Halva Choux Buns with Craquelin Topping

Halva Choux Buns with Craquelin Topping

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These choux buns are inspired by my latest obsession: halva! The craquelin topping makes them extra special adding delicious crunch.

It seems the baking world has gone tahini mad and not for no reason – the bitter paste made from sesame seeds is as addictive as peanut butter and has added much-needed balance to loads of too-sweet desserts (check out my recipe for tahini choc chip cookies!). And where you’ll find a tahini obsession, you’ll also find an halva obsession! I decided to merge it with my other latest obsession; craquelin choux buns.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
WHAT IS HALVA?

To be clear, we’ve been using the word ‘halva’ wrong this entire time. We think we’re referring to the sweet in the picture on the right, right?! Nope. The world ‘halva’ is derived from the Arabic word meaning ‘sweet’ so the term ‘halva’ actually refers to an entire array of sweets which are popular across Arab nations, the Mediterranean, Central Asia, Algeria and Eastern Europe. And just like any other ‘sweet’ the ingredients and textures vary quite drastically from each other. 

What we think of as ‘halva’, also known as halvah, is the Middle Eastern sweetmeat made predominantly from roasted sesame seeds (sunflower seeds can also be used). The seeds are ground into a smooth paste and mixed with boiled sugar. It has a high-fat content and although very sweet has a slightly bitter taste. It’s definitely worth buying the good stuff as the quality can vary but whatever you do, make sure you store it well away from humidity – it reduces a slab of halva into a runny puddle fast!  Other types of halva are made with semolina, flour, cornstarch, lentils or vegetables and can range from a pudding-like consistency to set jellies. Interesting right?! 

WHAT IS CRAQUELIN? 

Craquelin is a super-simple pastry that’s rolled thinly, frozen, cut out and placed on top of choux pastry. The two are baked together and in the oven they create magic! There are four things I LOVE about craquelin:

  1. It adds a lovely crunchy top to the choux pastry – that texture is EVERYTHING when you fill the choux with soft whipped cream. 
  2. It adds flavour to an otherwise rather bland pastry. Craquelin can be coloured with food colouring and flavoured to compliment your choux buns. 
  3. It helps the choux pastry rise evenly – notice that these choux buns are not wonky or uneven but perfect little rounds. That’s all thanks to the craquelin which weighs it down ever so slightly while it bakes.
  4. Craquelin is also super easy to make; just mix together 3 ingredients and roll it out.

Sounds simple enough, right? Now go give these choux buns and the craquelin a go! Just remember to buy extra halva – the stuff is addictive and you WILL eat it all! 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Halva Choux Buns with Craquelin Topping
Yields 18
Crunchy choux pastries filled with a halva whipped cream
Print
Prep Time
40 min
Cook Time
20 min
Total Time
1 hr
Prep Time
40 min
Cook Time
20 min
Total Time
1 hr
0 calories
0 g
0 g
0 g
0 g
0 g
0 g
0 g
0 g
0 g
0 g
Nutrition Facts
Serving Size
0g
Yields
18
Amount Per Serving
Calories 0
Calories from Fat 0
% Daily Value *
Total Fat 0g
0%
Saturated Fat 0g
0%
Trans Fat 0g
Polyunsaturated Fat 0g
Monounsaturated Fat 0g
Cholesterol 0mg
0%
Sodium 0mg
0%
Total Carbohydrates 0g
0%
Dietary Fiber 0g
0%
Sugars 0g
Protein 0g
Vitamin A
0%
Vitamin C
0%
Calcium
0%
Iron
0%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your Daily Values may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
Ingredients
  1. 110g cake flour
  2. 80g salted butter, cut into small blocks
  3. 1 cup (250ml) water
  4. 3 extra large eggs, lightly beaten
  5. FILLING
  6. 200g halva, plus extra to decorate
  7. 30ml (2 tbsp) icing sugar, sifted
  8. 500ml cream
  9. CRAQUELIN
  10. 40g softened butter
  11. 45g soft brown sugar
  12. 40g cake flour
  13. 10g halva
  14. 1 tsp sesame seeds, plus extra for sprinkling
Instructions
  1. Start by making the craquelin, combine the ingredients together to form a soft dough. Roll out the craquelin between two pieces of cling wrap to 2mm thick. Transfer to a baking tray and refrigerate for 30 minutes.
  2. To make the eclairs, sift the flour and salt together. Heat the butter and water until just melted then bring to a rolling boil. Immediately remove from the heat and add all the flour at once. Mix until a smooth dough forms, place back on the heat and cook for about 1 minute or until the pastry pulls away from the sides of the pot. Allow to cool until lukewarm.
  3. Beat the eggs into the pastry a little at a time until smooth, shiny and of a piping consistency. Place the pastry in a piping bag fitted with a large fluted nozzle. Pipe small blobs of choux about 4cm in diameter onto a lined baking tray.
  4. Use a cooking cutter cut out 5cm discs from the cold craquelin then place the craquelin discs on top of each blob. Bake at 180 degrees for about 15 – 20 minutes or until puffed up and golden. Turn off oven, remove the puffs, pierce each with a skewer to allow steam to escape and immediately return to the oven to dry out for 15 minutes.
  5. Make the filling by crumbling the halva into the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a whisk attachment. Add the sugar and mix well. Add 50ml of cream and mix to form a paste. Gradually add the rest of the cream, a little at a time while whisking until cream reaches stiff peak stage. Place in a piping bag fitted with a star nozzle tip.
  6. To assemble, slice the tops off the buns and pipe the cream to fill. Sprinkle with halva and sesame seeds then place the top of the bun on top. Repeat with the remaining eclairs. Serve on the same day.
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calories
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fat
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protein
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carbs
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The Kate Tin https://thekatetin.com/
 Recipe originally created for Food & Home Entertaining Magazine

