Cranberry Spice Breakfast Buns

I love entertaining around the holidays!!

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I say yes to everything and then I feel completely rushed and overbooked. Does anyone know what I’m talking about? So when I was creating these breakfast buns my number one priority was for them to taste delicious. Obviously. But it was also extremely important that they be quick + easy. Because we’re going to blink and it will suddenly be January…and then we’ll be all juice fasts and yoga pants and I GUARANTEE we’ll be wishing we ate more breakfast buns. Happens. Every. Year.

 

Let’s get to know our buns before we get begin, shall we? We start with a simple dough rich with egg yolks, butter, brown sugar and spices. It smells like heaven. Then we whip up a cranberry, jewel-toned filling that just smacks of the holidays. All the smells…All the colors...All the feels.

 

This dough is going to make your life next-level amazing. I mean it. We’re going to let our yeast do all of the heavy lifting and flavor building while we take naps, drink egg nog, paint our nails fire engine red and decorate the house with mistletoe and tinsel. In a nutshell we’re going to do a long + slow rise in the fridge and then we’re going to do a quick second rise with the aid of our oven + steam. It’s easy. We got this. Now we have more time to untangle Christmas lights and pick out wrapping paper patterns.

 

Before We Get Started…

*Buttermilk. I love buttermilk. I practically bathe in it. But I understand that you might not feel the same. So I tested this with regular milk, as well as water. Guess what? It all turned out marvvy. Buttermilk and I have a thing, so that will always be my number one go-to, but you do you.

*Temperature. Make sure your buttermilk (or water or milk) are nice and warm. Everyone suggests using a thermometer but I’m telling you right now that 99% of you will never take the temperature of your buttermilk. Am I right? So I take it for a short spin in the microwave and then stick my finger in it…if it burns my finger it’s wayyyy too hot. I’ll set it aside to cool a beat or it might kill off my yeast. You want it to be warmer than your body temperature, so that it feels like a lukewarm bath…or a blanket fresh from the dryer.

*Make Ahead. As mentioned above, the dough’s initial rise can take place over 1-4 days in the fridge which really means that the day of baking you’ll only have about 1 to 1 ½ hours max from the fridge to the table. Not bad…not bad at all.

*Adding Flour To Your Dough. It is very important when you’re mixing the dough that you are conservative with the amount of flour you add to keep the dough from sticking. Too much flour will yield a dry bun. Not good. Not enough flour and your dough will be really difficult to handle. It’s a dance.

*Muffin Tins. I put these in muffin tins because I wanted them to rise up and not out. Plus I thought they looked cute. However, you could just as easily put them on a parchment-lined baking sheet.

 

Let’s get our bake on!

 

Cranberry Spice Breakfast Buns

 

Makes 24 Petite Buns

 

INGREDIENTS

 

For the Dough

  • 1 package instant or active dry yeast, approximately 2 1/4 teaspoons
  • 1 cup buttermilk, milk or water, warmed
  • 1 stick unsalted butter, melted and cooled
  • 1/4 brown sugar
  • 3 large egg yolks, room temperature
  • 4 cups of Bob’s Red Mill all-purpose flour, you may need up to ½ cup additional flour to keep it from sticking + dusting your surfaces
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons sea salt
  • 1 teaspoon cinnamon
  • ½ teaspoon cardamom
  • 1 tablespoon vegetable oil, for the bowl

 

For the Filling

  • 2 cup fresh cranberries, coarsely chopped*
  • 1 ¼ cups packed brown sugar
  • ¼ cup pecans, finely chopped
  • 1 tablespoon ground cinnamon
  • 1 teaspoon cardamom
  • 1 tangerine or orange, zested (about 1 tablespoon)
  • 4 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted

 

*Optional: You can decorate the top of each bun with a whole cranberry for a pretty pop of color + flavor. You’ll need an additional 24 small cranberries to do this.

 

For the Icing

  • Juice + zest from 1 tangerine or orange (if your orange isn’t especially forthcoming, you may need 2 oranges to thin the icing to the correct consistency)
  • 2 cups powdered sugar
  • 1 teaspoon cinnamon
  • 1/2 teaspoon cardamom

 

INSTRUCTIONS

 1. In your electric-stand mixer fitted with the dough hook attachment, add your yeast + warmed buttermilk. Let sit for 10 minutes while the yeast gets foamy and frothy. Add the cooled melted butter, brown sugar and egg yolks and run the machine on low to blend the ingredients for 1 minute.

