Hi there, Welcoming House Readers!
And a great big hello to the readers from the Grain Mill Wagon as well!
Perfect with coffee or a hot drink, these Gingerbread Sweet Rolls with a drizzle of Maple Icing are a perfect Saturday morning breakfast as fall begins to settle in.
I was twenty years old before someone introduced me to a completely different version of gingerbread that was similar to a cake. Instead I had grown up with this lovely, molasses and ginger based bread that we would beg my mother for on Saturday mornings, slathered with butter and sprinkled with cinnamon sugar after being toasted. I just wanted to say that up front, because this recipe is what my kids call a "two-fer"---where you can continue on from making the bread dough to make the gingerbread rolls, or you can just shape it into a loaf, let it rise, and bake it into a gingery concoction that smells amazing right down to the very last bite.
Let's get started, shall we?
Gingerbread Sweet Rolls with Maple Icing
In a regular mixing bowl, combine 2 cups of warm water, with 2 Tbs of
dry yeast. Let sit for five minutes to proof, then add the following:
1/3 cup dry milk, 2 Tbs coconut oil (or shortening), 2 eggs at room temperature, and 1/2 cup of molasses.
In a seperate mixing bowl, combine the following ingredients:
3 cups freshly ground Kamut flour,
3 cups freshly ground Hard White Spring Wheat flour
1 1/2 tsp sea salt, 2 tsp ginger, 1 tsp each of cinnamon, cloves and allspice, and finally, 1/4 cup of brown sugar.
Once these are well mixed, and the yeast has proofed in the wet
ingredients, add the dry mixture into the mixer bowl, and begin to blend
together.
Once it is well blended, let sit for ten minutes for the
flour to absorb all moisture.
After kneading for about ten minutes, and adding extra flour as
necessary to keep dough from being too sticky, turn dough out onto a
floured surface and knead by hand, adding in about 1/2 cup more flour,
then letting rest again for 5 minutes. At this point in time, cut into
two equal pieces, and you have enough dough for two pans of rolls, or
one pan of rolls, and one bread loaf pan. (Gotta have that gingerbread
toast, right?)
This is how I shape and mark my Gingerbread loaf bread.
Meanwhile, roll one half of the dough out into a large rectangle on a
floured surface. Due to the Kamut wheat, this is a soft and very
workable dough, which makes for amazingly tender sweet rolls when they
are finished!
Once rolled out, combine the following in a bowl with a
whisk:
Take 1 cup butter, 1/2 cup coconut oil, 2 Tbs Golden molasses, 1/4 cup
brown sugar, and 1 Tbs cinnamon, and mix until very well blended. This
is the filling for the rolls.
Spread on the rolls until completely covered, then, starting with the
short end, roll the rectangle up into a long roll of dough with filling.
Cut into 12 equal pieces, and place in a 9X13 pan to rise. This takes
about 45 minutes until they are fully ready to go into the oven, which
should be set at 350*.
Once in the oven, these rolls bake for about 25 minutes, rising while
they are baking. They need to cool completely before frosting (as you
can see from the pictures, while we love the frosting, they are just
beautiful without it!).
The frosting is simple, just 1 stick butter, 2 Tbs maple syrup (real or
fake, your choice), and 1 cup powdered sugar. Blend, then add 1 Tbs of
milk or water to make it smooth, whip until it begins to really grow in
size with the addition of air. Smooth onto the rolls, and serve. Or
smother them with the frosting while warm and let it dribble down the
sides.
Finally, I cant let you stop reading without teaching you a lesson about baking.
Ready?
Dont ever wear black.
Many blessings to you and yours,
Heather
Linked up at Hearts for Home Blog Hop
Yummy recipe. I do not have any Kamut. Is there anything I can substitute for it? I want to make these!
ReplyDeleteabsolutely! Just use a mix between whole wheat flour and all purpose and you will accomplish the same texture, although it will not have quite the nutty flavor that kamut brings! :)
DeleteThanks for stopping by!
~Heather
Oh I love this recipe - number one it's gingerbread and you used Kamut flour. Awesome. I'm actually going to link to this at my blog :0)
ReplyDeleteHeather, your recipe calls for freshly ground whole wheat and kamut. How do you know how much to grind so you have just the amount you need? Do you ever have more ground than what you need for a recipe? I finally have the kamut. I am going to make these this week. Thank you.
ReplyDelete