Saturday, April 10, 2010

Good Friday 2010

This year we decided to take part in the old tradition of making Hot Cross Buns for Good Friday; well I decided to, the rest of the family just got shoo-ed out of the kitchen until I was done. They only complained a little though, because the buns were delicious! 
 Here they are fresh out of the oven!
I read through all the Hot Cross Bun recipes on Allrecipes.com to get ideas, and then settled on using the Fruit Bread recipe from my breadmaker cookbook. I used the Dough setting instead of the Loaf, and added the dried fruit and spices for traditional HCB. I was not very organized this year so we didn't get a chance to give any out on Good Friday, but we did donate two plates of buns to the MOMS bake sale on Saturday, and made short work of all the rest at home! 
I made a simple Powdered Sugar/Ricemilk/Vanilla Extract glaze to go over the top, but I had the hardest time getting it thick enough! I think I started out with 1/2 cup Ricemilk and had to use close to 2 cups of powdered sugar to get it thick enough for it to show up white on top of the buns, and I nearly burned up my cheap immersion blender getting it mixed. I ended up with a lot more glaze than I actually needed, but the buns looked and tasted great in the end.

A few things I would like to change next year: 
  •  Make or prepare the rolls in advance so that we could enjoy and give them out on Good Friday.
  • If using rapid-rise yeast, form the dough into rolls before it has a chance to rise in the machine. 
  • Brush the egg wash down the sides of the rolls so that the golden color doesn't stop half way down.
  • Make a thin frosting instead of a glaze for the crosses. 
  • Glaze or frost the rolls on a cooling rack to avoid the frosting puddles that made the rolls sticky.


3 comments:

  1. brilliant notes of advice...hindsight they say :)

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  2. Hot cross buns! Those are just darling. I just wanted to encourage you on your lower sugar goal, and I think you'll love the coconut oil as a good alternative to butter in recipes since you're dairy free. High birth weight babies are often really, really healthy, so don't worry about the digits, just the health. You're right on reducing sugar being good for baby, too! :) Katie

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  3. I love making notes on my blog after a project, it makes it so much easier to remember what I did when I go to make it the next year!

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