• About Me
  • Coaching
  • Work with me
  • In media

Saffron Trail

healthy vegetarian cooking

  • Home
  • Breakfast
  • Salads
  • Nutrition
  • Food & Travel
  • Home
  • Breakfast
  • Salads
  • Nutrition
  • Food & Travel
Baking, Breakfast, Snacks

Bread baking tales and recipe for cinnamon rolls

August 12, 2012

7
Shares

The high point of July was this artisan bread-baking workshop most generously organised by Breadworks Boulangerie. We were hand held (literally) through this process of bread kneading, shaping and baking by master artisan baker, Maurice Chaplais from UK. It was so much fun messing around with flour, yeast, butter and other baking enthusiasts to help with the sticky business. We got to take home the gorgeous stuff we baked-challahs, baps, scottish mist and a most decadent chocolate rum tart. It was also the first time I worked with fresh yeast.

 You may call it a strong smell, but I’ll most definitely call it an aroma, which mellows and infuses every corner of your home as you bake with this. Call it a stupid coincidence, but I came back home from the workshop and my hands were desperate to get kneading some bread and every batch of yeast at home died on me. I had a painful wait as I ordered fresh yeast online, and the very evening it came home, I got started.

Top L-R: Anadama bread, Whole wheat loaf /Bottom L-R: White Sandwich loaf, Fig walnut loaf from Masterchef Australia

Now, the recipes we learnt in the workshop asked for accurately weighed ingredients, while my favourite cookbook-How to Cook Everything Vegetarian by Mark Bittman has a section on leavened breads with all metric measurements. So I got started with two sandwich loaves, one white and other, part whole wheat. The next was an Anadama bread, which uses part cornmeal, because in my baking spree, the flour in the bin was all scraped out and I need half a cup more and this recipe fit the bill perfectly.

That was three loaves in two days.

Yesterday presented me with a perfect opportunity to bake something that’s been playing on my mind for a while, the cinnamon roll. We had a farewell tea party for a neighbour and bingo, I wanted to bake these. Again, a Mark Bittman recipe with slight modifications, turned out pillowy soft, just the right amount of sweetness and that hit of decadence from the sugary almond glaze. These were my babies, lovingly baked and of course I loved them. But when my friend, Bharath, who never offers praise unless truly deserved raved about them after taking a bite (in stone cold sober state), that these were the BEST rolls he’s eaten, I knew these were deserving of good pictures and then a post with a recipe, may be.

So here goes

Rolls before baking, after baking and after glazing (Instagram pics).

Recipe for Cinnamon Rolls with glaze

Bread baking tales and recipe for cinnamon rolls

The high point of July was this artisan bread-baking workshop most generously organised by Breadworks Boulangerie. We were hand held (literally) through this process of bread kneading, shaping and baking by master artisan baker, Maurice Chaplais from UK. It was so much fun messing around with flour,
Print Recipe Pin Recipe
Cook Time 1 hour hr
Total Time 1 hour hr
Servings: 5 serving
Course: Breakfast
Cuisine: American
Ingredients Method

Ingredients
  

  • 3.5 cups all purpose flour
  • 4 tsps 2 tsps yeast instant dry yeast fresh or instant dry
  • 1 tbsp sugar
  • 2 tsps salt
  • 2 eggs
  • 2 tbsps butter (soft)
  • 1 cup milk (3% or whole, not skimmed)
For filling
  • 2 tbsps cinnamon ground
  • 3/4 cup sugar
  • 2 - 3 tbsps butter
For brushing
  • 2 tbsps butter melted
For glaze
  • 1/2 cup sugar powdered
  • 2 - 3 tbsps milk
  • drop almond vanilla extract few extract or

