No Knead Challah Cinnamon Rolls

challah cinnamon rolls | apt 2b baking co
challah cinnamon rolls | apt 2b baking co
challah cinnamon rolls | apt 2b baking co

I am a sucker for a good culinary memoir. Recently, I devoured both of Molly Wizenberg's books in about 2 days, Amelia Morris's Bon Appetempt was the same, Heat, My Life in France, Kitchen Confidential, Julie and Julia, Blood, Butter, & Bones.... I read them all (and more) lightning fast. So when, Jessica Fechtor of Sweet Amandine, a blog I have followed for ages offered to send me a copy of her memoir Stir I jumped at the chance to read it, and as is my custom, finished it over a weekend. It was a moving, beautifully written story (that I won't explain in detail here because I think you should all read it too) that details her  recovery after an aneurism burst in her brain. Woven through are the recipes for the comforting and cozy foods she and others cooked during those many months. 

After I finished reading, and wiping away a few tears, I paged through the book a second time looking for a recipe to cook and was immediately drawn to her challah. I love baking yeast breads, especially as the weather cools down, and this no knead method was soooo easy and forgiving. If you are scared of bread baking, this might be a good place to start because you seriously can't mess it up. I made the recipe a few times, as traditional braids, but then I realized that it would make the perfect base for cinnamon rolls. You can prep the dough the night before, then form the rolls and let them rise the morning you want to serve them. Jessica, I hope you don't mind that I bastardized your beautiful challah into cinnamon rolls. 

No Knead Challah Cinnamon Rolls

Five Fold Challah recipe from Jessica Fechtor's Stir

makes 2 loaves of challah or about 12 cinnamon rolls

This dough is easy to make, totally delicious, and super forgiving. I have made it with vegetable oil and olive oil, both are great. I also made it with all purpose flour and it turned out just fine. For challah shaping instructions, check out this post on Food52. 

Dough

4 cups bread flour

1 1/2 teaspoons instant dry yeast

2 teaspoons fine sea salt

2 large eggs plus 1 large egg yolk (save the white for glazing if you are making braids)

3/4 cup water

1/3 cup olive oil

1/4 cup honey

Filling

6 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted

1/3 cup granulated sugar

2 tablespoons ground cinnamon

pinch salt

Glaze

2 cups confectioner's sugar

1/4 cup sour cream

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

pinch salt

Whisk together the dry ingredients in a large bowl, and the wet ingredients in a smaller bowl. Dump the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients and stir with a rubber spatula until a wet, sticky dough forms. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and let sit for 10 minutes. 

Peel back the plastic. Grab an edge of the dough, lift it up, and fold it over itself to the center. Turn the bowl a bit and repeat around the entire lump of dough, grabbing an edge and folding it into the center, eight turns, grabs, and folds in all. Then flip the dough so that the folds and seams are on the bottom. Cover tightly again with the plastic, and let sit for 30 minutes. 

Repeat the all-around folding, flipping, covering, and resting four more times. (I keep track by drawing hash marks in permanent marker right on the plastic.) The dough flops more than it folds in the first round or two. Then, as the gluten develops, you’ll get proper folds. By the final fold, the dough will be wonderfully elastic, and you’ll be able to see and feel the small pockets of air within. Pull the plastic tight again over the bowl and refrigerate for 16 to 24 hours—any longer and you risk over-proofing.

The next morning, make the cinnamon rolls. Grease a 9 x 13-inch baking dish.

Stir the sugar, cinnamon, and salt together in a small bowl. On a lightly floured surface roll the dough into a rectangle about 18 x 12 x 1/2-inch thick . Brush the melted butter over the top, then sprinkle with the cinnamon sugar. Starting from the long end, tightly roll the dough into a log. Slice the log into 12 pieces and arrange them in the baking dish. Cover the dish with a towel and let the rolls rise until puffy and almost doubled in size, about 2 hours.

Position a rack in the center of the oven and preheat to 350ºF. Bake the rolls until golden and cooked through, about 25-30 minutes.

While the rolls are cooling, make the glaze by whisking all of the glaze ingredients together. It should be thick but pourable, if it's too thick add a bit of milk, if it is too thin add a bit of confectioner's sugar.

Drizzle the glaze over the warm cinnamon rolls and enjoy immediately.

And a quick housekeeping note: When I moved and redesigned the blog last year many links were broken, especially for older posts. I'm working to correct those errors now. So sorry for any inconvenience. 

Easy Blueberry Spelt Scones

easy blueberry spelt scones (apt 2b baking co | yossy arefi)
easy blueberry spelt scones (apt 2b baking co | yossy arefi)

It has been a busy summer here in apartment 2b, as they always seem to be. I am finishing up my book (!), working on a couple of fun freelance projects, and also trying to eat lots of ice cream and grilled corn and tomatoes and other summery things while the getting is good. Tough life, I know...But! I want to pop in to say a quick hello and share this easy recipe for blueberry scones with a bit of spelt flour. I am liking spelt flour more and more these days, mostly because you can easily substitute it for all purpose flour in most recipes and it has a great nutty flavor (and some added nutrition if that makes you feel better about eating baked goods).

These scones are a riff on the tangerine poppyseed scones I posted a few months ago with a summery twist: a generous amount of blueberries. This is the kind of recipe I love because you can swap ingredients in and out easily to suit your own tastes: change up the lemon for lime or orange, use raspberries, blackberries or currants instead of blueberries, add a handful of chopped chocolate, use all purpose flour or part whole wheat, rye, or oat. Go for it, and have some fun!

Easy Blueberry Spelt Scones

makes 8

3 tablespoons granulated sugar

one lemon

1 cup (4 1/2oz/128g) all purpose flour

1 cup (4 1/2oz/128g) spelt flour

1 tablespoon baking powder

1/2 teaspoon salt

4 ounces (112g) unsalted butter, cold and cut into cubes

1/2 cup (120ml)  buttermilk

1/3 cup (80ml) heavy cream

1 1/2 cups fresh blueberries

Preheat oven to 400ºF and line a baking sheet with parchment paper.

Add the sugar to a large bowl and zest the lemon into the bowl. Add the flours, baking powder, and salt to the bowl and whisk to combine. Add the butter and use your fingers to press each cube of butter into a flat shard about the size of a quarter. Keep tossing the butter in the flour mixture to ensure that it is well coated. Make a well in the center of the mixture add add the buttermilk and heavy cream. Stir gently to combine, but don't worry if there are a couple of dry spots. Add the blueberries and stir gently couple more times. It's best to not over mix this type of dough. Use your hands to knead the dough a couple of times in the bowl then turn the dough out onto a lightly floured surface. Pat the dough into a circle about 1-inch tall and 7- inches wide. Use a knife to cut the dough into 8 wedges. Transfer the wedges to the baking sheet, brush each one with a bit of heavy cream and sprinkle granulated sugar on top. Bake until the scones are golden brown, 18-22 minutes. Enjoy warm. These scones are best enjoyed on the day they are made.