Best 4 Pistachio Morning Buns Recipes

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Indulge in the delectable fusion of flavors and textures with our Pistachio Morning Buns, a true delight for your taste buds. These delightful pastries are handcrafted with a flaky, buttery croissant dough, generously filled with a sweet and nutty pistachio filling, and topped with a luscious cream cheese frosting. Each bite offers a perfect balance of crispy and soft, sweet and nutty, making them an irresistible treat for any occasion. Discover the secrets behind these heavenly buns with our step-by-step guide, complete with expert tips and tricks to ensure perfect results.

Here are our top 4 tried and tested recipes!

CHOCOLATE AND PISTACHIO WHIRLIGIG BUNS



Chocolate and Pistachio Whirligig Buns image

This recipe was brought to The Times in 2003 by Nigella Lawson, the British cookbook author and culinary celebrity, as part of an article encouraging readers to bake with yeast - an act all too often unnecessarily fraught with anxiety. The payoff for tackling one's fear, she argued, is big. Enter these pillowy, butter-rich buns dotted with semisweet chocolate and pistachios. They are not difficult - if you can follow directions, you can make them (really!) - and they are insanely delicious. You can also fill them with marmalade, or with honey and chopped walnuts.

Provided by Nigella Lawson

Categories     breakfast, brunch, breads, dessert, side dish

Time 1h35m

Yield 20 buns

Number Of Ingredients 13

1 2/3 cups milk
8 tablespoons unsalted butter, softened
5 to 5 1/2 cups all-purpose flour, plus more for dusting the work surface
1/3 cup sugar
1 ¼ teaspoon fine sea salt
3 packets rapid-rise, bread-machine or other instant yeast
2 large eggs
Vegetable oil for bowl
8 tablespoons unsalted butter, softened to room temperature
1 cup plus 1 tablespoon sugar
3/4 cup shelled pistachios
1 cup semisweet chocolate chips
1 large egg, beaten

Steps:

  • In a small saucepan, combine 8 tablespoons butter and the milk, and place over low heat until lukewarm, stirring to melt the butter. Remove from heat and allow to cool slightly.
  • In a large bowl, combine 5 cups flour, sugar, salt and yeast. In a medium bowl, beat eggs lightly, and then whisk in milk mixture.
  • Using a mixer with a dough hook, or by hand, stir liquid ingredients into dry ingredients. Knead dough for 7-8 minutes until smooth and springy, adding more flour by the tablespoon if necessary to form a soft, slightly sticky dough. Form into a ball, and place in an oiled bowl. Cover with plastic wrap, and let rise in a warm place until double in size, about 30 minutes.
  • Line bottom of a 13-by-10-inch baking pan with parchment paper.
  • Punch down the dough. On a lightly floured surface, roll out dough to a rectangle about 22 by 12 inches.
  • To make filling, dollop the remaining 8 tablespoons softened butter over the dough and spread into an even layer. Sprinkle the sugar evenly over the butter. Chop pistachios until splintery, and sprinkle evenly over dough. Top with chocolate chips, pressing the chocolate and nuts gently into the dough. Starting from longest side, carefully roll up dough so it looks like a long sausage. Cut dough into 20 slices, each 1-inch thick, and arrange with a cut side up in pan.
  • Position a rack in the center of the oven and preheat oven to 400 degrees. Brush buns with beaten egg, and let them sit in a warm place until puffed up and spongy to the touch, about 15 minutes. Bake until buns are risen and golden brown, 25 to 30 minutes. Let cool in the pan at least 30 minutes, then cut and serve warm.

Nutrition Facts : @context http, Calories 547, UnsaturatedFat 26 grams, Carbohydrate 47 grams, Fat 38 grams, Fiber 2 grams, Protein 7 grams, SaturatedFat 10 grams, Sodium 168 milligrams, Sugar 20 grams, TransFat 1 gram

PISTACHIO, ROSE AND STRAWBERRY BUNS



Pistachio, Rose and Strawberry Buns image

Meant for breakfast or as an accompaniment to a mug of hot tea, these Danish-like yeast buns are filled with pistachio cream and strawberry jam, then soaked in a rose water-scented sugar syrup. Adapted from "Golden," a cookbook from Honey & Co. cafe in London, the buns sweet but not at all cloying, with the rose water and pistachio adding a heady perfume. Feel free to substitute apricot or raspberry preserves, or orange marmalade, for the strawberry jam. And if you're not a fan of rose water, try orange blossom water or even brandy instead. These are best served within eight hours of baking, but leftovers can be refreshed the next day by heating them in a 300-degree oven for 10 to 15 minutes, until just warmed through.

