There must be a hundred different cinnamon roll recipes, from the French pain aux raisin to the British Chelsea buns to Philadelphia style sticky buns to the Midwest American truck stop cinnamon rolls that are as big as your head.
Here is the recipe I grew up with and still bake most often.
Make the dough by combining all of the ingredients and kneading until smooth, 5 to 10 minutes. The dough should be tacky but not sticky. If it is too moist add a handful of extra flour. Place the dough in a bowl, cover the bowl, and set aside to rise until it has doubled in size (roughly an hour).
While I'm waiting for the dough to rise, I like to plump the raisins by pouring very hot water on them and letting them sit in the water for 15 minutes before draining them. This keeps them moister when you bake them, but this step isn't necessary if you are short on time.
Sometimes I prepare my filling as you'll see below: by combining the softened butter, cinnamon, and brown sugar in a bowl so they can be spread together. Again, this isn't necessary: you can simply spread the butter and sprinkle the sugar and spices as best as you can by hand. It is up to you.
When the dough is risen, roll it out on a floured surface.
Spread the filling on the risen dough.
Also sprinkle the raisins on top.
Roll the dough up, trying as best as you can to prevent the filling form spilling out. Slice the roll into 12 even pieces.
A tip from the Department of Slow Learners: I have no idea why it took me 25 years to figure out this trick, but it did. In the past, when I needed to slice something like this into 12 even pieces, I would eyeball it and then start carving one slice at a time off the end. Inevitably as I reached the final couple of slices I'd have either too much or too little left, so the final couple rolls are never the same size as the rest.
The trick I learned is to first slice the roll into two even pieces. Then slice slice each of these pieces into two even pieces, so you have four pieces total. Each of those pieces only needs to be cut twice more for you to have twelve pieces. Eyeballing how to cut a small piece of dough into three even pieces is much easier than eyeballing a twelfth of a large piece of dough.
Moving on....
Now that your roll is cut into twelve even pieces, place those pieces in a baking pan.
Cover the pan and let the buns rise for another 45 minutes to an hour until they've roughly doubled in size.
Bake them at 375 for 20 to 25 minutes. Be careful about oven positioning and overbaking: because there is quite a bit of sugar in the filling it is quite easy to burn the bottom of the rolls. I find that the second rack from the top works best in my oven, and I try to pull them out as soon as they look baked.
Let the rolls cool for 20 minutes or so before glazing them. The glaze will thicken as it cools, but if it is extremely runny feel free to add some additional powdered sugar to thicken it up.
There is it.
I'd be interested in hearing about other people's favorite Cinnamon Roll recipes/techniques. Please share your recipes, ideas, and photos.
Here is the recipe I grew up with and still bake most often.
Cinnamon Rolls
Makes 12 rolls
Dough:
16 oz all-purpose flour
10 oz warm milk
2 teaspoons instant yeast
2 tablespoons melted butter
1/4 cup sugar
1 teaspoon salt
Filling:
4 tablespoons melted butter
1 cup raisins
1/2 cup brown sugar
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1/2 cup choppped walnuts or pecans
Glaze
1 cup powdered sugar
1 tablespoon lemon juice
Make the dough by combining all of the ingredients and kneading until smooth, 5 to 10 minutes. The dough should be tacky but not sticky. If it is too moist add a handful of extra flour. Place the dough in a bowl, cover the bowl, and set aside to rise until it has doubled in size (roughly an hour).
While I'm waiting for the dough to rise, I like to plump the raisins by pouring very hot water on them and letting them sit in the water for 15 minutes before draining them. This keeps them moister when you bake them, but this step isn't necessary if you are short on time.
Sometimes I prepare my filling as you'll see below: by combining the softened butter, cinnamon, and brown sugar in a bowl so they can be spread together. Again, this isn't necessary: you can simply spread the butter and sprinkle the sugar and spices as best as you can by hand. It is up to you.
When the dough is risen, roll it out on a floured surface.
Spread the filling on the risen dough.
Also sprinkle the raisins on top.
Roll the dough up, trying as best as you can to prevent the filling form spilling out. Slice the roll into 12 even pieces.
A tip from the Department of Slow Learners: I have no idea why it took me 25 years to figure out this trick, but it did. In the past, when I needed to slice something like this into 12 even pieces, I would eyeball it and then start carving one slice at a time off the end. Inevitably as I reached the final couple of slices I'd have either too much or too little left, so the final couple rolls are never the same size as the rest.
