Sunday, August 17, 2025

Soft Fluffy Gooey Cinnamon Roll Recipe

 

How is it possible to be gooey, soft and fluffy all at the same time?

These super fluffy, soft, pillowy cinnamon rolls have been perfected over 15 years of real home cooking and years of commercial cooking (when I owned the cafe). This is the actual small batch recipe I have used and tweaked over the years.

They are filled with the perfect amount of cinnamon filling and then topped with lashings of dreamy vanilla cream cheese frosting.

They can be frozen and defrosted in a microwave in 40 seconds. Plus you can partially make the dough the night before and finish a second rise and bake in the morning. 

This is the ultimate cinnamon roll recipe!

If you have never baked with yeast before don't be afraid, it's actually pretty easy as long as you follow the recipe and steps. I have found the following tips super helpful to ensure a consistent rise every time.

1. Make sure the yeast is within use by date. 

2. Proof your yeast - This is a process where you add the dry yeast to liquid and activate it (with sugar in this recipe) to see if it blooms. Imagine going through the whole process of mixing and kneading bread for 10 or more minutes, putting it in a warm place to rise and having a ball of dough that is hard and heavy instead of elastic and springy. Proofing your yeast is a surefire way to test that it is still active.

3. Don't overheat the yeast during the rise process. When I was young I remember my first try baking with yeast I used hot water and killed the yeast. I thought if gently warming yeast worked then hot could only work better and faster. Nope, uh-uh, No! Luke warm is the way to go here.

4. Use bread flour. This one is not essential but I find that my rolls hold up better with bread flour. When I use all purpose or plain flour the rolls collapse down on themselves a little during the cooling process. They still taste amazing and to be honest the slightly sunken tops are a good way to hold more frosting. But for perfect rolls which are softer and fluffier, bread flour will get a better result.

5. Knead your dough until elastic and it springs back. If you don't knead your bread enough it will be dense and not rise as well. If you have a stand mixer this is easy to achieve with a dough hook. If you are doing it by hand don't be tempted to skimp on this step.


6. Double rise but....don't over rise. Rolls that have been left to rise too long will result in a tougher texture roll. The taste may be overly yeasty and sour and the dough may collapse during cooking. It's another example of more is not always better.

*Bonus Controversial Tip - It is possible to use yeast that is past its best before date. If you follow Tip 2 and proof your yeast and it blooms it is ok to use. 

I follow these couple of tips and consistently get great soft fluffy inside and golden baked outside results. 

I think everyone should try cooking with yeast at least once. The feeling of pride when you take your first bite of home baked bread made from scratch with your own hands is pricelessly rewarding in so many ways.

Happy Baking

XX

Linda M 


Best Fluffy Soft Cinnamon Roll Recipe - makes 12 cinnamon rolls

170grams warm water (heat in microwave from 10-20 seconds until barely warm)

1 packet dry yeast (7g)

85g caster sugar

460g bread flour

1 tsp salt

1 egg

40g melted butter

Mix together water, yeast and 1Tbsp sugar and set aside to bloom. This usually takes around 4 minutes for me.

In a large bowl mix together flour, remaining sugar, salt, butter, egg and proofed yeast mixture and mix until just combined and then knead until smooth and elastic and the dough bounces back when pressed lightly. If you have a stand mixer this Will take around 10 minutes on low speed.

Place in a lightly oiled bowl, cover and set aside in a warm spot to rise for 1 1/2 hours or until doubled in size. It was winter for the ones I made in the picture so I covered my bowl with plastic wrap and set it in the oven on 50C (around 120F).

Dust the bench down with flour and roll the dough out into a rectangle of around 45 X 30 cm (18 by 12 inches).

Shape the dough into a rectangle as you roll it. I like to pick my dough up and at the start turn it so it does not stick to the bench and rolls out an even thickness.

Spread on filling (recipe below). Roll up into a long log then cut 12 rolls 1 1/2 inches each. 

(this picture only has 6 rolls the recipe is for 12 rolls as per below picture)

Put into greased tray and rise a second time for around 30 minutes.

Don't over rise - you want perfectly puffy rolls, they should not have large bubbles.

Bake at 180-190C for 12-18 minutes until the rolls are golden brown. If you tap them with your nails they will be hard on the top and sound a little hollow.



Frost with cream cheese frosting (recipe below). When I had the cafe I would turn the rolls out onto a tray lined with parchment paper and then flip back over onto a wire rack lined with parchment paper and allow the rolls to cool before frosting them for a neater looking finished roll. However you can frost them and eat them still warm fresh out of the oven and the result is a gooey delicious roll like the picture at the top of this blog post.

Cinnamon swirl filling

70g (2+ 1/2 oz) unsalted butter, softened

1 cup brown sugar

2 Tbsp ground cinnamon

1/4 tsp salt

Mix all ingredients together, I use my stand mixer and beat until it mixes up fluffy like a frosting.