2. Add 4 cups of flour, sea salt, cinnamon + cardamom. Run the machine on low for 1 minute and then increase to medium for 10 minutes. Periodically add flour, no more than 1 tablespoon at a time, to keep the dough from sticking. It will have formed into a ball, with some dough sticking to the bottom of the machine. A little stick is fine. I use floured hands to get the dough out of the mixer bowl.

3. Add 1 tablespoon of vegetable oil to a large bowl and swirl it around so the interior is coated. Set the dough in the bottom of the bowl and then rotate it so that both the top and bottom are lightly coated in oil.

4. MAKE AHEAD: At this point, you can wrap the bowl tightly in plastic wrap and place in the fridge for 1, 2, 3 or (I’m not kidding) 4 days. When you’re ready to bake your buns, take the dough out of the fridge and proceed to step #6.

5. If you want to bake your buns on the same day, cover the bowl with plastic wrap or a damp kitchen towel, set in a warm, draft-free area and let rise for about 2 hour or until double in size.

6. In a medium bowl mix together your cranberries, brown sugar, pecans, cinnamon and cardamom and set aside.

7. Divide your dough into two equal-size dough balls. Lightly flour a clean surface and roll each dough ball into a roughly 12 X 9 rectangle. Try to make sure the edges are squared off and not rounded. Brush the topside of each dough rectangle with the 4 tablespoons of melted butter. Equally distribute the cranberry mixture between both pieces of dough.

8. With the long side nearest you, grab the two closest edges and fold the dough halfway up the dough, on top of itself. Then, like you’re folding a letter, grab the top edges of the dough and fold them down over the top. Square out the edges of the dough a bit. Repeat with the other piece of dough.

9. Now we’re going to cut strips of the dough log (see photo). I like to use a pizza cutter, but you could also use a very sharp knife, pastry scraper or dental floss (I’ve never had much luck with the latter, but maybe you’ll love it). Each piece should be roughly 1 ½ centimeters wide…but don’t stress out on that too much as these are rustic little buns…each with their own charm. Each dough log should yield 12 strips of dough, for a total of 24.

10. Pause a minute and boil some water on the stovetop (we’re going to use this to aid in rising the dough), place a rack in the center of your oven and a skillet on the bottom rack just beneath it. Butter or spray with nonstick two muffin tins.

11. Grab one strip of dough. Holding each end gently twist the dough (again, see photo), then we’re going to tie it into a simple knot. Wrap the dough (adding some more twists if you like) around your index and middle finger and then tuck the ends underneath as you slide it off of your fingers. This is A) a bit messy and B) an imperfect process. Go with it. As you shape the buns place them in the prepared muffin tins. If you’d like, at this point, shove a small, whole cranberry into a nook near the center of the dough.

12. Place the muffin tins in the oven (your oven should be turned off and cool) and pour the boiling water in the skillet underneath them and close the oven door. Set the timer for 30 minutes. When done, the buns should be puffed up. Remove the buns and the skillet from the oven and turn it to 350 degrees F.

13. Bake your buns on the middle rack of the oven for 14-16 minutes. You want them to be lightly bronzed and cooked through, but not George Hamilton dark. Set the muffin tins on a cooling rack. As they cool in the muffin tins, whip up your icing. Grab a medium bowl and whisk the orange juice + zest, powdered sugar, cinnamon + cardamom together until smooth and thick. You want it thin enough to drizzle off of the spoon, but thick enough that it all won’t run off of your buns.

14. Once the buns have cooled a bit, about 30 minutes, drizzle each with a spoonful of icing.

15. I hope these make it to your holiday breakfast table. Please tag me @displacedhousewife #displacedhousewife so I can see your gorgeous buns!! Let the holiday season commence! xo

 

*This post was sponsored by Bob’s Red Mill feedfeed. All opinions and thoughts are my own. A big THANK YOU to both for including me in this campaign!