Showing posts with label Orange. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Orange. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Orange Cinnamon Swirl Bread


“Sharing is caring”, so it’s convenient when bread recipes yield two loaves.  Yet, when each gooey slice melts in your mouth to a citrusy sweetness, sharing starts to seem a bit too generous.  I want it all.  Unfortunately you cannot hide the evidence with bread.   You do not need to see a dusting of flour or a preheating oven.  The olfactory sense is the great detective in this case.  A baking loaf is a ticking-tummy-time-bomb.  About the time the buzzer dings, a group of entranced people have gathered around the oven door.  Our noses tingle as we search out the source of that saccharine smell; a near primal urge.  I have been known to devour an entire loaf fresh from the oven.  It’s just that good.  It even won me a first place blue ribbon when I made it in my Brownie troop oh so many years ago…
Like most homemade bread recipes, the process is involved; demanding that it be made only on special occasions.  But that would be a tragedy.  Orange and cinnamon invigorate the senses without weighing down the airiness of the bread, making it a perfect complement to any meal.  The frosty icing on top would have you thinking it is a cake, but be assured that the texture is that of a sweet bread, not a pound cake.
Reluctantly, I shared the second loaf; though I only saw about two pieces of it.  Apparently it was enough to quell the sweet-starved belly beasts of more than one person.  So whether you are preparing something for a Sunday brunch, afternoon tea, or dessert, Orange Cinnamon Swirl is sure to impress any company.  

Orange Cinnamon Swirl Bread
     
 Ingredients:
6 cups bread flour, approximately
2 packages dry yeast or 4 ½ tsp
1/3 cup nonfat dry milk
½ cup granulated sugar
1 ½ tsp salt
1 ¼ cups hot water (120-130˚)
¼ cup ( ½ stick) butter, room temperature
 1 T grated orange peel
¾ cup orange juice
1 egg, room temperature
1 T ground cinnamon mixed ½ cup sugar
2 T water
Frosting:
1+ cup confectioners’ sugar
1 tsp grated orange peel
4 tsp orange juice

Instructions:
1.       Measure 2 cups flour into a large mixing bowl and add the dry ingredients.  
2.       Pour in hot water and stir vigorously to blend into thin batter. 
3.       Add the butter, orange peel, orange juice, and egg.
4.       Add flour, ½ cup at a time.  Stir until shaggy mass that is workable on floured surface with hands.
5.       Knead for about 8 minutes by hand.  Add flour to achieve desired moisture content – should not stick to hands or be too dry.
6.       Place dough in lightly greased bowl (use vegetable/canola oil), turning the dough to be covered on all sides.
7.       Cover bowl tightly with plastic wrap and put aside in warm place to rise until it has doubled in bulk – about 1 hour. 
8.       Fold back plastic wrap, punch down dough.
9.       Turn onto floured surface and divide into two pieces.  Cover with wax paper and let rest for about 10 min. 
10.   Roll each piece into a 15”x7” rectangle, about ½” thick. 
11.   Use a spray bottle with water to wet the dough, then sprinkle cinnamon/sugar mixture on top.  Spray again to smooth out texture. 
12.   Roll dough from the narrow side.  Seal the edges by pinching tightly along the seams.  Tuck in the ends and place seam down in bread pans. 
13.   Cover the pans with wax paper and let stand until the dough has doubled in bulk, about 45 minutes.
14.   Preheat oven to 375˚ 20 minutes before baking.
15.   Bake for 10 minutes, then reduce the heat to 325˚ and bake for 30 minutes more, or until the loaves are nicely browned and test done when tapped (sound should be hard and hollow).
16.   Remove loaves from oven, let cool on rack. Then ice with the frosting.
Makes 2 (decadent) loaves

Monday, September 6, 2010

A Diamond in the Ruff: Orange Fluff


Reminiscent of drawing on place mats and molding play dough into multi-colored blobs, here I am in college scooping heaps of “orange fluff” into a bowl. Mountains of sweet, lush orange cream, dotted with bubbles of tapioca and hunks of mandarin oranges makes for a light dessert or late-night study snack. The “instant” labels on these ingredients signify the simplicity of the dessert, perfect for students working with a limited time frame, all you need is patience when letting the puddings cool. But you can always counter this with sampling your ingredients! The taste of the final product will have you convinced that this pudding-like dessert should have a special place in your personal [not community] fridge.

While it may sound like a mystery dessert, I assure you that the only mystery is why you haven’t tried it earlier. It is often difficult to find instant tapioca pudding, but in that case, just buy the Minute brand of tapioca and combine with milk, sugar, egg and vanilla for your tapioca. Once you make and cool this, just add it to the mix. Don’t let one ingredient get you down.

Issues also arise when questioning the taste of orange Jello in their dessert, but it is not an invasive taste. On the contrary, there is so much pudding and fluff that it is more like the creamsicles you chased the ice cream man down the street for. Chase no more! Now you can have the taste of creamsicle for breakfast, lunch and dinner. Well, okay that is a little much – this would be too much of a good thing I’m afraid. And this recipe does make enough for your army of hungry college friends. For the occasional dessert partaker however, this is a heavenly orange dream where the clouds are made of cool whip and the rain is tapioca falling from a bright orange Jello-colored sky.

Orange Fluff

Ingredients:

3 cups water

1 small package instant orange jello

1 small package instant French vanilla pudding

1 package instant tapioca pudding

8 oz cool whip

15 oz mandarin oranges

Instructions:

1. Boil water in medium sized saucepan. Add jello and pudding mixes, stirring constantly with a whisk or spoon for about 3 min.

2. Remove from heat. Place in pan of ice water to help it chill faster.

3. Once pudding mix has come to room temperature, fold in cool whip and mandarin oranges.

4. Chill in fridge for about 2 hours.

5. Best eaten cold and fluffy.