Tuesday, December 29, 2015

Christmas Cinnamon Roll or Pecan Roll Recipe

I like to think that I am a good cook. I can definitely follow a recipe and I know enough about cooking and flavors to go off book every once in awhile. In the past I have posted a couple recipes that I like (Irish Car Bomb Cupcakes and Cherry Pinot Noir Waffle Syrup) but those have all been links to other people's recipes.


Well, here's a recipe that I am going to consider my own. It's a combination of a Cinnabon-style cinnamon roll recipe that I found online, and my aunt's Pecan Roll recipe.


Growing up we always had Pecan Rolls on Christmas morning. My aunt would bring them with her if she was there, or would send them to my grandmother if wasn't there. Since we've all grown up we don't spend Christmas with my aunt as much so I started making Pecan Rolls using her recipe.


Well, my sister-in-law doesn't like nuts. And that's kind of the point of Pecan Rolls. So I started making cinnamon rolls instead. There's things about each recipe that I really like, so this year I decided to combine them into my own recipe.


This recipe will get you 2 plates of 8 rolls each. They will all be stuck together. You can separate them if you want and wrap them individually, but I find it easier to store all together.


Unfortunately I didn't take any pictures when I made these last week, but I will try to remember next year.


A couple notes:


1. It really helps having a mixer with a dough hook. I wouldn't recommend doing this without one.


2. I have several things listed as 'optional.' I do make the sticky mixture and the icing, but I don't add the nuts or raisins. The only reason I omit those two is because my sister-in-law doesn't like them. Omitting the sticky mixture would make them slightly healthier - but if you want healthy why would you even make cinnamon rolls?!


3. If you are saving them and want to reheat them, I recommend using the microwave and covering them with a wet paper towel to kind of steam them.


4. I usually make the icing right before eating them because if you keep it in the fridge it hardens a little.


5. I hate sifting powdered sugar - it does make a difference, but I'm usually to lazy to do it. No one in my family has complained about it yet.


6. I always have lots of leftover filling. If I can come up with more realistic quantities I will update this post.


7. Flip the rolls onto a paper plate at the end for easy storage. A regular plate might be fancier, but if it will take a couple days to get through all of them then you're out a plate or two. Plus with paper plates you can give these babies away as gifts.


8. Wash the cake pans immediately or the sticky mixture will never come off.


9. Make sure your yeast is not expired or this will not work.


10. I have you flip the rolls a second time if you don't use pecans. Leaving the sticky mixture with pecans face up is the style of the Pecan Roll. Flipping a second time so the sticky mixture is down is the style of a cinnamon roll. Choose wisely...


Here's the recipe:


Christmas Cinnamon Rolls or Pecan Rolls


TIME REQUIRED: Prep – 15 minutes; Rise – 60-90 minutes; Assembly – 15 minutes; Rise – 45-60 minutes; Bake – 20 minutes; Total – approximately 3 hours
Rolls can be made ahead of time and stored in the refrigerator or freezer. I usually make the icing right before eating the rolls – it can be stored in the fridge, but it will harden.
Makes 16 rolls
INGREDIENTS:

FILLING (I usually have lots extra):
·         ½ cup melted butter
·         1 cup granulated sugar
·         2 Tbsp. cinnamon
·         ¼ cup brown sugar
·         Raisins to taste (optional)
DOUGH:
·         1 pkg active dry yeast + ½ tsp granulated sugar
·         1/3 cup granulated sugar
·         1/3 cup of shortening
·         ½ cup 110 degree water
·         ½ cup whole milk
·         1 tsp salt
·         1 egg (beaten)
·         Up to 4 cups flour
STICKY MIXTURE (optional):
·         ¼ cup butter
·         ½ cup dark brown sugar
·         1 Tbsp. lt corn syrup
·         1 cup pecans (optional)
ICING (optional):
·         2 oz cream cheese (softened)
·         7 Tbsp. butter (softened)
·         ½ tsp vanilla extract
·         2 Tbsp. milk
·         1 ½ cups powdered sugar (sifted)
INSTRUCTIONS
FILLING:
Mix together granulated sugar, cinnamon, and brown sugar in a bowl. Set aside.

DOUGH:
Preheat oven to 200 deg. Turn off the oven when it’s hot.
In a small bowl, soften the yeast and ¼ tsp sugar in the warm water (I find that the hot water out of my faucet is pretty close to 110 degrees).
Scald the milk (bring almost to a boil).

Using a mixer and dough hook combine the milk, sugar, shortening, salt and egg. Cool slightly. Add yeast mixture and 2 cups of flour; beat until smooth. Add in enough of the remaining flour to form a slightly stiff dough. Knead with the dough hook for approximately 5-8 minutes until the dough is stretchy.
Place the dough in a greased bowl and cover with a dish towel. Put the bowl in the oven until the dough doubles in size (1 – 1 ½ hours).

STICKY MIXTURE:
While dough is rising make the sticky mixture.

Grease the bottom of 2 cake pans.
On the stove, melt butter in a pan over medium heat; add sugar and corn syrup. Heat slowly. Chop pecans (optional).

Pour half of the mixture in each pan and spread across the bottom. Sprinkle pecans on top of filling (optional).

DOUGH (After Rising):
Turn on oven to 200 degrees and turn off when hot.

Remove dough from oven. Punch down dough and let it rest for 5 minutes.
Divide dough in half. For each half, make a log shape and roll into a rectangle using a floured rolling pin. Spread half of the melted butter for the FILLING over each dough rectangle; sprinkle the filling mix over the butter (I usually have a lot leftover); add raisins to taste (optional).