White Chocolate Marmalade Brioche Buns

White Chocolate Marmalade Brioche Buns

Light-as-air pull-apart brioche buns with pockets of tangy marmalade and melted white chocolate  and a crunchy sugary crust.

These brioche buns are absolute heaven straight out the oven! I first created a Christmassy version stuffed with mince pie filling for the December issue of Food & Home Magazine, but decided to make them breakfasty.  So I loaded them up with tangy-bitter marmalade and contrasted that with sweet white chocolate – but they would be equally amazing with different combos. Next time I make these I’ll definitely try a raspberry and white chocolate version.

White Chocolate Marmalade Brioche Buns

Once you’ve made the buns and popped them into muffin trays, the dough balls can be frozen, stored in the freezer and then bagged for when you feel like a really special breakfast. Simply remove them from the freezer the night before to defrost, allow them to proof overnight and bake them when you wake up! If, like me, you love dessert for breakfast, try out these Sticky Toffee Pudding Pancakes or these Waffles with Honeyscotch Sauce.

White Chocolate Marmalade Brioche Buns

White Chocolate Marmalade Brioche Buns

Yield: 12

White Chocolate Marmalade Brioche Buns

Ingredients

  • 1 tsp dried yeast
  • ½ tbsp lukewarm water
  • 1 orange, zested
  • 2 tbsp (25g) castor sugar
  • ¼ tsp sea salt
  • 1 tbsp lukewarm milk
  • 1 cup (120g) bread flour
  • 1 large egg, lightly beaten
  • 75g butter, cubed and softened
  • 100g Natura Sugars Demerara Sugar, for sprinkling
  • Marmalade, for spreading
  • 200g good-quality white chocolate, chopped plus extra melted, for drizzling
  • milk, for brushing

Instructions

  1. Combine the yeast and water in a bowl and set aside in a warm area for 5 minutes or until the surface forms bubbles. In a separate bowl, combine the orange zest and sugar by rubbing the two together with your fingers then add the salt and milk. Place the flour, yeast mixture and egg in the bowl of a stand mixer and, using a dough hook, mix on low speed for 1 minute. Increase speed to high, add the milk mixture and mix for 10 minutes or until the dough comes away from the sides of the bowl. Keep the mixer running and gradually add the butter, mix for about 7 minutes or until smooth and elastic. Cover the dough with plastic wrap and set aside in a warm place for 2–3 hours or until the dough has doubled in size. Spray a 12 hole muffin pan with cooking spray and preheat oven to 180 degrees C. Roll out the brioche dough until 1cm thick and use a medium cookie cutter to cut out rounds 5cm wide. Toss each round of brioche dough in the demerara sugar, coating each side. Spoon ½ a tsp of marmalade on each round then sprinkle with a few shards of white chocolate. Layer 5 rounds on top of each other and cut the stack in half horizontally. Place each half in its own muffin pan, cut side down*. Cover with a clean, damp cloth and set aside for 1 hour or until doubled in size. Once doubled in size, brush with the milk and sprinkle with the demerara sugar. Bake in the preheated oven for 25-30 minutes or until golden and cooked through - the bread should sound hollow when tapped. Serve warm drizzled with extra melted chocolate, if desired.
  2. *TIP The buns can be frozen at this point. To bake them simply remove from the freeze and thaw completely. Then follow the rest of the recipe.
https://thekatetin.com/white-chocolate-marmalade-brioche-buns/

