Tag Archives: Christmas breakfast

Star Bread

Star Bread

I’ve been generally bad at posting regularly for the last year or so, but I have recently made it a bit of a habit to post my early morning baking adventures over on my Instagram stories. Whether those recipes make it onto this website is not the point—the point is to share what’s happening in my kitchen. Last week, I posted a picture of a Star Bread on there and got so many compliments, which is really kind and validating. There was one bit of feedback from an old friend that really stuck out to me though:

“I cannot imagine being able to go in my kitchen and make something like this.”

It was followed up by compliments, but that statement has stayed with me. I mean, if I’m not over here convincing you that you can indeed go in your kitchen and make Star Bread, then what exactly am I doing?

Star Bread

Ten years ago, I was convinced by food blogs that I could make vanilla wafers at home. Which I did. And then I made it my whole personality. And while vanilla wafers and yeast doughs are not the same level of difficulty, I want you to know that you almost certainly can go in your kitchen and make Star Bread. You can.

Star Bread

If you can make cinnamon rolls, you can make Star Bread. If you can make pull-aparts, you can make Star Bread. Same goes for monkey bread and cinnamon swirl bread. They are all fundamentally the same—cinnamon-sugar and a simple enriched yeast dough wrapped together, sliced, and baked. If you’ve got time and a basic kitchen set-up with a fridge and an oven, you, my friend, can make a Star Bread.

In this case, it’s just a matter of dividing and stacking the dough with the cinnamon-brown sugar, then slicing it so that it resembles a sun. The signature shape comes in when pairs of the sun’s rays are twisted away from one another, creating a festive eight-point loaf.

Let it rest and rise a second time, then paint it with egg wash to encourage a burnished final product, and bake until beautiful. Star Bread can certainly be served by its lonesome, but I like a light dusting of confectioner’s sugar for garnish. It gives a snowy day vibe that works super well this time of year.

Star Bread

I know cinnamon rolls are a popular Christmas breakfast, but perhaps this year you can use your skills to make a Star Bread instead. They’re the same in so many ways, and while they’re both showstoppers, Star Bread clearly has a bit more of a…well, a star quality. And you do too, my friend. You can make a Star Bread. I believe in you.

Star Bread
Star Bread
makes 1 loaf (about 8-10 servings)

Dough:
2 3/4-3 cups all-purpose flour
3 tablespoons granulated sugar
1 packet (2 1/4 teaspoons) instant yeast
1 teaspoon fine sea salt
3 tablespoons unsalted butter
1 cup whole milk
1 large egg, room temperature

Filling:
6 tablespoons light or dark brown sugar, packed
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
pinch of Kosher or sea salt
2 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted

Egg Wash:
1 large egg
1 teaspoon water

For Finishing:
confectioner’s sugar

Make the dough. In a medium-large mixing bowl, whisk together all-purpose flour, sugar, instant yeast, and salt. Set aside.

In a small saucepan over medium-low heat, melt butter and milk together until just warm to the touch, about 95-110 degrees.

Crack the egg into a small mixing bowl. Whisking constantly, add the butter/milk mixture in a thin stream until completely combined. Add mixture to the dry ingredients and fold together.

Turn dough onto a floured surface and knead 5-6 minutes, until smooth. Gather dough into a ball and place it in an oiled bowl, making sure to get a little oil on all sides. Stretch some plastic wrap over the top and allow dough to rise in a warm, draft-free environment for 40 minutes or until doubled in bulk. Alternatively, place wrapped bowl in the refrigerator for 12-24 hours (a cold proof).

Make the filling. In a small bowl, use a fork to whisk together brown sugar, cinnamon, and salt. Set aside.

Line a rimmed half-sheet pan with parchment paper.

Flour a surface, your hands, a rolling pin, and a large, sharp knife or bench scraper. Punch down your dough. Turn it onto the surface, then use the knife or bench scraper to divide it into four even pieces.

Working with one piece at a time, roll it to a circle 9-inches in diameter (or larger and cut off excess). Gently transfer the first circle to the center of the prepared baking sheet.
Paint it with melted butter and sprinkle with 1/3 of the filling mixture. Roll out two more circles,
then paint with butter and sprinkle with the remaining 2/3 of the filling mixture. Top with the fourth and final circle. Gently press down on top to adhere everything. Slice off and discard any scraggly bits.

Shape the bread. Use a coffee mug or other 3-inch stencil to mark a 3-inch circle on the top of your stack. Then, use the large sharp knife or bench scraper to slice the portion outside of the 3-inch circle into 16 strips. This should look like a sun with rays.

