Coffee Cinnamon Buns

Soft, pillowy sweet dough filled with cinnamon sugar and topped with a coffee glaze.

I felt like the biggest baking nerd creating this recipe last week. This was a completely unplanned recipe, born out of a serious cinnamon roll craving. I couldn’t get the idea of pillowy, soft sweet dough, filled with cinnamon sugar and twisted into delicate knots out of my head and so I found myself, sitting in front of my computer last week creating a sweet dough spreadsheet. I have a bunch of sweet dough recipes—you can check out my Browned Butter Spelt Cinnamon Buns, Tahini Orange Cinnamon Rolls, and Einkorn Pecan Sticky Buns if you don’t believe me—but they all vary slightly and I wanted to create the perfect sweet dough ratios. I compiled all of my sweet dough recipes into one very organized document, converted everything to baker’s percentages, and then decided what ratios I wanted to use for this recipe. Lo and behold, the perfect sweet dough was born.

The final dough has a fairly high enrichment percentage (milk, butter, and eggs) which makes it moist and soft, perfect for spinning and swirling and rolling into these coffee cinnamon buns.

the dough

This dough is a simple, enriched sweet dough with a high ratio of milk, eggs, and butter. It’s made brioche-style and we start by proofing the yeast in the warm milk. Then the eggs, flour, sugar, and salt, are added and mixed to form a thick dough. With the mixer running on a lower speed, softened butter is incorporated a little at a time, before the mixer speed increases and the dough kneads for a decent amount of time—until it’s smooth and elastic, with a strong network of gluten strands.

The dough rests at room temperature until doubled in size and then there are two options for shaping and the second proof. Option #1: Punch the dough down and transfer it to the refrigerator for an overnight cold proof. In the morning, let the dough warm up slightly, roll it, fill it, and shape it, and then let the buns proof for another 30 minutes or so before baking. Option #2: After the first proof, go ahead and roll, fill, and shape the dough and then transfer the cinnamon buns to the refrigerator for their overnight proof. Give them about an hour at room temperature before baking. You can adapt this recipe to fit your schedule.

the filling and frosting

Because I wanted the dough to be the star, we leaned into simplicity for this recipe. A very classic cinnamon, sugar, and butter filling is smeared over the dough before shaping and I topped them with a strong coffee glaze making them really perfect for lazy weekend mornings.

Coffee Cinnamon Buns
Yield 12
Author Anna Ramiz
Prep time
30 Min
Cook time
20 Min
Inactive time
13 Hour
Total time
13 H & 50 M

Coffee Cinnamon Buns

( 0 reviews )
Soft, pillowy sweet dough filled with cinnamon sugar and topped with a coffee glaze.

Ingredients

for the sweet dough
  • 140 g (1/2 cup +3 tbsp) buttermilk, warmed
  • 10 g (2 3/4 tsp) active dry yeast
  • 1 egg
  • 1 egg yolk
  • 50 g (1/4 cup) granulated sugar
  • 345 g (2 3/4 cup) all purpose flour
  • 3 g (1 tsp) kosher salt
  • 100 g (7 tbsp) unsalted butter, softened
for the filling
  • 56 g (4 tbsp) unsalted butter, softened
  • 100 g (1/2 cup) brown sugar
  • 2 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 1 tsp ground cardamom
  • 1/4 of a nutmeg pod, grated
  • 1/2 tsp kosher salt
for the glaze
  • 70 g (1/3 cup) heavy cream
  • 1 tbsp instant coffee
  • 120 g (about 1 cup) powdered sugar

