Hot Cross Buns

In my house, Good Friday isn’t ‘Good Friday’ without a Hot Cross Bun.  In an ideal world I would have posted this during the Easter holidays, but life happened … and I didn’t.  Having now downloaded all my photographs – I’ve decided not to worry about it.  After all, Easter happens annually so you’re going to need this next year.  Plus, if you leave the cross off, you’re left with a spiced fruit bun.  Nothing wrong with that.

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I suspect one of the reasons they’re such an important part of English culinary tradition is that they were ‘restricted’.  In the 16th century when sugar and spices from the New World were becoming affordable for the middle classes, Elizabeth 1 issued an edict banning London bakeries from selling spiced buns apart from funerals, Good Friday and Christmas.  I hope it’s been repealed or there are all kinds of people not observing the ‘rule of law’.

Crossed buns go back far further than that though.  Pagan Saxons slashed their buns to honour Eostre.  That’s the goddess of spring and, more alarmingly from my perspective, fertility.  (That, incidentally, is the linguistic source of our word for Easter.  The French ‘Pâques’, the Spanish ‘Pascua’ and the Italian ‘Pasqua’ all have their root in the Jewish Passover – ‘Pesach’.)

Superstitions abound.  Personally, I don’t feel any need to hang a Good Friday baked bun in my kitchen to prevent fires – but you must do as you wish.  Nor do a keep a bun in my corn to keep weevils and rats at bay – but, then, I don’t have a barn of corn and I prefer not to think about rats.  Share a bun with a friend and your friendship will survive the year.  Take a bun to sea and your ship will be safe from shipwreck.

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The cross, it seems, can signify pretty much everything from symbolising the suffering of Christ on the cross to letting the devil out.  I’m posting this on St George’s Day so I think I’ll stretch a point and say it’s in honour of the day and the English flag.

Over the years, I’ve fiddled about with pretty much everything.  I’ve played with the spices (cinnamon, saffron, mixed spice, nutmeg, mace, ginger and cardamon), added grated apple, citrus zests, soaked the dried fruit in both tea and alcohol – until the point I feel I’ve now settled.  I like my buns traditional.  Part of the charm for me is that I’m eating something my Great Grandparents would recognise.

Hot Cross Buns milk

I start by putting 300ml full-fat milk in a saucepan along with ½ cinnamon stick and 2 cloves.  Over a gentle heat, bring it to a point  where small bubbles are forming around the sides.  Remove from the heat, put a lid on it, and allow to infuse.

Hot Cross Buns 1

Meanwhile, I get my dried ingredients together.  That’s 500g of strong bread flour, 1 tsp mixed spice, ½ tsp ground cinnamon and ½ tsp freshly grated nutmeg.  I sieve everything together.  On one side of the bowl I place ½ tsp salt and on the other I empty a 7g sachet of fast action yeast.  Then I add 50g caster sugar.

Hot Cross Buns 2

Then it’s back to the milk.  Depending on how distracted I’ve been it will now be gently warm to cold.  If it’s cold I bring it back to hand-warm and add cubed cold butter.  It melts immediately.  This is the moment to fish out the cinnamon stick and cloves.

Hot Cross Buns egg

Lightly beat two eggs together in a bowl.  Mix all the dried ingredients together and make a dip in the centre.  Pour in the combined eggs and mix together.  The easiest way is to form your hand into a claw and use small circular movements to bring the dry ingredients into the eggs.  (Truthfully, I’m right-handed – but needed that to work the camera.  This blogging is tricky!)

Once the egg is incorporated it’s time to add the milk.

Hot Cross Buns mix

The end result is a sticky dough.  Tip that out on to a lightly floured surface.

Hot Cross Buns knead

And knead.  At this point the two proteins (gliadin and glutenin) in my flour are matted together.  In ten minutes time they’ll have formed themselves into ordered straight lines and be the gluten that gives my bun its structure.

Hot Cross Buns knead 2

There are lots of variations in kneading styles and they all work – with subtle differences if you really get keen.  This is a traditional English kneading style.  You stretch the dough out with the heal of one hand and then roll it back.  Give it a 180° turn and go again.  Be careful not to add too much flour.  It will get less sticky the longer you knead.  Stop when you’ve got a smooth, elastic dough.