Working with two neighboring rays at a time, twist them away from each other 3-4 times before pinching them together at the ends. Repeat until you have 8 little points on your Star bread. Gently tuck in scraggly ends and nudge the points into a shape you find pleasing. Cover with bread with plastic wrap and a tea towel, then let rise 40-50 minutes, or until risen. You’ll know it’s ready when you poke it with your finger and it doesn’t immediately bounce back.

During rising, preheat the oven to 350F. Make the egg wash by whisking the egg and water together in a small bowl or mug.

When the bread has risen, remove the plastic wrap and tea towel. Discard plastic wrap. Paint the entire surface of the star bread with egg wash. Bake for 25-30 minutes until golden and burnished.

Let bread cool 10 minutes. Gently transfer to a serving plate. Dust with confectioner’s sugar, if desired. Serve warm.

Star Bread is best the day it’s made, but may be kept covered for up to 48 hours.

Cinnamon Sugar Puff Pastry Christmas Tree

Between the burnout and a holiday case of COVID that set me way behind, this year has not had my best Christmas content. Not every December can be a winner, you know? But I’m back this week with a couple more recipes before the real festivities begin. I’m doing my best in this moment, and my best is this Cinnamon Sugar Puff Pastry Christmas Tree.

Cinnamon Sugar Puff Pastry Christmas Tree

It’s flaky. It’s tasty. It’s CUTE.

Cinnamon Sugar Puff Pastry Christmas Tree

It can be served in place of cinnamon rolls at your Christmas breakfast, or it can be a part of a tea or dessert spread.

It can be made savory by swapping the pfilling with pesto or pimento cheese.

It can be made even easier with ready-made puff pastry instead of homemade rough puff.

Cinnamon Sugar Puff Pastry Christmas Tree

Basically it can do it all, even when I can’t. That’s the kind of Christmas treat (tree-t?) I can get behind.

Cinnamon Sugar Puff Pastry Christmas Tree
Cinnamon Sugar Puff Pastry Christmas Tree
makes one tree

Rough Puff Pastry (makes 2 sheets):
2 cup all-purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon Kosher or sea salt
10 ounces (20 tablespoons) unsalted European-style butter, very cold, cut into small pieces
1/2 cup water or milk, very cold

Cinnamon Sugar Filling:
1/4 cup light or dark brown sugar, packed
1 tablespoon ground cinnamon
1 tablespoon all-purpose flour
pinch of Kosher or sea salt
3 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted

Egg Wash:
1 large egg
1 teaspoon water

Garnish (optional):
1 tablespoon confectioner’s sugar

If you do not wish to make the Rough Puff Pastry, you may use two sheets of frozen all-butter puff pastry that you have thawed according to package directions. Begin the recipe at “Make the cinnamon sugar filling.”

Make the rough puff pastry. In a large mixing bowl, whisk together flour and salt. Use a pastry blender or two forks to cut butter into dry ingredients until the largest pieces are the size of small peas. Pour in cold water or milk and stir with a silicone spatula or wooden spoon until a shaggy dough forms.

Use your hands to give the dough a couple of kneads in the bowl, then divide it in half. Flour a surface and a rolling pin. Place one half on the floured surface. Place the other in the bowl in the refrigerator.

Flour a surface and a rolling pin. Turn dough out onto surface, and use your hands to pat it into a rough rectangle. Roll the dough into an 8x10" rectangle. Fold dough in thirds, and give it one quarter turn. Roll into an 8x10" rectangle again, fold, and turn. Repeat rolling, folding, and turning until it has been done six times total. Wrap folded dough in plastic wrap and refrigerate for at least one hour, or up to 48 hours. Repeat the mixing, rolling, folding and chilling process with remaining half of the dough.

Make the cinnamon sugar filling. In a small bowl, use a fork to whisk together brown sugar, cinnamon, flour, and salt. Mix in melted butter until a paste forms. Set aside.

Make the tree. Place an oven rack in the center position. Preheat oven to 400F. Line a rimmed half-sheet pan with parchment.

Flour a surface and a rolling pin. Unfold one sheet of dough. Roll out to 12x15-inch rectangle, or a bit larger. Transfer to the parchment lined baking sheet.

Use a knife or straight edge to score a large tree shape in the dough. Spread the cinnamon-sugar filling into the tree shape, leaving 1/2-inch border on all sides. Brush a tiny amount of water on the exposed border.

Retrieve the other sheet of dough and repeat the rolling and transfer process. Press down the dough so that you have “sealed” the filled tree shape. Use a large sharp chef’s knife or a straight edge to trim off all the excess dough, leaving behind the tree shape. If desired, return dough scraps to the floured surface and cut out stars or other shapes for decoration. Otherwise refrigerate dough and save for another purpose.

