Finished Rolls |
Obviously I'm a fan of all baked goods, but these might be the best thing I've ever made; multigrain rolls are packed with sweet caramelised onions and punchy blue cheese. They’re great on their own (warm is best, or straight out of the oven!) or with a herby side salad or bowl of tomato soup. Cooking them side by side makes for crispy tops and soft, bouncy sides, but the fillings would be equally delicious worked through the whole dough to make a large loaf – whatever suits your needs!
Caramelised Onion and Stilton Multigrain Spiral Rolls
Makes 16/18 rolls
Ingredients:
Dough:
500g multigrain bread flour (or strong white)
25g/1oz marg or butter
2 tsp salt
2 tsp/7g dried yeast
350ml warm water
Filling:
4 onions, very finely sliced
2 tsp butter or marg
2 tsp sugar (any variety)
Salt and pepper to season
225g stilton (or use any variety of cheese you like)
milk to glaze
200oC oven/180oc fan oven
Method:
1. Rub the marg or butter into the flour until it resembles
breadcrumbs, then add the yeast and salt (to separate sides of the bowl) and
mix.
2. Add the warm water in stages until the dough comes
together but isn't sticky.
Soft, golden caramelised onions |
4. Place into an oiled bowl, cover with oiled clingfilm and
leave to rise in a warm place until doubled in size (at least 1 hour).
5. Whilst the dough is rising make the caramelised onions. Cook the sliced onions in a saucepan with a little oil over a low heat for 10 minutes, or until very soft and translucent, do not let the onions colour. Once soft, add the butter and sugar, continue to heat gently until everything is combined. Season to taste. Sieve the onions to remove excess liquid and set aside to cool.
5. Whilst the dough is rising make the caramelised onions. Cook the sliced onions in a saucepan with a little oil over a low heat for 10 minutes, or until very soft and translucent, do not let the onions colour. Once soft, add the butter and sugar, continue to heat gently until everything is combined. Season to taste. Sieve the onions to remove excess liquid and set aside to cool.
Covered dough with fillings |
7. Cover the rectangle evenly with the onions and blue
cheese (broken into small pieces), tack one of the long edges to the work
surface and then roll from the opposite long edge like a swiss roll - do it as
tightly as you can. (I left a small portion of the dough without stilton as some of the people I was making it for don't like it).
8. Cut the ~1m long roll into approx. 5cm portions (you
should get between 16/18 individual rolls, plus some scraggy end bits which you can just bake with the rolls).
Mid rolling |
10. Cover the rolls with oiled clingfilm and leave to rise
again in a warm place for approx. 30 minutes.
11. Brush the rolls with milk and bake in the centre of a
preheated oven (200oC) for 35/40 minutes, or until golden brown. Because of the oils from the cheese and onions you can't tap these rolls on the base to test for a hollow sound; you have to do it by the colour of the dough and the feel when pressed, you're looking for crispy exteriors that spring back when pressed. Turn out of the trays and leave to cool on a wire rack, or eat straight away...
Sliced rolls before 2nd proofing |
Happy Baking!
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