Instructions

  1. Combine warmed buttermilk and yeast in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the dough hook attachment and let sit for about 5 minutes, until foamy.
  2. While the yeast is proofing, combine sugar, flour, and salt in a medium bowl.
  3. When the yeast is foamy, add the egg and egg yolk and whisk to incorporate. Add the dry ingredients and begin kneading on medium speed for 1-2 minutes, until all of the flour has been incorporated and a dough begins to form.
  4. With the mixer running, add the butter a tablespoon or so at a time. When all of the butter has been added, increase the mixer speed to medium high and knead for 5-6 minutes, until the dough is smooth and elastic.
  5. Scrape down the sides of the bowl, cover, and let proof at room temperature for an hour to an hour and a half, until the dough has doubled in size.
  6. Punch the dough down and transfer to the refrigerator for about 30 minutes, just to make the dough a little easier to work with. **see notes for alternate proofing instructions**
  7. While the dough is chilling, combine butter, brown sugar, cinnamon, cardamom, nutmeg and salt and stir to form a smooth paste.
  8. Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured work surface and rolled into a 12x18” rectangle.
  9. Smear the cinnamon butter mixture over the center and right two-thirds of the dough.
  10. Fold the left third of the dough into the center and then fold the right third over the dough into the center as well (like folding a letter, but horizontally).
  11. Turn the rectangle 90° and roll out a little, just to stretch it about an inch vertically.
  12. Cut the dough into 12 strips. Roll each strip up like a snail and tuck the end under the center of the bun.
  13. Place on a parchment lined baking sheet and cover with plastic wrap. Place in the refrigerator overnight, or about 12 hours.
  14. When you’re ready to bake, preheat to the oven to 375° F and take the cinnamon buns out of the refrigerator. Remove the plastic wrap and cover loosely with a towel. Let rest for about an hour, until they come to room temperature.
  15. Bake for 18-20 minutes, until deeply golden.
  16. While the buns are baking, make the coffee glaze. Combine heavy cream and instant coffee in a small saucepan and bring to a simmer to dissolve the coffee. Transfer to a measuring cup and whisk in the powdered sugar until smooth.
  17. Pour the glaze over the warm cinnamon buns and serve immediately.

Notes

**For alternative proofing instructions, see the blog post above!

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Butterscotch Oatmeal Cookies with Hazelnuts and Espresso

These chewy butterscotch oatmeal cookies are filled with toasted hazelnuts and strong espresso. A quick and easy recipe, they make great freezer cookies--perfect for baking off at a moment's notice.

oatmeal cookies with butterscotch-1.jpg

Us recipe developers work weird food schedules. For the blog, I try to create and plan content a month ahead, but for client work, it’s often farther in advance. This is how I found myself making Thanksgiving dinner at the end of September this year. I had a client project for a full Thanksgiving feast—turkey, stuffing, mac and cheese…the works, due at the beginning of October. For the weeks leading up to the shoot, I spent quite a bit of time on the phone with grocery stores trying to locate a turkey (fun fact, most grocery stores won’t get turkeys in stock until “closer to the holiday”, though they won’t tell you when exactly that will be and lots of meat managers are really not huge fans of people calling and asking about them). After finally securing myself an out-of-season turkey, I began to work on my full Thanksgiving dinner, a project that would leave me with somewhere close to a million pounds of leftovers that I really didn’t want.

So we threw a party. We celebrated Thanksgiving in early October with a group of friends who brought bonus sides and desserts pot-luck style. It was the first party we’ve hosted since moving to Minnesota and it was such a fun night, though I am officially turkey-ed out for the year. I’ll be eating spicy noodles or something completely different this year on actual Thanksgiving and I’ll be giving thanks for not having to cook a turkey twice in two months.

oatmeal cookies with butterscotch-8.jpg

oatmeal cookies with butterscotch, hazelnuts, and espresso

I had this flavor idea swimming around in my head for a few weeks and decided to make a batch to go with our Thanksgiving party food so I could test them out on a group and they were a real hit. Think of them as classic oatmeal cookies with a bit of a grown-up twist.

I have three nonnegotiables when it comes to oatmeal cookies: 1) they should have crunchy edges 2) they should have soft, pillowy middles and 3) they should have a deep brown sugar flavor. These cookies hit all three and more.

I love steeping flavors into the butter for my cookies so this time we added instant espresso to our melted butter as the base of flavor. It’s then mixed with lots of brown sugar and sugar, eggs, vanilla, and dry ingredients (flour, oats, leavening agents, and salt). So easy. A bunch of toasted hazelnuts and butterscotch chips round it out and then they are chilled slightly before baking. Side note: this cookie dough smells AMAZING. My whole kitchen smelled like a tiny little coffee shop or the smell of the hazelnut coffee from Panera Bread.

