Sourdough Macadamia Nut Sweet Rolls
We recently spent a week in Hawaii, and while I couldn't bring back any fresh fruit, I was able to bring back some good macadamia nuts (Sea Salt Roasted). Wanted to use some of them in a bake and came up with the following idea. I used the Sourdough Cinnamon Roll recipe from Breadtopia's Sourdough Cookbook for Beginners (Pg. 102) as the basis for the recipe and then developed my own filling using the macadamia nuts. Gave a few to friends, and the early reviews are great!
Sweet Stiff Starter
90g AP Flour
30g Sourdough Starter at 100% hydration
40g Water
30g Granulated Sugar
Final Dough
450g AP Flour
50g Spelt Flour, fresh milled
130g Scalded Milk
86g Unsalted Butter, cubed
120g Granulated Sugar
10g Salt
6g Vanilla Extract
150g Eggs (3 large eggs)
Filling
150g Granulated Sugar
75g Chopped Macadamia Nuts
2 tsp Orange zest
1 tsp Orange juice (fresh squeezed)
3/4 tsp Cardamom
1/2 tsp Myer's Dark Rum
1/2 tsp Vanilla Extract
Icing
2 cups Powdered Sugar
1 tsp Myer's Dark Rum
1/2 tsp Vanilla Extract
2-3 TBSP Milk
Morning Before
1) Combine ingredients for Sweet Stiff Starter and kneading a few times to completely mix/hydrate flours
2) Ferment 6-12 hours at 76 deg F until dough has doubled in size
Night Before
1) Mix all Final Dough ingredients including Sweet Stiff Starter with paddle attachment until dough just comes together.
2) Knead dough using dough hook attachment for 10-15 minutes on medium speed (I was unable to fully develop dough and keep it from sticking to bowl.
3) Scrape dough into greased bowl and ferment at 76 deg until at least a 75% volume increase. Will take 6-12 hours. (I was able to get 100% in 10.5 hours)
3) Combine Filling ingredients in a bowl and mix thoroughly to wet the sugar (should have wet sand consistency). Cover and refrigerate to allow flavors to come together.
Day Of
1) Roll dough on a lightly floured surface into a 24" x 12" rectangle keeping corners relatively square and to a uniform thickness. If dough sticks to counter, lightly flour the top side and flip the dough. Lightly flour the new top side and continue rolling.
2) Place filling on dough and evenly distribute it. Leave about 1/2" of open dough along the top edge to seal the roll.
3) Roll dough away from you keeping the roll as tight as possible and uniform in shape/thickness.
4) Grease a 13" x 9" x 2" baking dish.
5) Cut the roll into 2" long sections and place cut-side up in the dish. Evenly space the 12 rolls in the dish.
6) Cover the dish and let rise 3-5 hours at 75+ deg F. Dough will expand significantly and the rolls will touch each other. (I stopped final proof at 3.75 hours (76-77 deg F)).
7) Pre-heat oven to 350 deg F and then another 15 minutes
8) Bake at 350 deg F for 25-30 minutes until edges are light golden brown and filling is bubbling (I went a couple minutes too long).
9) Combine ingredients for icing and mix until no sugar lumps with a whisk. Add milk/sugar as needed to get desired consistency.
10) Remove rolls from oven and let cool in pan for 5-10 minutes. Drizzle icing over rolls and let the icing firm up.
Rolls after Final Proof
Comments
These look amazing Troy and must taste awesome. I’d love one right about now. Hope you and your family enjoyed Hawaii, which island(s) did you visit? It’s one of our favorite places to visit.
Benny
Thank you Benny. It’s always nice when an experiment turns out the way you hoped. 😁
We visited Maui. My first time there and definitely enjoyed it!
Looks like a winner! I've got a cinnamon twist recipe that I've been tinkering with but it uses IDY...so glad to see a tried and tested recipe for a sourdough version here. The filling ingredients sound absolutely scrumptious! I imagine these stay softer a little longer given that they are made with sourdough...if any lasted past the first day ;-)
Thanks so much for posting and for including such great instructions!
Have only made cinnamon rolls once or twice, so can’t really comment on softness over time. Yeah, they usually don’t make it past a couple days. 😁
The sweet stiff starter negates any sour flavor and this was my first time trying it. Not sure I see a big advantage to this route versus using commercial yeast because the fermentation times are very long. Would need to do a side by side to compare. However, the orange zest/cardamom combination was a hit!