Monday, May 12, 2008

Warm Buns


Another rainy day blog post: here is Saffron Buns recipe I was just drooling over on Design Sponge (photo from DS), courtesy of Delicious Days. I "think" I can make these:

Sunny Saffron Brioche
yields 12 muffin-sized brioches
Active time: about 30 minutes
Baking time: about 20 minutes

500g (appx 2 cups) all-purpose flour
20g (1.4 tablespoons) compressed (fresh) yeast (or 7g- 0.5 tablespoons- active dry yeast)
200g (7 ounces) milk, warm
~1/4 tsp saffron
75g (5.3 tablespoons) white sugar
1 pinch of salt
75g (5.3 tablespoons) butter, soft, plus extra for greasing tray and brioche
2 large eggs

All ingredients need to be room temperature, make sure to take them out of the fridge early enough.

Sieve the flour into a bowl, make a little depression in the middle and crumble the compressed yeast into it. Heat the milk until lukewarm. Grind the saffron threads in a mortar - it is easier, if you add a teaspoon of sugar – then add the saffron sugar to the warm milk, it will instantly turn bright yellow. Pour as much milk into the well as necessary to cover the yeast crumbs, then stir the yeast-milk mix once or twice. Cover the bowl with a kitchen towel and let this sponge rise for about 10 to 15 minutes in a warm and cozy spot, the surface will start to look bubbly.

Add the remaining ingredients (saffron milk, sugar, pinch of salt, butter, eggs ) and knead well, either manually or with your kitchen machine until the dough can be easily removed from the bowl (non-sticky). If it still feels too sticky, add some more flour, only one tablespoon at a time. Again, let the covered bowl rest in a warm place for at least an hour, the size of the dough should almost double.

Preheat oven to 200°C (390°F) and grease the cups of a regular muffin tin (12 holes) with butter. Knead dough one more time and toss on a floured pastry board. Cut in equal pieces and form little snow ball sized dumplings (I prepared a model, trimmed it until it had the perfect size and weighted it afterwards. The rest of the dough I cut into equal pieces, each around 70g.) Reserve a small amount of dough for the little balls to top the brioches and to ensure typical look.

Fill each cup of the tin with a dough ball, then poke it with the handle of a wooden spoon or your finger, this is where you place a tiny little dough ball – hey, it’s all about the look! Melt two tablespoons of butter and carefully brush the soon-to-be-brioches. Cover with foil and let rest a final time, 15 to 30 minutes should do just fine. Bake at 200°C (390°F) for 18 to 20 minutes or until the tops turn golden brown. Cover with parchment paper if the tops get too dark too fast. Remove from the oven, carefully release them from the muffin tray and brush them with a little melted butter if desired, giving them a nice little extra glow. Enjoy for breakfast or whenever the time is right for a treat!

2 comments:

Fiona said...

Sounds delicious, but as soon as I saw the picture of some really weird looking food I thought, "This has Cathy written all over it!"

Cath said...

Fiona, you know me too well - they are so cute, bubbly and yellow, with powdered white on top! How could I resist?! I am hungry.