April 6, 2020

Bread Machine Cinnamon Rolls



My love of cinnamon rolls began on a camping and rock climbing retreat as young teenager.  The camp counselor/cook made homemade cinnamon rolls right at camp from kneading, raising, filling cutting and baking in a clever camp stove oven. As the smell permeated the camp, I couldn't wait to sink my sugar addicted teeth into something that smelled so good.  Yeasted sweet dough treats were not part of my childhood so this was a new and wonderful taste experience. But then for more than a decade, I did not think of cinnamon rolls, outside of the grocery store tube can variety, until the mall chain store pumped out giant, thickly frosted cinnamon rolls to the mall crowds.  Neither the tube can nor mall store rolls ever stood up to those camping rolls.  Then bread machines came on to the market in the early 1990s and cinnamon rolls became a mainstay in my home. My first bread maker was the Panasonic machine from 1994. That machine was extraordinary and didn’t break down until 2012 after making many loaves of bread and many more doughs for rolls of all kinds.  Though the bread machine does have its limitations as the breads produced are not artisanal and the bread quality tends to be the same across recipes, the bread machine fills a place in the home for fast and easy homemade bread for even the most unskilled or skilled and overworked person.


Bread Machine Cinnamon Rolls
1 ½ pound loaf
1 pound loaf


3/8 cup milk or non-dairy milk
¼ cup milk or non-dairy milk
3/8 cup water
¼ cup water
1 egg
1 egg
3 cups all-purpose flour
2 cups all-purpose flour
4 tablespoons butter or  nondairy butter substitute
3 tablespoons butter or  nondairy butter substitute
1/3 cup sugar
¼ cup sugar
1 ½ teaspoons instant yeast or active yeast
1 ½ teaspoons instant yeast or active yeast
*Roll dough into 9X18 inch rectangle
*Roll dough into 8X14 inch rectangle
Filling
Filling
3 tablespoons of softened butter
2 tablespoons of softened butter
4 tablespoons sugar
3 tablespoons sugar
2 teaspoons cinnamon
1 ½ teaspoons cinnamon
2 teaspoons cocoa powder if desired
1 ½ teaspoons cocoa powder if desired
Icing
Icing
3 tablespoons softened dairy free butter
2 ½ tablespoons softened dairy free butter
1 cup powdered sugar
3/4 cup powdered sugar
3 tablespoons non-dairy milk of choice
2 ½ tablespoons non-dairy milk of choice
½ to 1 tsp vanilla, lemon juice, or lemon extract – adjust to personal taste preferences
½ to 1 tsp vanilla, lemon juice, or lemon extract – adjust to personal taste preferences



Line a sheet pan with a Silpat or parchment paper.
Place all ingredients in bread machine pan.
Select dough setting and press start.
When dough has risen long enough, the machine will beep.
Turn off bread machine, remove bread pan and turn out dough on floured countertop or cutting board.
Turn on proofing setting in oven, if have, or warm oven at lowest temperature for a few minutes then turn off.
Roll dough into the loaf size rectangle - *see above*
Filling
Spread the softened butter edge to edge across the rectangle.
Mix the sugar, cinnamon, and cocoa powder in small bowl.
Sprinkle the sugar mixture edge to edge across the dough rectangle.
Roll rectangle tightly into a log starting from the long end.
Pinch seam.
Put seam side to cutting board or counter and cut with a sharp thin bladed knife into the desired number of rolls and place rolls 1 inch apart on prepared pan
**see below if making ahead.
Thicker rolls 8-12 pieces 13/4 inches thick
Smaller rolls 12-16 pieces 1/1/4 inches thick
Cover with a lint free towel and let rise for 30 minutes until doubled in size in proofing oven, warmed oven, or warm place.
Once nearly doubled, remove from oven.
Preheat oven to 350F.
Bake rolls for 15 to 20 minutes, until golden brown.
Icing
Mix in a large bowl with whisk, hand mixer, or bowl mixer the powdered sugar and softened butter until combined.
Whisk in milk until smooth and at the consistency of a soft slow flowing icing or preferred desired consistency
Adjust consistency by alternately adding more liquid or powdered sugar.
Frost by stringing, pooling, spreading etc. – any coverage level and pattern desired.

**At this point, if desired, cover tightly with aluminum foil, and refrigerate overnight. 
Remove from refrigerator and let rise in proofing oven, warmed oven, or warm place until doubled in size - plan for extra time for the proofing step.







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