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Saturday Morning Cinnamon Buns

Nothing says weekend like a warm gooey cinnamon bun, eaten in your pyjamas of course!!

With a little time, these warm, gooey buns will fill your home with an intoxicating aroma that'll get everybody stumbling to the kitchen.

A couple of tips before we get started, if you want these buns early in the morning but don't want to get up with the roosters, make them the night before. To do this, reduce the yeast by a 3/4 of a teaspoon, and place them covered in the fridge after you've cut them and placed them in the baking dish. In the morning, remove them from the fridge, let them warm up for about 30 minutes while the oven preheats and you make the icing then bake as directed.

CINNAMON BUNS

1-1/2 pkg (about 3-1/4 teaspoons) dry yeast
1/4 cup warm water
1/2 cup butter
1/3 cup sugar
1-1/2 tsp salt
1/4 tsp nutmeg
1 cup luke warm milk
1 ea egg
4-5 cup sifted flour

Filling:
as needed butter
as needed brown sugar
as needed cinnamon
as needed raisins or chocolate chips (optional)


Here are the how to photos with the recipe following.


Place all ingredients, except the filling ingredients, in the bowl of a mixer. Add enough flour so that the dough comes together. Once the dough has come together, knead for about 5 minutes.



Place the dough in a greased bowl and cover. Place in a warm area and let rise until doubled in size, about 1 to 1.5 hours.





Roll into a rectangle about 1/2 inch thick and spread on the butter leaving 1 inch at the end so that you can seal the log. Generously spread the brown sugar over the butter then sprinkle on the cinnamon and any other toppings you would like


Roll up and cut into 1.5 inch pieces. Place in a greased baking dish and let rise until doubled in size, about 1 hour.


Bake in a 350 F oven for approximately 25 minutes. Once they are baked, remove them from the baking dish and glaze. For the glaze, mix icing sugar, milk, vanilla and a little melted butter together until it is a good consistency to spread. You can also use your favourite cream cheese icing but make sure you don't spread that on until they buns are completely cool.



ENJOY!!!

Fall Dessert


Vanilla Bean and Port Poached Pear with Honey-Cinnamon Mascarpone

Fall time offers up some amazing ingredients to bake up incredible desserts. Make sure you take advantage with this recipe, it's simple, light and sure to please. When choosing your pears, make sure to choose ones that are still firm. If your using soft pears, they're more likely to fall apart causing an unwanted headache. Second, what ever you do, don't break into the old bottle of port from 1977 that you've been saving for a special occasion! These pears are special but not that special! There's so much sugar in the syrup and you cook it for so long that a good port would loose all of it's goodness. A cheap cooking port will suffice. Ok here we go...



In a pot just big enough to hold your pears combine:

2 cups port
1.5 cups sugar
1/2 cup water
1/2 ea orange, sliced
3 ea cinnamon sticks
5 ea cloves
1 ea vanilla bean, sliced and scarped

3 ea pears

Bring this to a simmer. Meanwhile, peel your pears. Peal your pears and leaving them whole, place them in the port syrup. You want them to be almost completely submerged, if they aren't, add a bit of water to bring the level up. Be sure not to dilute the syrup too much with water because it's the sugar in the liquid that helps the pears hold their shape as they cook. Too much water would turn into mushy pears, still tasty but not the goal. If you've find that you're having to add more then 1/2 a cup of water, just add about 1/4 cup of sugar.



Cover the pot and on a very low simmer, cook the pears until they are tender when pierced with a skewer. This till take a while but also depends on the firmness of the pears you started with. Make sure to turn the pears often to ensure even cooking.

While the pears are cooking. make the honey mascarpone filling. Simply mix mascarpone, honey and cinnamon to your desired sweetness, set it aside.

When the pears are done, remove them to a plate to cool. Remove about a cup of the cooking liquid to a small pot and reduce it until it's sauce consistency. As the sauce reduces, it will thicken, make sure you consider that it will continue to thicken as it cools. To achieve the correct consistency, boil it until the bubbles become thick and close together, let it cool and adjust your consistency by either adding more of the cooking liquid to thin it or reducing it further by boiling it again.

Once the pears are cool, slice them lengthwise and remove the core with a melon baller. Fill the centre with the mascarpone filling and plate with a little bit of the sauce.