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Adventures in bakery - hot cross buns
Using Delia's recipe I made a good start by forgetting to add the yeast, only remembering at this point:

So I was hot and cross by this stage. Unlike the buns. Haha. I left it there and began all over again, making a new batch of dough. Luckily I had lots of everything. While the new dough was rising, the idea of wasting all that other dough really began to get to me, so I decided to make some Easter flatbreads. I just squashed the dough out into flattish discs and cooked it with a little bit of butter in a pan. I broke my favourite spatula - I snapped it! Clearly I don't know my own strength.

They were pretty nice actually, for a flatbread. Eaten during Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. I never realised how much make up Johnny Depp wore in that film. Finally, the buns were ready:

I made the crosses just by cutting into the dough, but this method failed almost totally. Visually they are a bit of a mess. Delia's suggestion is to use 'strips of wet pastry'. Right.
Verdict: 'quite nice'. They tasted great and the inner dough was lovely, but I think they were cooked too long or I made them too small, or perhaps the yeast was old because they were a bit tough on the outside, where I wanted them to be more squidgy. I glazed them with water and sugar and that helped a bit.
Not bad for a first go round, but I'm not wowed. It would've been more successful as a loaf, I think.
So I was hot and cross by this stage. Unlike the buns. Haha. I left it there and began all over again, making a new batch of dough. Luckily I had lots of everything. While the new dough was rising, the idea of wasting all that other dough really began to get to me, so I decided to make some Easter flatbreads. I just squashed the dough out into flattish discs and cooked it with a little bit of butter in a pan. I broke my favourite spatula - I snapped it! Clearly I don't know my own strength.
They were pretty nice actually, for a flatbread. Eaten during Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. I never realised how much make up Johnny Depp wore in that film. Finally, the buns were ready:
I made the crosses just by cutting into the dough, but this method failed almost totally. Visually they are a bit of a mess. Delia's suggestion is to use 'strips of wet pastry'. Right.
Verdict: 'quite nice'. They tasted great and the inner dough was lovely, but I think they were cooked too long or I made them too small, or perhaps the yeast was old because they were a bit tough on the outside, where I wanted them to be more squidgy. I glazed them with water and sugar and that helped a bit.
Not bad for a first go round, but I'm not wowed. It would've been more successful as a loaf, I think.
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Mmmm, buns. Buns are good whatever shape they end up.
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These look really good, and I am really hungry right now. ;_;
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Oooh, how very tasty-looking and -sounding!
The recipe that I had seen for these previously (the 1960s Time-Life volume Cooking of the British Isles) recommended rolling small bits of dough into slim ropes and pressing them onto the top of the buns, with dabs of water to make the crosses adhere, if needed - I think this may be similar to what the "wet pastry" idea meant.
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Three things I've come to conclude in my various attempts. First, I agree with those who advocate using slim strips of the dough to form a cross - every cutting method I've tried inevitably produces rolls like yours which, while rather attractive (in my opinion) aren't really "crossed". Also, cutting increases the surface area which can lead to greater dryness, which brings me to point two: traditional hot cross buns only ever seem to be soft and squidgy when hot. While I love them fresh from the oven (and for perhaps 20 minutes thereafter) as soon as they've come to room temperature, the density and hardness become rapidly unappealing. I'm sure there must be a recipe for which this is not the case, but myself, I've yet to find it. To revive a set of cooled buns, wrapping tightly in foil and reheating in a low oven seems to work pretty well, though, so it's not like you have to eat the entire batch right away or waste it :). And finally, for soft exteriors rather than hard crusts, I find that dipping the buns in glaze the moment they emerge from the oven (and as mentioned above, not cutting the crosses) seems to yield a pretty tender exterior.
As an aside, your hot cross flatbread looks weirdly yummy. Sorry to hear about your poor spatula, though. :)
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someone once said, trying is half the battle.
and for a first time, rather looks good
i have never tried bread.
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And ... hot cros buns ARE hard to make! And your's look really yummy in any case! I'm sorry I have no other helpful things to say here!
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Also, randomly, Easter Biscuits have finally made it to Scotland! Yay! (I'd been missing them so badly, last year I was reduced to making my own).
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