White Chocolate Marmalade Brioche Buns

Hot Cross Bun Doughnuts stuffed with Chocolate

Hot Cross Bun Doughnuts stuffed with Chocolate

#SPONSORED

If you love Hot Cross Buns, then brace yourself because Hot Cross Bun Doughnuts are even BETTER! I’m pretty sure I was the first person to create the Hot Cross Bun Doughnut. About 4 years ago, I woke up in the middle of the night with an idea; what if you DEEP-FRIED a hot cross bun?! I often think of deep-frying things, so this was not unusual but a quick google search confirmed that this did not yet exist. YES! Do you know how rare it is to come up with something completely new?!

That’s how these hot cross bun doughnuts ended up on Food24 and on the Expresso show (see I have proof I was the first!) BUT I’ve always regretted that I never filled them with something… I also don’t know what I was thinking making them miniature. Go big or go home, right?

The recipe is pretty simple; prepare a basic bread dough using Stork Bake (‘cos the doughnuts will stay fresher for longer) and load it up with spices, raisins and candied fruit. If you’re a raisin dodger, you can simply swop the fruit out for choc chips and nuts. Proof the dough as you would when making bread, but instead of baking them… you FRY them!

I like to grease the baking paper with a little Stork Bake to stop them sticking, and here’s the trick, when you’re ready to fry the doughnuts, simply cut the paper around the dough ball and pop the entire thing (dough ball with baking paper stuck to it) into the hot oil. As the doughnut browns, the paper will fall off.

Immediately give them a quick dip in a mountain of castor sugar. They are delicious as-is but filling them with an absurd amount of chocolate hazelnut spread (or custard!) really makes them special! These are best served still-warm on the day that you’ve made them. The dough will happily keep the in the fridge overnight so feel free to make that the day before.  You could even shape them, place on a baking sheet, cover with cling wrap and refrigerate overnight. In the morning, simply let them proof, pipe the crosses on and fry! Happy Easter!

Hot Cross Bun Doughnuts stuffed with Chocolate

Makes 12 large doughnuts

 

60g Stork Bake, cubed, at room temperature

420g cake flour

1 tsp salt

50ml soft brown sugar

1 tsp mixed spices

1 tsp ground cinnamon

1 tsp mixed peel (optional)

10g Instant dry yeast

1 large egg, beaten

200ml warm water

½ cup raisins

 

Crosses

¼ cup cake flour

1 tbsp melted Stork Bake

2 tbsp water

 

Vegetable oil, for deep-frying

Castor sugar, to dust

200g chocolate hazelnut spread, to fill

 

Rub the Stork Bake into the flour and mix in the salt, sugar, spices and mixed peel, if using. Add the yeast and mix. Beat the egg and warm water together and add to the dough. Mix to form a soft dough then knead for 5-10 minutes until smooth and elastic. Mix in the raisins. Divide into 12 pieces (or 24 if you’d prefer them to be a smaller bite-size) and roll into balls. Place on 2 x baking trays lined with baking paper, cover with cling wrap and allow to rise in a warm place until doubled in size – the balls should feel puffy (see TIP). Mix the flour, Stork Bake and water together and place in a piping bag. Pipe crosses onto the buns. Heat a deep fryer or large pot of oil to 180C and fry the doughnuts, in batches until golden and puffed. Remove from the oil and immediately dust in castor sugar. Place the chocolate hazelnut spread in a piping bag fitted with a small plain nozzle. Pierce a hole in the side of the doughnut, insert the nozzle and fill each doughnut with chocolate hazelnut spread. Serve immediately.

TIP To speed up the proofing process, turn your oven into a proofer by preheating it to the lowest setting – about 50 degrees celsius and place a baking tray filled with water in the bottom of the oven. Place the buns in the oven, covered, then turn the oven off and leave them to proof in the hot and humid environment.

