• Pumpkin Round Two- Sticky Buns!

    by emily • October 25, 2009 • Uncategorized • 1 Comment

    Here is a picture from Billy's phone of my sticky buns!

    Here is a picture from Billy's phone of my sticky buns!

    Yeastfest 3000 is still underway and my most recent accomplishment came yesterday when I successfully created a recipe for Pumpkin Sticky Buns. Although the pumpkin flavor was not as noticeable as I would have liked, the color was there, and I’ve begun brainstorming ways to incorporate more pumpkin into the recipe. I won’t be making them for some time though- I don’t want sticky buns to become my regular Saturday night dinner as they were this weekend. 3 sticky buns into the night I had to cut myself off, and force feed them to my guests.

    The Recipe

    3/4 c pumpkin puree

    zest of 1 orange

    4 cups plus unbleached flour

    salt

    2 large brown eggs

    4 T  melted butter + 6 T butter melted + 4 T butter

    1/2 c sugar

    1/4 c brown sugar, plus

    1 t yeast

    1/2 c warm water

    cinnamon and other spices to taste

    Method: Proof the yeast in warm water + 1 T agave nectar or sugar (I don’t always do this but, it better safe than totally disappointed 2 hours later if you’ve never worked with yeast before).  Blend pumpkin with the water & yeast. Mix in sugar, eggs, butter, salt. Mix in 4 cups of flour. Pour the remainder of the flour on a clean surface.

    Dump the pumpkin mixture onto the pile of flour, and begin kneading. You will need to add anywhere from 1/.2 cup- 1.5 cups more flour to the dough. It should still be sticky, but not overwhelmingly so at finish. Knead for 5 minutes.  Form a ball and place in a buttered bowl. Cover, and let rise to aprox. double in size 1-2 hours.

    Punch down, form into a ball again, and roll out on a heavily floured surface into a large rectangle. It should be fairly thin, but not tooooo thin. This dough is going to be rolled into a log to form the buns, so picture what type of sticky bun you like, and backtrack from there. You could make big or small buns at this point. Entirely personal preference. Experiment.

    Brush your rectangle with butter, heavily. Spread cinnamon over the butter, heavily. You could add chocolate chips, or raisins, or nuts here too.  Sprinkle chunks of brown sugar over the butter and cinnamon. Add more butter for good luck, if anywhere looks dry.  Roll the rectangle along the longer side, into a tight roll. Cut into 12 evenly portioned sections.

    Melt butter, brown sugar, and a little water and perhaps some fruity liquor or vanilla extract on the stove top. Pour into whatever dish you will be cooking your buns in. Place the 12 buns in the dish (I had to use two) with a good amount of space between them. Let rise 20 minutes. Heat oven to 350. Cook until golden brown. Remove from oven and invert them over onto a cookie sheet, or another dish. You can eat like this, or make a secondary glaze to serve over-top. Voila!

    About emily

    The Story of Miz Emily

    Told by VBar

    Miz Emily, crow extraordinaire, hails originally from Connecticut and moved to Boston for college in 2004. She and Vbar met their first semester freshman year at Northeastern University and bonded immediately over their love of fresh food, the middle east and the likelihood that they will never get decently paying jobs. In the proceeding years, Emily lived first in the Mission Hill area of Boston before moving out to Jamaica Plain to roost. In the summer of 2008 Emily migrated west to San Francisco she still lives with her man Billy. Emily loves global travel and has spent time backpacking around Europe as well as in Turkey and Brazil.

    Emily’s cooking style can be described as clean, natural and adventurous. Never one to back down from a challenge, can-not-do is not a phrase in her pantry. A master of substitutions, she rarely follows a recipe exactly, often with deliciously innovative results.  Always one to be inspired by her surroundings, she enjoys shopping for new and inexpensive ingredients in farmers markets and ethnocentric neighborhoods, in particular Chinatown. Emily’s meals are strongly tied to the seasons particularly since she is lucky enough to have access to fresh California produce. Emily’s strong caw and yummy mowables make her a truly upstanding west-coast representative for the Crows.

    http://crowsinthekitchen.com

    One Response to Pumpkin Round Two- Sticky Buns!

    1. matt!
      November 9, 2009 at 4:54 pm

      holy balls that looks delicious

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