on one leg like a flamingo because
it seems to elevate the pain. She works so hard all of the time that if she was
to sit down for five minutes, she’ll fall asleep mid-sentence, usually hers!
She probably won’t thank me for this, but she turns 60 this year, she goes to
bed between 0200 and 0300, and then she gets up again at 0500 and 0700 at the
latest. She works hard every day usually doing something for someone else that
includes me. My mother is my saviour my voice of reason, my
friend and I love her dearly. She is crazy though, seven years ago she jumped
out of a perfectly good aeroplane for charity, now that is crazy!
Hot Crossed Buns
Makes 12
500g Plain flour
60g caster sugar
7g yeast (one sachet)
1 tsp salt
1tsp ground cinnamon
1/2tsp ground nutmeg
150ml lukewarm milk
75ml lukewarm water
1 beaten egg
90g raisin
60g chopped mixed peel
Sunflower oil for greasing
60g short crust pastry
Glaze
2tbsp sugar
2tbsp water
1. Empty your yeast
into a small bowl, add a teaspoon of the sugar and a tbsp of the water, mix
well and leave to stand, next sift the flour into a large bowl, then gently
stir in the sugar, salt and the spices. Now make a well in the middle and pour
in all the wet ingredients, the fruit and the yeast. Using a knife mix gently
into a soft ball.
2. On a floured surface, knead the dough until
smooth and form into a nice elastic round.
3. Lightly oil a bowl
and place your dough into it, cover with lightly oiled cling film and leave in
a warm place to rise, until doubled in size. It should take about an hour to an
hour and a half, but I have found this is not an exact science, sometimes it
could raise quicker and other times slower. (once I left it too long and it
started to collapse).
4. When it has risen,
punch down in the centre of the dough, and turn it out onto a lightly floured
surface, knead again for 2 or 3 minutes so it is smooth and elastic, you should
then be able to make about a dozen balls of dough.
5. Roll out your pastry
so it has a 5mm thickness, using a sharp knife, cut 24 narrow strips, 2 for
each bun, then using a little water secure them into a cross on top of the bun.
6. Lightly oil two
baking trays, and place your buns on them with plenty of space between each
one, they are going to double in size, it doesn’t matter if they are just
touching once they have risen but you don’t want to squish them together. Cover
with cling film and once again place somewhere warm to rise, they should have
doubled.
7. Preheat your oven to
220˚C/425˚F and then bake your buns for 15 mins, they should be well risen and
browned on top.
8. Meanwhile make the
glaze by placing all the glaze ingredients into a small saucepan, and heat,
until all the sugar is dissolved. Once the buns are properly baked remove them
from the oven and put them onto a wire rack, whilst they are still hot brush
the glaze over them and then allow to cool.
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ReplyDeleteTried to fix a typo... ;)
DeleteYour "Hot Cross Bun" recipe looks wonderful Bex, if I decide to make some I will definatley use your recipe! I'm much more a cook than a baker though, something about dough rising that doesn't work well for me! ;) I loved reading about your mother and I'm sure you have a lot of her character traits... ~ The teal looks great! If I use a recipe would you mind me sharing it on Facebook? I often share recipes there but want to make sure it's allright first... :) xo
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