Use a straight edge to score a 1-1 1/2-inch length vertically down the center of your tree. Starting at the base of the tree, use a sharp knife to cut 1-inch strips all the way up on both sides, leaving them connected in the center.

Taking one strip of dough at a time, gently twist it a few times. Repeat with all strips up to the top; as they get shorter, they will accept fewer twists.

Make egg wash. Combine egg and water in a small bowl and whisk together with a fork. Use a pastry brush to paint egg wash over the entire tree. If you cut stars from the excess, add them to the pan and paint with egg wash.

Bake tree for 28-30 minutes, until completely golden. Let cool 10 minutes before carefully removing to a serving plate. I found this easiest to do by lifting it on the parchment, placing it on the serving dish, then sliding out the parchment from underneath. Arrange stars, if using.

Sift confectioners sugar over all or part of the tree (I did the stars and then placed them). Serve warm or at room temperature.

How to Par-Bake Cinnamon Rolls {Make Ahead Method!}

How to Par-Bake Cinnamon Rolls {Make Ahead Method!}​

Coming from a Christmas morning breakfast casserole family, I’ve never really understood why so many people make cinnamon rolls on that day of all days.

I mean, have you made cinnamon rolls from scratch? They are not a quick recipe, clocking in at a minimum of three hours start-to-finish (slightly less if you do the rise overnight). My family is all adults so we start our Christmas morning at a leisurely 9am, eat around 10, then get to the gifts around noon. If we wanted cinnamon rolls for breakfast, that would require the baker (me!) to be up and functioning at 7am. Big no thank you. And if you have kids or people who get up for gifts at 6am or earlier…3am? Earlier? Forget it!

But what if I told you that you could have warm, fluffy, homemade cinnamon rolls on your table on Christmas morning in under an hour? Yes, it’s possible, thanks to a little technique called par-baking.

You’ve definitely heard the term “par-baking” on here before in association with pie crust. It means to partially bake, which is exactly what we’re going to do to these rolls: partially bake them ahead of time, then finish the baking on Christmas. This method will work with any yeast-raised cinnamon roll recipe you love. I wouldn’t recommend this method for any rolls with fruit in the filling (i.e. not these) as it might degrade during thawing, but I think nuts would be okay.

How to Par-Bake Cinnamon Rolls {Make Ahead Method!}​

Now, this isn’t a magic trick. You do have to plan ahead to do about 2.5 hours of mixing/kneading/rolling/rising at some point to make this work. But (but!) the bulk of the work can be done anytime between now and Christmas (or whenever you want cinnamon rolls).

The process is simple. Make your cinnamon roll recipe up to the baking step, then bake for about half the baking time (15 minutes). At this point, your rolls should be risen, puffed and pale. Where you would normally continue baking them until brown, resist that urge and remove them from the oven.

Let your rolls cool to room temperature and then triple wrap in plastic, cover in foil and freeze until the night before you need them. If you don’t want to have your 9×13” pan out of commission for any length of time, you can bake in a disposable aluminum baking pan, then tuck it into your freezer for up to six weeks.

The night before you want cinnamon rolls, move the par-baked rolls from your freezer to your fridge to thaw out. In the morning, simply uncover and bake your rolls for the remaining 15 minutes, until golden. Finish with cream cheese frosting and voila! Fresh homemade cinnamon rolls on your table in under an hour, and you didn’t have to sacrifice sleep to make it happen.

How to Par-Bake Cinnamon Rolls {Make Ahead Method!}​

Call it Christmas magic. Call it whatever you want. Just call me for breakfast.

Par-baked Cinnamon Rolls
adapted from Dana Velden

cinnamon roll recipe of choice
9x13-inch baking pan (disposable aluminum, if desired)

Follow your yeast-raised cinnamon roll recipe up to the baking step.

Preheat your oven to 375F. Bake cinnamon rolls for 10-15 minutes, until risen, puffed and pale.

Remove cinnamon rolls from the oven and allow to cool completely in their pan on a rack. Triple wrap the pan in plastic wrap, then wrap in foil. Freeze for up to 6 weeks.

The night before you want cinnamon rolls, move the pan of frozen rolls to the refrigerator. Let thaw 8-12 hours.

Preheat oven to 375F. Unwrap rolls; discard foil and plastic wrap.

Bake rolls for 10-15 minutes, until golden brown. Top with cream cheese frosting (or whatever your recipe says) and serve warm.