Method
 

  1. In a large bowl, combine flour, crumbled yeast, sugar, salt, butter with your finger tips until they are like crumbs and well mixed.
  2. Make a well in the center, add the eggs one by one, mixing well with finger tips.
  3. Add the milk to this, combining with wooden spoon or fingertips to get the dough together. 
  4. Once it forms a ball, transfer to lightly floured counter and knead for 10 minutes with heel of your palm, folding it back and again stretching with heel of palm. In the end, make a smooth ball with floured hands. Place in oiled bowl, covered properly, to rise to at least double the size (1-2 hours) in a warm, draught free place.
  5. Combine the cinnamon and sugar in a small bowl and keep aside.
  6. Butter a baking dish 9X13 inches or use two smaller trays and keep aside.
  7. Once dough has risen to double, remove from bowl on lightly floured surface. Punch down and lightly roll out using a rolling pin, roughly 15 inches in length and 9 inches wide.
  8. Cover the entire surface with the cinnamon sugar, lightly pressing down the coating into the dough with finger tips.
  9. Roll along the length into a tight jelly-roll. Cut into 1" slices, placing them cut side up on the greased baking tin. Keep a little space between rolls, to allow for the second rise.
  10. If you baking in a single large baking tray- place them in 3 rows of 5 rolls to make 15 rolls.
  11. Cover and keep aside for 45 minutes. Or you could place the entire tray inside of a big plastic shopping bag, twist the end and tuck it under tray to have a warm, draught free environment.
  12. Preheat oven to 175 C. Once the rolls have doubled / risen, brush with melted butter and place them in a middle rack and bake for 20-25 minutes until tops are golden.
  13. Meanwhile, in a medium bowl, whisk the powdered sugar, milk and extract until you get a glaze of pouring consistency. While the rolls are hot, using a spoon, drizzle the glaze criss cross all over the rolls.
  14. Eat/serve warm straight from pan.
by Nandita Iyer 
8 Comments

About Nandita Iyer

View all posts by Nandita Iyer

Related Posts

  • Breaking Bread with Pesto Pull Apart Loaf
  • unusual-mango-basil-grilled-cheese-sandwichMango Basil Grilled Cheese Sandwich
  • 4 Lentil Pancake ( Paruppu Adai )
  • Baked Crispy Chana Dal Chaat
previous post: Insanely Good Chocolate Almond Brownies
next post: Julia Child’s Yogurt Berry Tart

Comments

  1. Anonymous says: August 12, 2012 at 5:16 am

    What a baking marathon, you were on! The finish is precious when you get rave comments from discerning tasters. We missed being in the same city all the time. May be when you are here visiting we should have a bake off.

    Reply
  2. Anonymous says: August 13, 2012 at 12:56 am

    Love Anadama bread. I like the coarse texture 🙂 Good to see so much bread baking!

    Reply
  3. Anonymous says: August 31, 2012 at 4:50 am

    Hey Nandita! Met you at the Breadworks workshop, and so happy to see that you’ve put all that inspiration to good use. Those breads look gorgeous! Ruchira

    Reply
  4. Anonymous says: September 6, 2012 at 10:56 am

    Hi..Nandita! It’s tempting ……….http://www.valuemart.co.in

    Reply
  5. Anonymous says: September 18, 2012 at 7:57 am

    Hi Nandita…stumbled across ur blog from somewhere and i’m hooked!! have been looking for a good cinnamon rolls recipe and this looks amazing. just one question…which yeast do you use? I’ve tried using the ones u get in supermarkets here (chennai) and none of them have turned out well. Is there a specific brand you use?

    Reply
  6. Anonymous says: October 5, 2012 at 6:02 pm

    hi nandita……visited for the first time ….i’m impressed….would like to have more recipes of eggless cakes and biscuits..

    Reply
  7. Anonymous says: January 23, 2013 at 7:23 am

    send cakes tochennai, cakes to chennai, cakes to chennai delivery, cakes homedelivery to Chennai with http://www.chennaicakesdelivery.com.OnlineShopping of cake for chennai delivery is secured and assured with us. You canorder onlinecakes to chennai and all around India. Send birth day cake, wedding cake,anniversary cake with us.Same day cake delivery to Chennai. Our cakes areDelicious and freshly baked, made by the finest chefs in the country. Delight your loved ones with this simple anddelicious combination.

    Reply
  8. Anonymous says: May 3, 2014 at 10:35 am

    Hi Nandita…visited u r blog after some time. I am exalted to know that u r also in whitefield. If possible I will definitely try to attend u r bread breaking session. I tried this recipe here. I have two questions.Did u dissolve the dry instant yeast in water first? Because I did not and had a tough time getting the dough to raise. Also I used brown sugar for the filling. I found that it oozed out when baked. Should I have used white sugar

    Reply

Leave Your Comments Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating





Click for details

Buy my books

Amazon Storefront

Subscribe to my newsletter

Subscribe to My Channel

Archives

Categories

Featured Recipes

  • Salad Recipes
  • Tamil Vegetarian Recipes
  • Summer Recipes
  • Millet Recipes
  • Airfryer Recipes
  • Eggless Baking Recipes
  • Vegetable Recipes
  • Kerala Recipes

AS FEATURED IN

Copyright © 2025 · Saffron Trail by Nandita Iyer · Privacy & Disclosure Policy · Hosted & Managed by Host My Blog

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.OKPrivacy Policy