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Give your Easter baking a lift

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Dan Lepard Dan Lepard | 16:55 UK time, Wednesday, 28 March 2012

At Easter, religious traditions cross paths with the changing seasons at a time when you see life revving-up in the countryside. You might see parallels when you make hot cross buns at home as the milder climate causes dough to rise full-throttle into airy roundness. In springtime, nature feels driven at increasing speed and there鈥檚 a rush to the blossoming in the garden that feels upbeat and inspiring.

Hot cross buns

Many countries have vast Easter traditions, dwarfing Christmas in comparison, and the rising of dough is a metaphor that fits Easter recipes well. And by adding the last of winter鈥檚 hoard of luxury 鈭 ingredients such as butter, spices, dried fruit, honey and sugar 鈭 you鈥檙e making a confident sign that summer鈥檚 abundance will soon be back with us, and that the significance of Easter is worth some expense.

Around the world, home kitchens offer a wide selection of Easter baking ideas:

- a sweet yeast cake found in Eastern and Central European baking
- a sweet bread from the Czech Republic
- an Armenian spiced plaited bread
- a dove shaped sweet bread from Italy
- found in Bulgaria, Macedonia, Romania and Albania, a rich sweet raisin bread
- a Portuguese bread that is often sweetened
- a hazelnut-flavoured sweet bread
Hot cross buns - the English tradition, though now popular all over Britain.
- Russian sweet bread
- a fruit Dutch bread
- a Croatian bread
- from Germany, Austria and Slovenia
- a Greek plaited bread wrapped around, or served with, a coloured egg
- from Lithuania
- from Argentina

Easter is also a time that, traditionally at least, brought families back together, which means Easter baking recipes are often generous in size and meant for sharing. The modern approach is to minify the shape, so when baked they don鈥檛 seem like such a daunting carb-fest on your plate. Little babka, individual paasbrood and p茫o doce are tempting and easy to share. But if you must go big, think of it as a meal. Mugs of coffee or hot chocolate, a Colomba cut on the table and served with butter 鈭 it all adds to a sense of sharing.

La Colomba, meaning dove, is the most well-known of Italy's many Easter cakes.

The lowdown on high-rising sweet dough

Butter, sugar and spice aren鈥檛 ideal bedtime-buddies for yeast. So before you start adding more of that trinity, here鈥檚 a little information on what you need to keep your Easter baking light and delicate.

The fat in butter inhibits yeast from pulling in the nutrients and sugars it needs to grow and multiply: a butter-rich yeast dough might rise well at the beginning but appear to slow down after that. Though the enzyme released by the yeast cells that causes aeration in the dough, zymase, isn鈥檛 particularly slowed by fat, there just won鈥檛 be that much of it present鈥 unless you help it along. Warmth, time and extra yeast will get it moving faster:

鈥⑻ Keeping your dough around 28C, near a radiator or somewhere else warm helps speed the yeast activity up. This applies to the bulk dough before shaping and the final rise.
鈥⑻ Leaving the dough overnight in the fridge before shaping helps the final crumb become more tender when baked and allows yeast to multiply a little, but the dough will still need warmth and a long rise before baking.
鈥⑻ If your dough still seems still too slow, try increasing the yeast or even doubling it next time.

Though a little sugar helps the activity of yeast, too much slows it down. This applies to sugar in all its variations, including honey and syrups (artificial sweeteners excluded). For example, if you place 400g of strong flour in a bowl with 300ml warm water, and a teaspoon each of fast-action yeast and salt, the dough made will be ready for shaping after an hour. If you add 25g sugar to the recipe the dough will be ready after 45 minutes, slightly faster than normal. But add 50g sugar to that recipe, and the dough starts to take longer and will be ready after 2 hours; add 100g sugar, and it will need 4-6 hours before shaping and even then will bake very heavily. But there are tricks you can use to keep your dough sweet tasting and light:

鈥⑻ Think 鈥榮weet flavour鈥 rather than sugar. Finely grated citrus zest, vanilla, cocoa, coconut, or candied fruit (glac茅 ginger or chocolate chips) all trick the brain into thinking something is more sugar-rich that it is.
鈥⑻ Layer sweetness through the dough: roll it thinly, spread with nutella, custard, or sprinkle with brown sugar and spice, then roll it up, twist it, or cut it in pieces to stuff roughly into your baking tin so they weld together when baked.
鈥⑻ Ice it: a simple glac茅 icing or sugar syrup, flavoured even better, turns plain butter dough into something distinctly cake-like.

