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Tuesday, April 03, 2012

Guilt-free Easter loaf

When I was growing up there were rules about Easter. We only started eating hot cross buns on Good Friday and Easter eggs were verboten until after church on Sunday. It was a bit of a surprise to realise that other people didn't live this way - didn't they get told off, or go to hell? - but I now think my mother had a point. If you eat hot cross buns or Easter eggs from the moment they arrive in the shops, which is now in late January, there's nothing to look forward to when Easter actually arrives.

Even so, I found my resolve wobbling enormously last week when I masterminded a hot cross bun taste-off for work. That's why I developed this loaf, which has all the flavour and aroma of a hot cross bun, but none of the guilt.


Easter Loaf
One of the best things about the aforementioned hot cross bun test was getting a few tips from Sean Armstrong (who New Zealand readers might have seen on Masterchef recently) about what fruit and spice do to yeast doughs. I tweaked my normal bread recipe accordingly and it worked a treat. I know the instructions look long but this isn't at all hard. You don't have to make a cross on top, but it does stop it looking like ordinary fruit toast.
This is also, handily, my entry for April's Teatime Treats, hosted this month by the lovely Kate, and for April's Fresh From The Oven, hosted this month by The Little Loaf.

150g dried fruit (a mixture of mixed peel, sultanas and currants is good)
1Tbsp mixed spice
1 1/2 tsp dried yeast
150ml milk
150ml boiling water
500g strong white flour
40g butter
2Tbsp brown sugar
1Tbsp cocoa
1/2tsp ground cloves
1 1/2tsp salt

For the cross:
1 egg yolk
4Tbsp flour
milk to mix

For the glaze:
2Tbsp brown sugar
2Tbsp hot water

Put the mixed fruit and mixed spice in a bowl and cover with boiling water. Stir and let soak for at least four hours - overnight is best. Drain and set aside.
Put the milk and boiling water into a bowl. When it's at blood heat, add the yeast and leave for five minutes to start working.
While that's happening, put the flour and butter into a freestanding mixer fitted with the paddle beater, and put on low speed until the butter is mixed through. Alternatively, rub the butter through the flour with your fingers.
Add the sugar, cocoa, cloves and salt and stir well. Pour in the yeast and liquid and stir to combine, then use the dough hook on low speed until a dough forms. Tip in the drained fruit and knead with your hands or the dough hook until you have an elastic dough that springs back when touched. It will be quite sticky - this is good.
Form into a ball, put in a greased bowl and cover with a plastic bag. Leave in a warm place until the dough has doubled, about an hour.
Preheat the oven to 200C.
Turn dough out of the bowl and knock back gently. Press into a rectangular shape with your fingers, then roll up tightly. Put into a large, greased loaf tin and let rise again for about 30 minutes, until risen by half.
While you're waiting, mix the egg yolk and flour together for the cross. Add a little milk if needed. Scrape it into a snaplock bag - there will be lots left over, but you can put it in the fridge for a day and use it for your hot cross buns. Snip a tiny corner of the bag off when you're ready to use it.
When the loaf is ready to go in the oven, slash a cross in it, then pipe in the gaps.
Bake for 25-35 minutes, until the bottom sounds hollow when tapped.
As soon as it comes out of the oven, brush it with the glaze, which you have made by heating the sugar and water together until dissolved. Let cool completely before slicing.

Did you have these sorts of rules when you were growing up, or was my family completely abnormal?


10 comments:

  1. I'm with your mum on the holding back. Somehow, I'm fed up with hot cross buns by the time it gets to Easter. So more restraint seems appropriate!

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  2. The only rules we had were 'eat... you look famished' mores the pity and prob why I'm the weight I am! The loaf is fab. Anything that was once a bun or a cake and is now a loaf is genius if you ask me!

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  3. The hot cross bun tasting sounded good, but really they can be that fattening? Well, personally I prefer fruit bread like this anyway :-) so I guess I will be ok :-).

    Ciao
    Alessandra

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  4. A hot cross bun taste-off!? I wanna work where you work! It sounds ace! I love the idea of an Easter loaf too- absolutely genius! Thank you for entering it into TTT!

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  5. Delicious! And I agree, I wish we had hot cross bun taste-off at my office too! We tried to hold back... but I seem to remember an annual school fundraiser of selling bags and bags of hot cross buns in the weeks leading up to Easter - we were thoroughly sick of them by April!
    Jemma @ timeforalittlesomething.com

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  6. I want to work where u do too! Yum! No such rules at our house, but as egs and buns were not in the shops for as long prior to Easter maybe it didn't give us a chance to get sick of them - I still remember the magic they used to hold. Now, you're right - it just drags on!

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  7. I used to give up chocolate for Lent, so by the time Easter Sunday arrived it was a really special treat. Now I just don't have the willpower!

    Love your idea of a hot-cross loaf, and the texture looks great!

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  8. This was such an awesome idea, I tried it the same day I found it, which was easter sunday as it so happens. :)
    This is my effort:
    http://urbanrecipechic.wordpress.com/2012/04/08/spiced-hot-cross-bun-loaf/

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  9. I love hot cross bun loafs, genius idea. Yours worked a treat too.

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  10. I must try the soaking method - and love the idea of a hot cross loaf too.

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Hello - thanks for stopping by. If this was real life I'd make you a cup of tea and open the biscuit tin, but in lieu of those things, let's have a chat anyway...