Roll up each dough rectangle into a log, pushing in the sides; cut each log into 8 rolls. Take the ends and put them good side down in the center of one of the cake pans and fill in the rest of the rolls around them.
Cover both pans with dish towels and put them in the oven to rise (45 minutes – 1 hour).

Remove pans from the oven and uncover.
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Bake rolls for 20 minutes.

Take pans out and immediately flip rolls onto a plate. Wait a minute and remove the pans (wash immediately). If you did NOT use pecans in the sticky mixture, flip the rolls one more time to get them right side up.

ICING:
Using an electric mixer, combine cream cheese and butter (softened) in a bowl until creamy. Add in vanilla and milk. Gradually add in powdered sugar until smooth and fluffy.


Enjoy!

Thursday, December 17, 2015

Princess Anna Costume

I mentioned back in April in my post about the Queen Elsa costume that I made that I was also working on a Princess Anna costume and had been for awhile. Well I finished it...in October.


I had started it in March/April of 2014. So, yes...it took me a year and a half to finish a costume. Not to make excuses, but I wasn't working on it non-stop for that whole year and a half. I stopped and started as I had other projects to work on (Brew Fest, Legally Blonde, Graveyard Cabaret, Queen Elsa, another Brew Fest, Addams Family, etc.).


I also had some technical difficulties.


Way back in March of 2014 when I started on this journey I picked Anna thinking her costume would be easier. Boy was I wrong. I can work with sequins, but embroidery!? Apparently not.


My original plan was to applique all of Anna's "embroidered" embellishments. That worked for the skirt. For the cape I did a combo of applique and machine embroidery from my multi-stitch sewing machine. I did machine borders for the shirt as well. But for the bodice - oh that bodice - applique didn't look right and I didn't have a fancy enough machine for those decorations. So I had to hand embroider the bodice.


HAND embroider! As in by hand. With an embroidery hoop and all.


I am not an embroiderer. It's definitely not my thing. And the fabric I chose - this gorgeous vintage, black velvet was like the worst fabric for embroidery.


By last December I had the skirt, the shirt, and the cape finished.


I also had the bodice cut out and sewn together enough to start embroidery. Then it took me until October to finish the embroidery.


I'll admit there were times I was lazy and just ignored the project because I didn't want to embroider anymore. Fortunately there was no great need for Anna like there was for Elsa - until October. Which is all the motivation I need to get things done.


I did the back first and you can tell.


By the time I got to the front I had figured out a better way to outline the designs to embroider. On the back I was hand drawing it on with chalk and then basting out the center of the design. For the front I printed out the designed and traced it with the sewing machine. It came out so much better.


My boyfriend told me I should just buy an embroidery machine, but honestly, aside from this one project I never embroider. Especially to this degree. Usually for theater you can't even see this kind of detail.

So, here's to those who embroider - I applaud you for your work. Please don't ever make me do it again.

Tuesday, December 1, 2015

Addams Family

I'm doing my best to catch up on blogging, but as it usually goes I will probably blog regularly for a week or two and then neglect my blog for months at a time.


Just like my potted plant...well the one that's still alive (hence why I don't have kids, or pets).


This past summer I costumed the Addams Family: The Musical. The story is that Wednesday has grown up and fallen in love with a normal boy. He and his parents are coming over for dinner and she is trying to get her family to act normal - it's actually almost the exact same plot as La Cage Aux Folles except with Goths and ghosts instead of Drag Queens.



In the story Uncle Fester (who in the musical is a lot more of a romantic) enlists the families ancestors to help Wednesday out. So in addition to all the regular characters that you know and love (Gomez, Morticia, Lurch, Pugsley, Grandma) there's a chorus of ghosts each from a different time period. That was the part that I had the most fun with.



Fortunately most the family each had only one main costume. I bought Gomez a striped, double breasted suit. Lurch got an ill-fitting suit. Puglsey had a striped T-shirt. Grandma was just a bunch of raggedy stuff from storage. Morticia's dress was the most challenging. I was trying to follow the costumes from the Broadway version which has her in a tight-fitting (of course), low-cut (well duh), purple and black print (slightly unexpected but it totally worked!)


I couldn't find the exact fabric so I just used a purple and black damask. I was hoping for a stretch fabric to make it easier to fit, but alas no such luck. I ended up adding in panels of stretch fabric on the sides because otherwise she couldn't sit down. The best part about the costume was during the end of the show she and Gomez make up over a tango and she opens up a slit on the dress and makes it into a short skirt for dancing. It was quite the awesome surprise.


Back to the ancestors. I had grand plans that were torn asunder due to lack of men (isn't that just how it always goes in the theater). We were supposed to have an even number of men and women, but it just didn't work out. So we had 4 men and 8 women.


My favorites were the conquistador (which I made from a historical pattern - so not easy) and the saloon girl. I had to sew a lot of the ancestors since they all had to be in white (I also did the makeup design). I could not find an all white flapper dress so I had to buy a basic dress and add fringe.







There's also a random number where Fester sings a love song to the moon (Fester is in love with the moon, go figure) and he serenades her with the help of the female ancestor while they are all wearing vintage bathing suits.


The costumes were fun to make, but overall the show was a lot more work, and the work was a lot more taxing than I had anticipated. So, I'm hoping to take somewhat of a sabbatical from costuming large shows for awhile. Not sure how long it will last since I'm kind of a push over, but I'm definitely not jumping at it yet.