Cream Cheese Frosting

70g (2+ 1/2 oz) unsalted butter

70g (2+1/2oz) cream cheese

2 cups icing (powdered) sugar (In Australian can use Icing Sugar Mixture)

2 tsp Vanilla extract

Mix all ingredients together for a few minutes until light and fluffy. I use a stand mixer.


Original photos and recipe from the Bubble and Sweet blog ©Linda McCubbin 2025. I love when people share my blog ideas and give credit. Please feel free to link back to my blog for non commercial purposes or contact me. Affiliate links and adds may earn me money, however all ideas and opinions are my own.

Linda Mccubbin is a blogger, baker, maker and author of the cookbook ' Sweets on a Stick': More than 150 kid friendly recipes for cakes, candies, cookies and pies on the go!. Published in the US in 2011 (under my previous name Linda Vandermeer).

Thursday, July 24, 2025

Pistachio Cream and Salted Chocolate Brown Butter Cookies

This might be a bit controversial but I don't particularly love thick cookies. Don't get me wrong, they look spectacular. For photography purposes who can beat a picture of a fat cookie, big as your hand stuffed with chocolate and topped with candy bars. And for video purposes the break and pull shot with oozy filling spilling out is hard to beat.

But I need more than pretty looks, I need substance, and soul, and layers of flavour and texture instead of dense sugary propped up dough.


Enter these pistachio and salted chocolate brown butter cookies. Caramel undertones of browned butter, fragrant vanilla, crunchy chopped pistachios, smooth creamy pistachio butter, melt in your mouth dark chocolate, crisp cookie and flakes of salt weaving together to produce a harmoniously satisfying experience with every bite.


I made quite a few versions of this cookie while creating my favourite, adding a few grams extra flour here, taking out some butter to come up with the most pleasing mix between buttery candy like texture that was firm enough to keep it's shape and hold up to cookie like treatment. 

In the final version I have melted the butter with a tablespoon of milk powder which results in a crazy amount of browning in the butter. If you are not keen to brown the butter, you can just melt the butter and you will still end up with a lovely cookie, if you are not browning the butter and just melting it, reduce the amount of butter to 130 grams(4 5/8oz) to account for evaporation during the browning process.

As these cookies are soft and buttery, they need to rest on the trays to cool. 

\I shaped my cookies after baking using a round cookie cutter, by placing the cutter over the cookies and swirling them around in little circles. If are not quick enough or bake the cookies too much this technique will not work.

I bought my pistachio cream from Costco - I have seen the exact same brand on Amazon (CLICK HERE). If you don't want to buy pistachio cream you can save yourself some money and time, leave it out and the cookies will still be delicious. While I was making the cookies I thought they would make be amazing with Nutella and hazelnuts in place of the pistachio.

Happy Baking XX

Linda M


Pistachio Salted Dark Chocolate Brown Butter Cookies

makes 10 cookies x 10cm (apex 4") in size (60gram or 2oz uncooked dough). Store in an airtight container up to 3 days. Uncooked dough can be portioned into cookie serves, frozen wrapped in plastic wrap and defrosted for baking. 

I shaped my cookies after baking with a circle cookie cutter around 10cm (4 inches) across .

140g (4 7/8oz)salted butter

1 Tbsp dried milk powder

170g (6oz) plain (all purpose) flour

1/2 tsp salt

1/2 baking powder (baking powder)

120g (4 1/4oz) brown sugar

50g (1 3/4oz) granulated white sugar

1 egg room temperature

1 tsp vanilla extract

120g (4 1/4oz) dark chocolate cut into chunks - reserve some for adding to top half way through baking as mine was chunks I reserved around 55g (1 7/8oz) if you have chips reserve a few chips per cookie

45g (1 5/8 oz) or 1/3 cup shelled raw pistachios chopped (reserve 1 Tbsp of finely chopped nuts) 

70g (2 1/2oz) pistachio cream

1 tsp flaky salt

Prior to starting to brown the butter have a heat safe container which can hold 2 cups of more ready to pour the hot butter into. 

In a saucepan heat the butter over medium heat until melted. Stir with a rubber spatula or whisk so the butter cooks evenly. When the butter is melted add the 1 tbsp of milk powder. Continue to cook until the milk solids start to brown and immediately remove the saucepan from the heat and pour into the heat safe bowl. Make sure you scrap all the browned milk solids from the saucepan into the melted butter.

Allow the butter to cool a little while you prepare the remaining ingredients.

Sift the flour, salt, baking powder, brown sugar and white sugar into a large bowl.

Add the melted brown butter, egg and vanilla to the large bowl of dry ingredients and mix until combined using a large spoon or spatula. Make sure all the ingredients are wet and mixed in.

Add the chopped chocolate (making sure to save some to add later to the top during baking) and the chopped pistachio and mix until distributed evenly. Pop bowl into fridge to chill around 30 minutes.