Christmas Bun Wreath with Sherry Caramel

Christmas Bun Wreath with Sherry Caramel

#SPONSORED

There are a few things that define being a South African; if you use the word ‘Ja’ instead of ‘yes’, if you know what a ‘bakkie’ is, if you call it a granadilla instead of a passion fruit and, if you have at least one memory of OBS (Old Brown Sherry). Mine specifically revolves around Christmas and the generous glug my Great Aunty Margot always adds to the family trifle, but my story isn’t nearly as exciting as the one’s Sedgwick’s have compiled in a sweet little book to celebrate their 100-year birthday! One story, specifically, had me in fits of giggles because it sounded exactly like something my late grandmother would do! It’s called ‘The Undefeatable Tipsy Tart’ and was submitted by A. Nel.

“For over 15 years, my Grandmother was the reigning Tipsy Tart Queen of the local Agricultural Show. No other tannie could come close and every year, as she walked away with another first-prize ribbon, you would see them flocking around, fishing for her “secret ingredient”. Ouma would just laugh and say: “It’s made with love”.

 

Two years ago, my Gran passed away and my mother inherited all of her cookbooks and the hand-written recipes she had collected over the decades. Obviously the first dish my mother tried to replicate was the Undefeatable Tipsy Tart and while it tasted delicious, well, it wasn’t THAT good.

 

It was only 6 months later, after the gentleman who had been the judge for all those years stepped down, that Grandma’s trick was finally revealed. Turns out, the “secret ingredient” wasn’t actually part of her recipe – it was the shot of Sedgwick’s she always gave him beforehand that sealed the deal!”

If you’d love to get your hands on this special book (and a bottle of Sedgwick’s to drink while you mull over the stories), I’m giving away a gift set over on my Facebook page this week so click here to enter! You can also read all the funny OBS tales over on Sedgwick’s website here. But before you head on over, I’ve made some deliciously sticky Christmas buns stuffed with proper almond marzipan and fruit mince and drizzled with a Sedgwicks caramel which, if I could, I would bath in! Make them on Christmas eve, pop them in the fridge to prove overnight and bake them on Christmas morning to nibble on while you open presents! Merry Christmas everyone!

Sticky Christmas Bun Wreath with Marzipan and Sedgwick’s Caramel

Makes 12

 

DOUGH

500g flour

2 tsp ground cinnamon

2 tsp mixed spice

75g muscovado sugar

75g butter, softened

2 eggs

2 egg yolks

10g instant dry yeast

10g salt

175ml lukewarm milk (or water)

 

FILLING

60g butter, softened

½ cup fruit mince

100g almond marzipan (not persipan*) – optional, grated, plus extra for star cut-outs

 

SHERRY CARAMEL

1 cup light brown sugar

½ cup Sedgwick’s OBS

60g butter

1 tbsp cream

 

Make the dough by placing all the ingredients in a mixing bowl (I use a stand mixer to make it easier) and combine until a soft dough forms. Knead the dough for 8-10 minutes or until it’s smooth and springs back when poked with a finger. Cover the dough and leave to rise in a warm place until doubled in size (about 1 hour). You can also do this in the fridge overnight which gives it a lovely sourdough flavour. In the meantime, prepare the baking tray by rubbing a large 30cm spring form cake tin with butter. Knock down the dough and knead it lightly to press out the air then roll out into a 20x30cm rectangle. Spread the dough with the softened butter then spread with fruit mince and sprinkle with grated marzipan. Roll the dough up tightly (from the longest side) to form a sausage then slice into 2cm thick wheels. Pack the buns around the outside of the prepared cake tin and place a small ramekin in the middle (to keep the wreath shape. Then cover loosely with cling wrap and allow to rise in a warm place until doubled in size. In the meantime, make the caramel; place the sugar in a pan or saucepan with 2 tbsp water and heat gently until dissolved. Bring to the boil and simmer until deep golden brown. Add the OBS, butter and cream and swirl to combine. Allow to cool. Preheat the oven to 200C (conventional, 180 fan-forced) and bake for 20-30 minutes until golden (with the ramekin in the middle). Allow to cool slightly before serving warm, drizzled with the sherry caramel. Decorate with marzipan stars.

 

TIP You know when people say they hate marzipan? What they really mean is they hate persipan – the fake marzipan sold in most shops which is actually made from peach and apricot kernels and tastes like almond essence (also fake). Woolies now sell proper marzipan so do yourself a favour and give the real deal a try.