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Brown Butter Peach Cobbler Cinnamon Rolls.
Let me tell you what that means. Pillowy dough, rolled soft and slow. Inside, peaches roasted down till they’re sweet and jammy, folded through with warm cinnamon. Brown butter running under all of it, nutty and deep, the kind of smell that pulls the whole house into the kitchen before you even call anybody. A brown butter cinnamon crumble baked crisp and golden across the top. Then ribbons of buttercream frosting drizzled over the warm rolls, settling down into every fold. And fresh peaches, scattered right on top, bright and juicy against all that spice. Peach cobbler and a cinnamon roll, together. A piece of Carolina summer you pull apart with your hands. I’m a Southern boy. Down here, peach cobbler is a staple and a delicacy both at once, and taking something I grew up on and folding it into a cinnamon roll we all know by heart, well, that’s my prerogative. That’s what we’re baking this week inside Crust & Crumb Academy. If your mouth is watering right now, good. That’s the whole point. Pull up a chair. ~Henry⭐️🔥
Brown Butter Peach Cobbler Cinnamon Rolls.
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🍑 This Week’s Bake: Brown Butter Peach Cobbler Cinnamon Rolls 🇺🇸
Well, we survived Croissant Week. 🥐👏 All that lamination, all those butter layers, all that patience. You all showed up and did the hard thing, and I couldn’t be prouder of the folds that came through this kitchen. Now it’s time to let summer all the way in. ☀️🍑 This week we’re baking Brown Butter Peach Cobbler Cinnamon Rolls, and this one’s personal. I’m a South Carolina boy. Down here in the Deep South, peach cobbler isn’t just dessert. It’s a staple and a delicacy both at once. It’s the thing that shows up at the church supper, the Sunday table, and the family reunion, and everybody’s grandmother swears hers is the best. That cobbler is in my bones. 🧡 So I did what I always end up doing. I took something I grew up loving and turned it into something we all already know by heart, the cinnamon roll. Peach cobbler on the inside. Pillowy roll on the outside. Brown butter running through the whole thing. And a streusel top that’ll have your house smelling like a Carolina summer. 🔥🍑 And I’ll be honest, this one came out of my daughter Payton. She’s always challenging me, always poking at me to take it one step further. Don’t play it safe, Dad. So here we are. Cobbler in a cinnamon roll. That’s a Payton bake if I ever made one. ⭐ No fresh peaches where you are yet? Don’t worry. Frozen and canned work great, and I’ll walk you through every swap this week so nobody gets left out. Here’s the recipe so you can look it over before Saturday: https://pantry.bakinggreatbread.com/recipes/brown-butter-peach-cobbler-cinnamon-rolls The sourdough version: https://pantry.bakinggreatbread.com/recipes/sourdough-brown-butter-peach-cobbler-cinnamon-rolls?utm_source=skool&utm_medium=community&utm_campaign=recipe-share We bake together Saturday morning. 🇺🇸🍑
🍑 This Week’s Bake: Brown Butter Peach Cobbler Cinnamon Rolls 🇺🇸
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These aren’t your average cinnamon rolls.
Today I want to walk you through these Brown Butter Peach Cobbler Cinnamon Rolls piece by piece, because I’ll be honest with you, this is not your average cinnamon roll. A regular cinnamon roll is butter, cinnamon, sugar, roll it up, done. These have a lot more going on. A roasted peach filling you cook down to a jam. A cinnamon smear. A frozen brown butter crumble. A low hydration dough. And a bake that takes some patience because of how juicy they are. More steps means more places to trip up, and more places to get it right. So today I’m breaking it into three parts and posting them through the day. Keep an eye out. Here’s what we’ll cover: 1. The Filling. What to use if you don’t have peaches, and how to cook it down to a proper jam so it doesn’t run. 2. The Build. The dough, the smear, the crumble, and how to roll all that up without a disaster. 3. The Bake and the Finish. How to arrange them in the pan, how to know they’re done, and how to dress them up at the end. Stay tuned. First one’s coming up. Perfection is not required. Progress is. Henry ⭐🔥
These aren’t your average cinnamon rolls.
Fluffiest ever discard, Greek yogurt, and buttermilk pancakes
These will knock you straight out of your shoes Eggless Sourdough Discard Fluffy Pancakes ​Yield: Approx. 6 large, thick pancakes recommended Flour: Willow T55 ​The Dry Base ​130g Willow T55 Flour ​25g Granulated Sugar (approx. 2 tbsp) ​1 tsp Baking Powder (for total lift) ​1/2 tsp Baking Soda (essential to react with the heavy acids) ​1/2 tsp Fine Sea Salt ​The Wet & Acid Base ​150g Sourdough Discard (unfed, 100% hydration) ​120g Plain Greek Yogurt (full-fat preferred for moisture) I use full fat plain Zoi (I have used lemon yogurt as well) ​60g to 90g Buttermilk (Start with 60g/one-quarter cup; only use more if the batter is too thick to spoon) I use the 90g to start because we don't want to over mix the batter and it is thick ​42g Unsalted Butter, melted and cooled slightly (3 tbsp) ​1 tsp Pure Vanilla Extract ​Method ​1. Mix the Dry ​In a medium bowl, thoroughly whisk together the Willow T55 flour, sugar, baking powder, baking soda, and fine sea salt. ​2. Emulsify the Wet ​In a separate bowl, whisk together the sourdough discard, Greek yogurt, 60g of buttermilk, melted butter, and vanilla extract until completely smooth and emulsified. ​3. The Gentle Combine (Crucial Step) ​Pour the dry ingredients into the wet ingredients. Use a silicone spatula to gently fold the mixture together. Stop mixing while you still see small streaks of dry flour. The batter should look thick, lumpy, and actively puffy. If it is so thick that it feels like a soft bread dough, fold in the remaining 30g of buttermilk. Let the batter rest undisturbed for 5 minutes on the counter to allow the T55 flour to fully hydrate and the leavening agents to foam. ​4. The Griddle ​Preheat a heavy cast-iron skillet or griddle over medium-low heat. Brush the surface lightly with a thin film of butter or neutral oil. ​5. Cook for Maximum Rise ​Scoop large 1/3 cup mounds of the batter onto the griddle (about 1/3 cup per pancake). Do not flatten them out; let them sit tall. Cook for 3 to 4 minutes. During this time I add in my frozen wild maine blueberries (or other inclusions) placing one by one and pushing them gently into the cloud of pancake. Because this batter is dense and eggless, you will not see as many surface bubbles popping as you would in a thin batter. Instead, look for the edges to dry out and puff upward significantly.
Fluffiest ever discard, Greek yogurt, and buttermilk pancakes
Only 48 hours remain in FREE Founders Week!
This free week inside From Oven to Market has been something else. If you jumped in already, I hope you're feeling the value of that room. And I'll tell you straight, it only gets better from here. Here's the honest part. The free window closes in 48 hours. After that, From Oven to Market becomes a paid community. So this is my offer to you. If you want to see bread baking from a different angle, pick up something new, or maybe chase that dream of selling your bread one day, come get in now while the door's still open. Join here: https://www.skool.com/from-oven-to-market/about Join now, before I put the bouncer at the door. (I'm trying to give you guys the hook up) ~Henry⭐🔥 https://youtube.com/shorts/k-kTz4g4j3I?feature=share
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