When baking these cookies, take extra care not to over-bake so you don’t lose your soft, pillowy centers. I found that 8 minutes, tapping the tray on the counter, and then another 2-3 minutes worked perfectly in my oven. The centers will look underdone, but let the cookies cool completely on the pan and they will set up. Like most cookie recipes, this cookie dough freezes beautifully so that you can bake some off and have warm oatmeal cookies within 15 minutes.

oatmeal cookies with butterscotch-2.jpg
Butterscotch Oatmeal Cookies with Hazelnuts and Espresso
Yield
22-24 cookies
Author
Prep time
15 Min
Cook time
10 Min
Inactive time
30 Min
Total time
55 Min

Butterscotch Oatmeal Cookies with Hazelnuts and Espresso

These chewy butterscotch oatmeal cookies are filled with toasted hazelnuts and strong espresso. A quick and easy recipe, they make great freezer cookies--perfect for baking off at a moment's notice.

Ingredients

  • 1 cup (226 g) unsalted butter
  • 2 tbsp instant espresso
  • 3 cups (270 g) rolled oats
  • 1 1/2 cup (190 g) all purpose flour
  • 3/4 tsp baking soda
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • 1 tsp kosher salt
  • 1 cup (200 g) brown sugar
  • 1/2 cup (100 g) granulated sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 1/2 tsp vanilla powder (or 1 tsp vanilla extract)
  • 11 oz butterscotch chips
  • 1 cup toasted hazelnuts, roughly chopped

Instructions

  1. Place butter and espresso in a medium saucepan and cook over medium heat until butter is melted and espresso is dissolved. Set aside to cool.
  2. In a large bowl, stir together oats, flour, baking soda, baking powder, and salt. Set aside.
  3. In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, beat together brown sugar, granulated sugar, and espresso butter until smooth and homogenized and the mixture is room temperature.
  4. Add the eggs and vanilla and continue mixing for 1-2 minutes, until very smooth and completely combined.
  5. Gradually add the dry ingredients, mixing on low speed just until combined, followed by the butterscotch chips and the toasted hazelnuts.
  6. Using a large cookie scoop, scoop dough onto a parchment-lined baking sheet and chill for at least 30 minutes, preferably overnight.
  7. When you are ready to bake, preheat the oven to 350° F. Place cookies on another parchment-lined baking sheet, leaving about 2” space between cookies. Bake for 10-12 minutes, until the edges are golden and the centers are just set. Sprinkle with flaky salt and let cool on the pan.
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Toasted Sugar and Dalgona Coffee Pots de Creme

toasted sugar and dalgona coffee pot de creme

toasted sugar and dalgona coffee pot de creme

This recipe is part of a paid partnership with Highground Organic Instant Coffee. As always, all thoughts and opinions are all my own. Thank you for supporting the brands that make Gathered At My Table possible!

The first time that I tasted a pot de creme was the first time that I realized that I could become a pastry chef. Back in college, while I spent my days in a classroom studying to be a teacher, my cousin Joey was attending culinary school across town. (Side note: He is now a very fancy executive chef at a very fancy restaurant and resort and his food is actual artwork. It’s amazing.) Anyway, Joey would stage in the afternoons and evenings at a upscale restaurant in town which meant that we would often pop in said restaurant for deeply discounted (read: free) fancy food experiences. We would sit at a little table near the open kitchen and eat whatever the kitchen sent out to us. At the end of our first dining experience, the pastry chef sent out a sampler of all of the desserts on the menu featuring a chocolate pot de creme served with toasted brioche sticks for dipping. I about lost my mind. The custard was rich and creamy. The brioche was so perfectly toasted, the outsides were crispy and the inside was as soft as a pillow. It was the first dessert that my 19-year-old self saw artistry in, something more precise and creative than the cookies and brownies I’d been living on my whole life. It took me another seven years to actually make the career change into pastry, but it all began with that little pot de creme.

what is a pot de creme?

Pot de creme (literally translated to pot of cream) falls into the baked custards family of pastry. It shares similarities with many of it’s custard cousins— it’s baked in a water bath, uses eggs as the primary setting agent, can be flavored in many different ways. Pots de creme are often lumped in with puddings, which is not technically accurate. While the consistency is very similar to a pudding, a pot de creme only uses eggs as it’s thickener/setting agent, while pudding traditionally employs some sort of starch, like flour or cornstarch, to aid in thickening.