I tend to spritz a clean pyrex bowl with oil and place my dough to prove, covered, at room temperature.  If you need to slow things down you can pop your bowl in the fridge.

Hot Cross Buns 3

This is where the magic happens.  Yeast is a living thing and the holes are carbon dioxide supported by a web made up of all that hard-won gluten.  You know you are done when a gentle poke gives you an indent which recovers halfway-ish.

Hot Cross Buns fruit

And then it’s the dried fruit.  I choose sultanas, currants and candied peel.

Hot Cross Buns candied peel

Candied peel can be hard to find it you don’t want to use one of those nasty ready-cut supermarket tubs.  I get mine (and a whole heap of other good things besides) from here.

I find it easiest to add the dried fruit and candied peel whilst the dough is still in the proving bowl.  Knead until everything is evenly distributed and set it aside to prove again.  Another hour or so and you are ready to shape your buns.

Hot Cros Buns 4

I weigh my dough and divide between 15.  It’s about 75g.

Hot Cross Buns roll

And shape into balls.

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Lay them out onto a baking sheet, cover with a clean tea towel, and leave to prove for the final time.  Another hour – and the buns will just be touching.

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Then it’s time to pipe the crosses.  My top tip is to start piping away from the bun.  Let the paste hug the sides as you work across in a grid.  I make my paste quite loose, as I prefer a less dominant cross.  (75g flour mixed with 7 tbsp of water.)  If you want a more defined cross add less water.

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Bake in a  pre-heated oven – 220ºC/425ºF/Gas Mark 7 – for about 25 minutes.  Aga:  On the rack on the floor of the Roasting Oven for 15-20 minutes.

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Warmed and sieved apricot jam is my first choice.  Second, is 1tbsp caster sugar dissolved in boiling water.  Glaze the buns immediately they come out of the oven.

(If you want to get-ahead, it’s better to freeze the buns unglazed.  Thaw and reheat for 5 minutes.  Then glaze.)

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Warm from the oven, all they need now is lashings of salted butter.  Tomorrow they are better toasted.

Eat.

Hot Cross Buns 13Hot Cross Buns

Makes 15

  • 500g strong plain bread flour
  • 300ml full-fat milk
  • ½ stick of cinnamon
  • 2 cloves
  • 1 tsp mixed spice
  • ½ tsp ground cinnamon
  • ½ tsp freshly ground nutmeg
  • ½ tsp salt
  • 50g caster sugar
  • 50g cold butter, cubed
  • 7g sachet of fact-action yeast
  • 2 eggs, lightly beaten
  • 50g candied peel
  • 75g currants
  • 75g sultanas
  • 2 tbsp apricot jam, warmed and sieved

Gently heat 300ml of milk with the cinnamon stick and cloves until bubbles appear around the edge.  Leave to infuse.

Put the flour, ground cinnamon, nutmeg, caster sugar, fast-action yeast and salt into a large bowl.

Add the cubed butter to the warm milk and let it melt.

Mix the dried ingredients together and make a dip in the centre.  Add the eggs.  Shape your hand into a claw and with circular motions bring the dried ingredients into the egg.  Then add the hand-hot milk and continue mixing until you have a sticky dough.

Transfer to a lightly floured surface and knead until smooth and elastic.  Place the dough into an oiled bowl, cover and leave to prove for about an hour.

Add the dried fruit whilst still in the bowl and knead until combined.  Cover and leave to prove a second time.  Another hour.

Weigh the dough and divide into equal sized pieces.  Use a cupped hand to shape the buns and place on a lined baking tray.  Cover and leave to prove for a final hour.

Pre-heat the oven to 220ºC/Gas Mark 7/425ºF.  Make a flour/water paste – 75g flour to 7 tbsp water – and pipe the crosses.  Bake for 20-25 minutes until golden brown.  Aga:  On the rack on the floor of the Roasting Oven for 15-20 minutes.

Glaze with apricot jam whilst still warm.

Eat.

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Boozy Christmas Mincemeat

You can’t really have an English Christmas without dried fruit and booze.  Certainly not a Dickensian epic – mince pies, smoking bishop (that’s alcoholic), good will to all ….

