Earl Grey Cardamom Hot Cross Buns
Elevate your Easter baking with these unique Earl Grey and Cardamom Hot Cross Buns. Infused with fragrant tea and warm spices, and studded with raisins, orange peel, and dark chocolate, these buns offer an utterly delicious twist.
Prep Time45 minutes mins
Cook Time20 minutes mins
Resting Time1 hour hr 40 minutes mins
Total Time2 hours hrs 45 minutes mins
Course: Breakfast, Snack
Keyword: Earl Grey, Hot Cross Bun, Hot Cross Buns
Servings: 12 buns in a 9×13″ baking pan
Tangzhong
- 20 g high protein bread flour
- 100 g water
- 6 g earl grey tea leaves
Dough
- 50 g milk chilled
- 30 g whipping / heavy cream chilled
- 30 g castor sugar
- zest of an orange
- 1 egg
- ¼ tsp salt
- 260 g high protein bread flour
- 10 g earl grey powder
- 1 tbsp milk powder
- 1 tsp ground cardamom
- 1 tsp ground cinnamon
- ½ tsp nutmeg powder
- 1 tsp yeast
- 30 g unsalted butter room temperature
- 10 g milk optional for wash
Inclusions
- 30 g raisins
- 30 g orange peel
- 20 g dark chocolate callets
Please note that I have included two methods below for tangzhong making and dough kneading using either the Thermomix or conventional bread machine so do take note of the sub-headings.
TANGZHONG & DOUGH KNEADING (Thermomix Method)
To make the tangzhong, place 20g high protein flour, 100g water and 6g of earl grey tea leaves in mixing bowl, cook for 3min/80°C/spd 3 and let stand for 15-20 minutes until temperature lowers down to 40°C.
Add remaining ingredients in dough except butter, then knead 4 min.
Add butter, knead 1 min.
Add inclusions, knead 20 secs.
TANGZHONG & DOUGH KNEADING (Conventional Method)
Prepare tangzhong by mixing 20g high protein flour, 100g water and earl grey tea together in a pot, ensuring the mixture is well combined with no lumps. Cook over medium-low heat, stirring consistently to prevent burning and sticking while you cook.
The mixture will gradually become thicker. Once you notice that some “lines” appear in the mixture for when you stir with the spoon, it’s done. Your tangzhong is ready.
Transfer into a clean bowl. Cover with a cling wrap sticking onto the surface of tangzhong to prevent it from drying up. Let cool.
Add all ingredients under Dough (except butter) into breadmaker; first the wet ingredients including cooled Tangzhong, then followed by the dry ingredients.
Select "dough" mode and let knead until all ingredients come together, usually I let it knead for approximately 8-9 minutes.
Then add in the butter, continue kneading until the dough is smooth and elastic. Add inclusions in during the last 3-4 minutes. The total time of kneading in my breadmaker is approximately 20-25 minutes. Check if you have achieved windowpane.
BULK FERMENTATION (FIRST RISE)
DOUGH SHAPING & SECOND RISE
Grease and line a 9×13" baking pan using baking paper with 1-2 inches overhang.
After dough has doubled in size, punch down to deflate. Divide dough into 12 equal portions weighing approx 55-56g each.
Take one portion and press down with palm, then gather the sides to the center forming a ball. Then using the corner of your palms at a 45 degree angle, perform chaffing method by pressing dough downwards whilst rotating dough. This helps to stretch dough to get a nice, taut round ball with smooth surface.
Place the ball seam side down on the baking pan and repeat with remaining dough. Line them up 4 x 3 in the pan.
Let dough rise for its 2nd round of proofing, until double in size. This takes another 35-40 minutes. During the last 15 minutes, preheat oven to 180°C and prepare flour paste for crosses.
CROSSES
Mix flour and water in a small bowl until a thick runny paste forms.
Spoon into a piping bag or ziplock bag then snip off corner, approx a small 2mm-3mm round size.
Brush milk wash on the buns, then pipe a line down the middle of each row of buns. Repeat in the other direction to create crosses.
BAKING & GLAZING
Bake at 180°C for 18-20 mins until golden brown.
Whilst buns are baking, prepare sugar syrup. Combine sugar and water in a small saucepan and bring it to the boil. If using Thermomix, heat for 2 mins/100°C/Speed 3 without MC.
Remove buns from oven. Use overhang to lift buns from pan onto a cooling rack then brush sugar glaze on buns. Let cool for 10 minutes, then enjoy warm!
Store completely cooled buns in air tight container – they can stay in room temp for up to 2-3 days or refrigerated up to 1 week.
Inclusions – can be a mix of sultanas, currants or raisins. For extra plump and moist raisins/sultanas, soak them in hot water or black tea for 10 minutes before using. Drain and pat dry then toss into dough. You may adjust to have either more raisins, chocolate callets or orange peels, depending on what your personal preference is.
Whipping cream substitute – do use whipping cream with 35% fat. And please do NOT substitute the 30g of cream with another portion of 30g of milk. Both these ingredients have different % of fats etc.
Orange zest & Sugar rub – I highly recommend the additional step of rubbing the orange zest into the sugar before adding into the dough, as this would release the citrusy essential oil, adding a deeper orange floral note to the dough. But you can of course skip this step, and just add both sugar + zest individually into the dough to knead.
Earl Grey Powder – This is optional, but highly recommended. If you do not have this on hand, replace with 10g of high protein flour instead.
This is an original recipe by The Bakeanista. Kindly do not copy paste and/or repurpose the recipe without prior consent.