Steamed cinnamon rolls











Finally, after all that, at this late juncture, I have at last arrived at Cinnamon Bun Station. I have been making these things my whole life and these right here are the best that I've done. *bows deeply, performs elaborate salaam, backs out of room*

Steamed, that is the way to go. The Asian way with baking powder included in the dough that changes the pH and makes the gluten a lot more elastic. 

The dough has sugar which speeds it, and a touch of cocoa powder just because, and powdered milk because the yeast likes that a lot and the resulting bread is fortified with milk solids, and a touch of cinnamon to carry that through. It seems to go faster than usual. Speedy Gonzalez dough, that's what this is.

The topping before rolling is regular cinnamon roll filling; butter, brown sugar, cinnamon and allspice, raisins, pecans, salt.

The white topping after steaming is the same cream cheese topping used for carrot cake.

Here is the thing about bread made by steaming instead of baking that seems counterintuitive to Westerners, I think. If you take baked bread and steam it then it absorbs all that wetness, weakens, dissolves and falls apart, and that is what we think will happen when you steam dough. 

But that does not happen. When raw bread dough is steamed then the moist heat acts on the dough the same way as if the dough was held in a clay cloche except  more completely and does not dry out so does not form a dry outer crust. The bread is the same as baked bread. 

The spongy crustless bread can be sliced and toasted as ordinary bread. Little sandwiches can be made from it toasted or not. It is excellent.

Conclusion: win

3 comments:

Evalyn said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Evalyn said...

Can you post the recipe? Thanks!

Chip Ahoy said...

For you, Evalyn, it is ordinary bread dough, usually for brioche, that is, with milk and butter and egg, but not necessarily so.

This is where I was experimenting with baking soda to alter the pH. That does work very well to make the dough a bit more elastic, more easily stick to itself. So, baking soda included, but not neglecting regular salt. So watch it!

The thing that makes it cinnamon is additional sugar, butter and cinnamon, (I like to include clove) and raisins and nuts applied either sprinkled separately, as a square pizza, or applied as a smear.

Rolled up, the roll chopped in segments, and steamed instead of baked. That is all.

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