Cover 2 cookie trays with parchment paper or silopat mat* Divide the cookie dough into 10 equal portions of about 60g (2 1/4 oz) each. Shape into a tall cylinder and poke an indent into the top of each cookie. Add pistachio cream into the middle indent of each cookie. Chill the dough for at least another 30 minutes. You can chill for longer up to overnight if you like but keep the cookies in an airtight container if chilling for longer than an hour.

Preheat oven to 175C (350F) fan forced. Once oven is heated put cookies in oven and bake for 6 minutes. Remove from oven, add extra reserved chocolate on top of cookies, rotate tray positions and return to oven to bake further 6-7 minutes until the cookies start to brown around the edges.


Remove from oven, if you are shaping the cookies using the round cookie cutter, quickly do so by putting the cutter over the cookie and swirling it around if a small circle lightly to result in an even shape, Sprinkle the reserved finely chopped pistachio and flaked salt onto the top of the cooked cookies.

Allow cookies to cool on tray until set.

* I trialed baking the cookies on both a silo pat mat and parchment paper. The silopat mat ended up a more pleasing shape as they spread more evenly, the parchment paper lined trays ended up a crispier cookie, both were very good, I will probably use the silopat mat for aesthetic purposes in future.


Original photos and recipe from the Bubble and Sweet blog ©Linda McCubbin 2025. I love when people share my blog ideas and give credit. Please feel free to link back to my blog for non commercial purposes or contact me. Affiliate links and adds may earn me money, however all ideas and opinions are my own.

Linda Mccubbin is a blogger, baker, maker and author of the cookbook ' Sweets on a Stick': More than 150 kid friendly recipes for cakes, candies, cookies and pies on the go!. Published in the US in 2011 (under my previous name Linda Vandermeer).

Thursday, May 22, 2025

Woodland Toadstool macarons its giving fairy queen vibes

 

I was so excited by the technique I used to make the cottage rose macarons in my last post I decided to keep on going and make something even more whimsical and magical and that's how these woodland toadstool macarons came to be.

How adorably cute are they, and look at the perfect shiny shells! I am smitten with this technique. It's the opposite of textured macarons and I love it to bits.


I made a YouTube video <click here> that's only a few minutes long so you can watch the piping technique. Honestly I am mesmerised by the way the piped mixture falls back into the shells and can watch it endlessly. Once they are piped they look like beautiful necklace pendants sitting on a tray.

The secret to shiny macron shells that withstand the wet on wet piping technique is a recipe with the right consistency, not all recipes will work. My recipe is an Italian Meringue base that I have personally tried, tested and tweaked for 15 years. It was used commercially in my cafe and was no fail time after time for thousands of macarons. You can get it for free <HERE>


and if you know me you know I haven't stopped here. I have a few more designs floating around in my head that I have to try before I move on. If you make your own batch up make sure to tag me on instagram so I can see how they work out 👀

I filled these macarons with a whipped pistachio ganache that is so yummy you can eat it with a spoon, I've included quick instructions at the end of the post below.

Happy Baking

xx Linda 

Shopping links   

(may have affiliate links which may earn me commissions and contribute to the running of this blog):



Red Food Powder like <AMERICOLOR RED CLICK HERE FOR LINK> I prefer a powder for red as you need to use so much gel food colour it impacts the batter consistency.

Green food colour - any gel type can be used as only a drop is needed I used moss green. You only need a drop or 2 for the soft hue I achieved.

Pistachio Cream - I picked mine up at Costco her is an online link <PISTACHIO CREAM AMAZON> You can make your own or buy any brand you like. Or you can use just white chocolate ganache without adding the pistachio cream to save money.

I piped my ganache with a Wilton piping tip - 4B <link to set of 4 piping tips>



RECIPE INSTRUCTIONS/LINKS

You can get the recipe from my last post where I made wet on wet cottage core rose macarons <CLICK HERE FOR MACARON RECIPE>.

PISTACHIO GANACHE - I filled the woodland toadstool macarons with a decadently delicious whipped pistachio white chocolate ganache. Mix 3 parts white chocolate to 1 part cream (ie 300g (10+5/8oz) white chocolate to 100g (3+5/8oz cream)) heat in microwave for 2 minutes on high, cool/set, whip in a mixer and then and mix in 1 part pistachio cream (ie 100g (3 5/8 oz))

Original photos and recipe from the Bubble and Sweet blog ©Linda McCubbin 2025. I love when people share my blog ideas and give credit. Please feel free to link back to my blog for non commercial purposes or contact me. Affiliate links and adds may earn me money, however all ideas and opinions are my own.

Linda Mccubbin is a blogger, baker, maker and author of the cookbook ' Sweets on a Stick': More than 150 kid friendly recipes for cakes, candies, cookies and pies on the go!. Published in the US in 2011 (under my previous name Linda Vandermeer).