The trick I learned is to first slice the roll into two even pieces. Then slice slice each of these pieces into two even pieces, so you have four pieces total. Each of those pieces only needs to be cut twice more for you to have twelve pieces. Eyeballing how to cut a small piece of dough into three even pieces is much easier than eyeballing a twelfth of a large piece of dough.
Moving on....
Now that your roll is cut into twelve even pieces, place those pieces in a baking pan.
Cover the pan and let the buns rise for another 45 minutes to an hour until they've roughly doubled in size.
Bake them at 375 for 20 to 25 minutes. Be careful about oven positioning and overbaking: because there is quite a bit of sugar in the filling it is quite easy to burn the bottom of the rolls. I find that the second rack from the top works best in my oven, and I try to pull them out as soon as they look baked.
Let the rolls cool for 20 minutes or so before glazing them. The glaze will thicken as it cools, but if it is extremely runny feel free to add some additional powdered sugar to thicken it up.
There is it.
I'd be interested in hearing about other people's favorite Cinnamon Roll recipes/techniques. Please share your recipes, ideas, and photos.
Comments
I made zolablue's cinnamon rolls last night and discovered how little I know about enriched doughs. I was also reminded how nice it is to have ingredient measures in weights rather than volumes.
My dough was way too soft and sticky. I could handle it to roll it up, but when I tried to cut it, it stuck to the knife badly and lost all "rollness."
Cinnamon "rolls"
Has anyone converted her recipe to weights?
BTW, I used Floyd's sugar-lemon juice frosting. Very nice and simple. And the rolls are delicious. They are just hardly "rolls."
David
look incredible! I measured and compiled notes with weights, however, I haven't had time to give my weights a test run. I will post when I can give it a shot. At the beginning of the dough, I thought, eekkk, (my mashed potatoes had water on top and I mixed it in not thinking about the excess water) anyway, I did have to add a couple teaspoons of flour and I think I started with 700 grams. I will post as soon as I have tried it again.
Those look really tasty! I want to try the cinnamon chips next time.
Eli
David
I will get those posted soon. Also, I must think that someone needs to experiment on the recipe and make certain that this is a versatile dough. I see many variations. I will take one for the team and make a couple more batches using weights as measure and try to "master" the recipe. Someone has to do it, I guess. (I hate having to take this on (sigh). I will report back! My keys are sticking from confection sugar already!
Eli
David
If it has to be, it has to be (sigh). As for the physician clearence, I shall take them a basket of them on my visit. He will see my dilemma.
E
David
that they are cinnamon rolls. Let them think they are some fantastic very yummy creatation you have made! If they ask, you can look all intelligent and tell how you came up with this new recipe idea....Who's gonna know :) It is a sticky dough, so just add a little bit of flour. Just enough to make it handle-able. You want them to be as light and fluffy as possible. I have no doubt you will master it if you choose. You are such a master with dough already. Your work is wonderful! You give the rest of us someone to look up to and say "my bread is gonna look like that someday"
Audra
David
The dough for the cinnamon buns that I make is ridiculously slack. But it does make the best cinnamon buns! (Or at least, we think so.)
[url=http://etherwork.net/blog/?p=177][/url]
Our Cinnamon Buns recipe is based on the recipe for [url=http://www.ualberta.ca/ALUMNI/history/traditions/82autrecipe.htm]University of Alberta Tuck Shop buns[/url] You could try knotting Zolablue's cinnamon buns the way we do for the Tuck Shop buns.
Excerpt from the shaping directions in our recipe:
-Elizabeth
(going to look at Zolablue's recipe...)
edit: wow, Zolablue's look quite different from ours! The dough looks closer to the consistency of challah dough. Which gives me another idea. Maybe try using stronger flour when making Zolablue's cinnamon rolls. Perhaps the higher gluten would make the dough slightly less slack and sticky.
David:
Next time you make these, put the dough in the freezer for a short time before you cut them. Should help.
Made this today, and LOVED it! The bread was really light, which is always nice for a cinnamon roll. I only did one thing different, I used honey instead of sugar.. turned out perfect! (oh and did not add rasins)
Next time though I will make a cream cheese icing.. Not that with this icing it was not good(it was!) I just like cream cheese icing better :P
I learned from a friend of mine that owns a bakery to take dental floss and use it to cut the roll. I use that method every time I make cinnamon rolls and they come out perfect with out being squashed!
I wish I'd never seen this page. I'm in BIG trouble. Today I made Floyd's dough, Firepit's filling and both of their toppings (to see which I liked best). Very simple process, and a truly sinfully delicious result.
I haven't tried the lemon glaze yet on the rolls, but when I tasted the two toppings, I wanted to combine them to make lemon-creamcheese frosting. Maybe next time.
Glenn