And you need to get going now.

If ‘mincemeat’ is a concept outside of your cultural Christmas norm, I should explain modern versions contain no meat.  They did used to – and the further back you go the more ‘meaty’ they are.

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Home-made mincemeat is such a simple thing to make.  Even if the idea of a pantry full of preserves comes under the heading of ‘life’s too short ..’, you might want to make an exception for this.

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This is my ‘master’ recipe.  Mincemeat is such a ‘forgiving’ thing to make you can let your imagination fly.  Within the framework of dried fruit, apple, booze and some kind of fat you have endless possibilities.

Christmas Mincemeat 2

I grew up in a house with an almond tree in the front garden and I know ‘cracking’ them is a horrendous task.  So, I don’t do that – but I’m not going to pay extra to buy them blanched. Bring a pan of water to the boil, add the almonds.  1 min.  No more, you don’t want to soften the nut.

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Drain and rinse with cold water.  You can see the ‘skin’ has wrinkled.

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Dry with a clean tea-towel.  You can be as vigorous as you like ..!

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It’s an easy job to slip the almond from the skin.

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You will never again pay a premium for blanched almonds.

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Love it or hate it – ‘mixed peel’.  I love it, but I buy whole mixed peel and chop it myself.

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It’s a completely different product to those nasty little supermarket tubs of ‘mixed peel’.

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You can vary the dried fruit to suit your mood.  I’m using the ‘standard’ – currants, raisins and sultanas.  There’s no reason why you shouldn’t use figs, prunes, cherries …

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Traditionally, the fat is beef suet.  You can, of course, grate your own – or you can buy a packet.  That’s what I do – 200g – I don’t like silly little bits left in a packet so use it all.  There are vegetarian alternatives.  Or you can use butter – freeze and grate.  Butter tastes wonderful, but it’s not a ‘looker’ when it cools.  If you’re the one going to cook with it – when it will return to unctuous loveliness – then it’s a good choice, but not if you’re going to give it as a gift.

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The grated zest of one orange.

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And the zest of one lemon.  Then add the juice of both.  Why would you waste it?

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I chop my almonds by hand as I like the nutty chunks in my mincemeat.

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Peel, core and chop the apple.  I like chunks, but you can grate it.

Then, it’s the spices.  Cinnamon.  Mixed spice.  Nutmeg.

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Add the sugars.  Then the alcohol.  I’m adding whisky.  Brandy, Rum, Disaronno, Cointreau are all lovely alternatives.  Mix.  Clean hands are better than a spoon ..!  Let it all steep in a bowl, covered with cling-film for 24 hours.

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Then pot in warm preserving jars and leave to mature for 2-6 weeks.  After that, it’ll keep for about 3 months.  (Longer and the apple may start to ferment.)

After 2-6 weeks you are ready to bake ..

Yum.

Christmas Mincemeat 16Boozy Christmas Mincemeat Makes 3 500g Le Parfait jars.

  • 250g/2 cups currants
  • 250g/2 cups raisins
  • 250g/2 cups sultanas
  • 200g-250g/ 2 cups Bramley apples, peeled, cored and shopped into small pieces
  • 200g/2 cups suet
  • 150g/1 heaped cup blanched almonds, roughly chopped
  • 175g/1 cup demerara sugar
  • 50g/third cup dark muscovado sugar
  • ½ rounded teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 1 rounded teaspoon ground mixed spice
  • A grinding of nutmeg
  • 1 lemon, rind and juice
  • 1 orange, rind and juice
  • 125g/1 cup mixed peel, chopped into dice
  • 250ml whisky

Mix together the dried fruit, chopped apple, suet, chopped almonds,, mixed peel,  cinnamon, nutmeg and mixed spice.  Grate the zest of a lemon and orange into the bowl, then squeeze and add the juice. (A warmed fruit gives more juice.)

Add the whisky and give everything a good mix.  Clean hands are easiest.  Cover and leave for 24 hours, giving it all an occasional stir.

Pot the mincemeat up into sterilised jars.  Leave to mature for 2-6 weeks and use within 3 months – or freeze.

Bake.

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