Spices can accelerate or slow the action of yeast in dough. Tiny amounts appear to increase the activity of yeast, but some spices like cinnamon and clove will slow the yeast down if used in large amounts. Now, if you鈥檙e after richly spiced hot-cross buns, this is a bit of a blow but there are things you can do:

鈥⑻ layering and icing spices in your dough is the easiest. Make a sugar glaze with cinnamon and brush this over your buns, or make a ginger icing and glaze your Babka or plaited dough with it.
鈥⑻ use food grade spice oils or flavourings, available from cake decorating or bakery ingredient suppliers
鈥⑻ make an overnight ferment or sponge, and add some spice to that. This will give the yeast more time to multiply before you make your dough.

Give it some style

Tiny sugar flowers, sprinkles of nibbed sugar or even big white silk bows have a place in baking, and Easter is a good time to play with decoration. With the exception of architects and puritans, some fuss around your bundle of hot cross buns or Colomba shows a little pride in what you鈥檝e baked.

鈥⑻ sweet dough cries out for a finish before baking. A simple egg wash, beaten with a pinch of salt to bread down the white and make it easier to brush, is often enough. But think about sprinkling on nibbed sugar, crushed sugar cubes, coffee sugar, or even broken pieces of amaretti.
鈥⑻ clear cellophane on its own, available from artists鈥 supply shops, or tied with a simple ribbon immediately makes what鈥檚 inside look glamorous and is more hygienic for travelling.
鈥⑻ add colour with tissue or crepe paper. Even if you want to present your hot cross buns in a beaten up biscuit tin, a few layers of tissue paper inside will make it more impressive.

What are you baking this Easter?

Comments

  • Comment number 1.

    Really like the international variations, how fascinating.
    Really must make something along these lines ASAP!

  • Comment number 2.

    ahhh hot cross buns, loverrly - but as a ceoliac now a no-no, if anyone has a gluten free recipe that doesnt look or taste like a brick, please post it

  • Comment number 3.

    I love Easter - warmer weather and longer evenings make the Easter weekend special. We always have hot cross buns for breakfast on Good Friday (sometimes bought, sometimes baked by me!). One treat I often make is lemon cupcakes with a little nest of chocolate mini eggs on top of the icing.

  • Comment number 4.

    I used to love cooking for Easter, but with the kids gone and a diabetic husband it is no longer an option! all you guys with young families, ENJOY!

  • Comment number 5.

    Fascinating :)

    Is coffee sugar like vanilla sugar?

  • Comment number 6.

    Easter brings with it only the best hot cross buns. Great tradition practiced in Cape Town where they enjoy hot cross buns with pickled fish over Easter, tastes quite good actually.

  • Comment number 7.

    What about the savoury traditions like Easter Ledges pie or pudding made with fresh wild spring plants such as Bistort (also known as Easter Ledges), dock, nettles, dandelions etc?

  • Comment number 8.

    鈥淐offee sugar鈥, sorry booksie if I confused (and anyone else puzzled). Perhaps it鈥檚 my memory but sometimes you get larger sugar crystals in bowls to serve with coffee - bigger than Demerara - and I thought it was called coffee sugar. Billingtons make a version but I thought there were other types out there. Or you could break up those lumpy white sugar cubes into shards from sprinkling.

    Richard, I will have a go at making some GF buns, but it will have to be for 2013 now.

    KaveyF, glad it鈥檚 inspiring. Cooksalot, like the sound of the lemon cupcakes with chocolate eggs.

    L_Foodie鈥︹渉ot cross buns with pickled fish鈥濃 I think I get it - spices, sweetness, acid, fish, soft bread - but would have to try it.

    Peppercat, yes indeedy. I was just pulling out the sweet yeast breads here but there is a huge tradition of more general Easter baking, arguably bigger that Christmas food.

    La belle helene, hope you can sneak out for a little cake this weekend, even if it wont be your own baking.

    Dan

  • Comment number 9.

    Richard, I used to bake gluten free/wheat free hot cross buns from a Glutafin recipe which will be on their website which were very good but best eaten freshly baked.

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