While they do take a bit of time to make, pots de creme are fairly hands-off. A simple, egg based custard is made (very similar in process to a creme anglaise sauce) by heating milk and cream and then tempering in egg yolks and sugar. The hot cream is then poured into jars or ramekins and baked at a very low temperature in a water bath until set. The custards then cool to room temperature and are chilled for at least 6 hours and served cold (preferably with perfectly toasted brioche).

pot de creme featuring highground coffee

pot de creme featuring highground coffee

dalgona coffee

I know that I’m close to a year late on this whole Dalgona coffee trend, but I’m here! That’s all that matters. Dalgona coffee is a whipped coffee that got it’s start in South Korea and took over our Instagram feeds last spring. (Michele at Hummingbird High has a very in depth look at Dalgona coffee over on her blog.) It’s so simple to make and adds a really fun texture to the pot de creme. Highground Instant Coffee, hot water, and sugar are whipped using an electric mixer until it creates a fluffy, aerated coffee that holds it’s shape and texture when added to milk or scooped on top of pots de creme. It’s like having a latte and dessert at the same time.

a note on toasted sugar

The toasted sugar in this recipe is completely optional, but it is a fun little pastry chef trick for adding depth and flavor to otherwise fairly simple and straightforward desserts. The recipe below makes more toasted sugar than is needed for this recipe (it is very difficult to toast small amounts of sugar without making oven caramel, which is not something we want), but you can store the cooled sugar in a sealed container and bake with it just like you would regular granulated sugar. If you decide to skip the toasted sugar in this recipe, just use granulated sugar in its place.

toasted sugar and dalgona coffee pot de creme

toasted sugar and dalgona coffee pot de creme

Yield: makes six 6 oz puddings
Author: Anna Ramiz
Toasted Sugar and Dalgona Coffee Pot de Creme

Toasted Sugar and Dalgona Coffee Pot de Creme

Prep time: 30 MinCook time: 2 HourInactive time: 7 HourTotal time: 9 H & 30 M
A creamy vanilla bean and toasted sugar custard topped with whipped Dalgona coffee featuring Highground Organic Instant Coffee.

Ingredients

for the toasted sugar
  • 1 lb granulated sugar
for the pot de creme
  • 2 cups heavy cream
  • 1/2 cup whole milk
  • 1/2 cup toasted sugar
  • 1 vanilla bean
  • 5 egg yolks
for the dalgona coffee

Instructions

to make the toasted sugar
  1. Preheat the oven to 300° F. Place granulated sugar in a 9x13” baking dish and roast for 50-60 minutes, stirring every 10 minutes until sugar is a light tan color. Cool completely. Set aside the amount needed for the recipe, and store the rest in an airtight container and use in place of regular sugar.
to make the pot de creme
  1. Preheat oven to 300° F.
  2. Combine heavy cream and milk in a medium saucepan. Scrape out the inside of the vanilla bean and place the seeds and the empty pods into the pot with the cream and bring to a simmer. When the cream is hot, remove the pot from the heat and cover. Let steep for 1 hour and then strain out the vanilla bean pods.
  3. Return cream to the saucepan and add 1/4 cup of the toasted sugar. Bring to a simmer.
  4. Meanwhile, in a large bowl, whisk together the remaining 1/4 cup toasted sugar and the egg yolks.
  5. Whisking continually, gradually stream the hot cream into the bowl with the egg yolks.
  6. Strain the mixture through a fine mesh sieve and then divide it evenly between six glass jars or ramekins.
  7. Place the ramekins in a 9x13” baking dish and fill the dish with water, reaching to halfway up the sides of the ramekins. Bake the pot de cremes for 55-60 minutes, until the edges are set but the center still has a slight jiggle. Turn off the oven, open the door slightly and allow the pot de cremes to cool completely.
  8. Remove each ramekin and wrap with plastic wrap. Chill for at least 6 hours.
to make the dalgona coffee
  1. In a large bowl, combine toasted sugar, instant coffee, and boiling water. Whip using a handheld mixer for 3-5 minutes, until mixture is light and fluffy.
  2. Spoon dalgona coffee on the tops of the chilled pot de cremes and serve immediately.

Notes:

In this recipe, toasted sugar is completely optional. Toasted sugar is slightly caramelized so it adds a more complex flavor to the pot de creme and it's fun to have on hand to play around with. The recipe for this toasted sugar will yield more than you need for the recipe, so keep it on hand and substitute it in place of regular sugar in any baked good. If you choose not to make the toasted sugar, simply use granulated sugar in it's place.


This recipe is sponsored by Highground Instant Coffee, but the opinions shared here are all my own. Thanks for supporting the brands that make Gathered At My Table possible!


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