Provided by Melissa Clark

Categories     breakfast, brunch, snack, pastries, dessert

Time 3h30m

Yield 8 buns

Number Of Ingredients 16

5 tablespoons/70 grams unsalted butter, cubed and at room temperature, more for greasing pan
1 1/2 teaspoons/5 grams active dry yeast
1 large egg
2 1/2 tablespoons/30 grams granulated sugar
1/3 cup/80 milliliters whole milk, more if needed
2 1/3 cups/300 grams bread flour
Pinch of kosher salt
2/3 cup/80 grams pistachios
6 tablespoons/80 grams unsalted butter, at room temperature
1/3 cup plus 1 tablespoon/80 grams granulated sugar
1 large egg
1 tablespoon all-purpose flour
8 teaspoons strawberry jam
1/2 cups/100 grams granulated sugar
1 tablespoon honey
1 tablespoon rose water

Steps:

  • Make the dough: Place butter, yeast, egg, sugar and milk in bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a dough hook, or a large bowl if working by hand. Mixing on low speed or stirring with a wooden spoon, add flour and salt. If mixture looks dry, drizzle in another tablespoon or so of milk. Beat for 2 to 3 minutes in mixer, or 5 to 6 minutes by hand, until you get a soft but not sticky dough. Don't worry if you still have some whole flecks of butter running through the dough; they will make your final bun quite light. Cover bowl in plastic wrap and chill for at least 2 hours and up to 12.
  • Make the pistachio cream: Put pistachios in a food processor and blitz until they resemble bread crumbs, then add butter, sugar, egg and flour and pulse until they are well combined to form a paste. Set aside. Cream can be made up to 2 days ahead and stored in refrigerator.
  • Lightly butter 8 cups of a muffin tin. Remove dough from refrigerator. On a lightly floured surface, roll dough into a 16- by 8-inch rectangle. Work with as little flour as possible so as not to dry out dough. Use a sharp knife or pizza slicer to cut eight 4- by 4-inch squares. Lift each square into a cup in the muffin tin and push all the way down. Allow excess dough to hang over sides. Divide pistachio cream among cups, then top each with a teaspoon of strawberry jam. Fold corners over lightly to cover filling, but don't push them down. Set aside in a warm place and let them rise for 40 minutes to 1 hour; the buns' folds should rise considerably.
  • Place a clean, empty baking sheet in the center of the oven, and heat it to 400 degrees. When buns are done rising, place muffin tin on baking sheet and bake for 10 minutes. Turn sheet front to back, reduce oven temperature to 350 degrees and bake for another 10 minutes.
  • While the buns bake, make the syrup: In a small pot, bring 1/3 cup plus 1 tablespoon water, the sugar and the honey to a boil. Remove from heat and stir in rose water.
  • Remove buns from oven and brush generously with syrup; you don't have to use it all. Let cool slightly in the tin before removing and serving.

Nutrition Facts : @context http, Calories 516, UnsaturatedFat 9 grams, Carbohydrate 73 grams, Fat 22 grams, Fiber 2 grams, Protein 9 grams, SaturatedFat 11 grams, Sodium 43 milligrams, Sugar 41 grams, TransFat 1 gram

ALL-PURPOSE ENRICHED BREAD



All-Purpose Enriched Bread image

This dough, a hybrid of brioche and Japanese milk bread, bakes into a light, soft loaf with a silky crumb. There are two key steps to the bread's texture: The first is a tangzhong, or "water roux," which originated in Japanese baking but was popularized throughout Asia and beyond by the Taiwanese pastry chef Yvonne Chen. The second is a long, slow mix that develops sufficient strength in the dough to support a lofty rise in the oven. Unless you have superhuman strength and patience, a stand mixer is required. The dough is slightly sweet, making it ideal for cinnamon rolls or pistachio morning buns, and suitable for sandwich bread or hamburger buns.

Provided by Claire Saffitz

Categories     breads, project

Time 7h45m

Yield 2 loaves

Number Of Ingredients 8

1 cup/240 grams whole milk or buttermilk
6 tablespoons/50 grams plus 3 3/4 cups/490 grams all-purpose flour, plus more, if needed, for work surface
5 large eggs, chilled
2 tablespoons vegetable or olive oil
1/4 cup/50 grams granulated sugar
10 grams kosher salt (2 3/4 teaspoons Diamond Crystal or 1 1/2 teaspoons Morton)
2 teaspoons/6 grams active dry yeast
1/2 cup/113 grams unsalted butter (1 stick), cut into 1/2-inch pieces, chilled, plus more, at room temperature, for pans

Steps:

  • Make the tangzhong: Combine the milk and 6 tablespoons flour in a medium saucepan and whisk until smooth. Place the saucepan over medium heat and cook, whisking constantly, until the mixture begins to thicken, about 2 minutes. Continue to whisk vigorously, making sure to scrape along the bottom curve of the saucepan, until the mixture is very thick and looks like smooth mashed potatoes, about 20 seconds longer.
  • Remove saucepan from heat and scrape the tangzhong into the bowl of a stand mixer. Cover the bowl and let the tangzhong sit until it's room temperature, about the better part of an hour. (A cool tangzhong is crucial to ensuring proper dough development; you can speed it along by chilling the bowl and occasionally uncovering it to stir the tangzhong.)
  • Make the dough: To the bowl of the stand mixer, add 4 eggs (reserve the remaining egg for brushing over the dough), then add the oil, sugar, salt, yeast and remaining 3 3/4 cups flour. Fit the mixer with the dough hook and mix on low speed until the ingredients come together as a coarsely textured dough, about 3 minutes. Stop the mixer, scrape down the sides of the bowl with a bowl scraper or flexible spatula, then mix on medium-low, scraping down the sides once or twice more, until dough is smooth, firm and very elastic, 12 to 15 minutes. It will have gathered around the hook but still cling to the slides and bottom of the bowl, and have a mostly tacky, not sticky, texture.
  • Stop the mixer and scrape down the sides of the bowl. Add half of the chilled butter pieces and mix on low speed until the butter pieces have incorporated into the dough, about 5 minutes. Stop the mixer, scrape down the sides again, and add the remaining butter. Mix on low until all the butter is completely incorporated. The dough should no longer stick to the sides of the bowl and will have a very smooth, supple appearance. Increase the speed to medium-low and continue to mix until the dough is extremely elastic, another 10 to 15 minutes.
  • Test the dough: To see if the dough has built sufficient strength and elasticity - which it will need to expand to its maximum volume in the oven - stop the mixer and raise the hook. The weight of the dough will slowly pull it downward off the hook. (A strong dough will stretch the distance to the bottom of the bowl, rather than tear.) You can also do a windowpane test: Pinch off a golf ball-size piece of dough, and use your thumbs to flatten it and work the dough outward into a thin layer. Slowly stretch the dough, until it forms a thin membrane through which light can pass. If it tears before that point, or as it falls from the hook, continue to mix on medium-low and repeat the test every 5 minutes.
  • Let the dough rise: Scrape the dough onto a work surface. (If the dough is a bit sticky, dust it very lightly with flour.) Fold it in half several times to create a smooth, taut surface, then place back inside the stand mixer bowl, smooth-side up. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap or an airtight lid and let rise at room temperature for 30 minutes, then transfer to the refrigerator and chill for at least 4 hours and up to 24. (If making hamburger buns or pistachio morning buns, stop here and see recipes.)
  • Prepare the pans: Using a pastry brush, lightly coat the bottom and sides of 2 standard loaf pans with room-temperature butter. Line each pan with parchment paper, leaving an overhang on the two longer sides, then lightly brush the parchment paper with more butter. Set the pans aside.
  • Portion the dough: Remove the dough from the refrigerator and uncover. Scrape the dough from the bowl and place on the work surface. Use the heel of your hand to knock out the gas and deflate the risen dough, which will be quite firm. Using a kitchen scale and a bench scraper or a knife, portion the dough into 16 equal pieces. (Each piece will weigh about 70 grams.) If you don't have a kitchen scale, you can eyeball it.
  • Form the loaves: Working with one piece of dough at a time, fold it onto itself a few times to create a smooth surface, then gather the edges and pinch them together to form a smooth bundle of dough that looks like a garlic bulb. Place it seam-side down on the work surface and position your hand over the dough, palm barely touching the top and fingers lightly cupping it and resting on the work surface. Drag your hand - and the dough with it - slowly across the surface, moving it in small, rapid circles. The friction between the dough and the surface will help tighten the dome so your loaves rise upward. You shouldn't need to add flour, since the cold dough is easier to handle and much less sticky, but if your dough is slightly warm or otherwise sticky, add just a bit of flour to make it easier to handle. Continue with all the pieces of dough, then arrange the balls inside the prepared loaf pans, 8 per pan in a 2-by-4 pattern.
  • Proof the loaves: Cover the pans tightly and let sit at room temperature, undisturbed, until the dough has doubled in size and the individual domes appear puffed and balloonlike, 1 1/2 to 2 hours.
  • Meanwhile, arrange an oven rack in the center position and heat oven to 350 degrees. Beat the remaining egg in a small bowl until no streaks remain, then set aside.
  • Test the loaves: For the softest, airiest bread, the dough must be fully proofed. Test it by uncovering the loaves, lightly oiling your finger, and gently poking the surface. It should feel filled with air, spring back, and hold a slight indentation from your finger. If it doesn't, cover again and continue to let it rise, repeating the test every 10 or 15 minutes.
  • Apply egg wash and bake the loaves: Brush the surfaces of the proofed loaves generously with the beaten egg and transfer the pans to the oven. Bake side by side, rotating each pan 180 degrees and left to right after 15 minutes, until the surfaces have risen dramatically and are deeply browned, 25 to 30 minutes. Let cool completely in the pans, then cut along the short sides with a paring knife to loosen. Use the parchment paper to lift the loaves out of the pans. Slice with a serrated knife.

CRANBERRY-PISTACHIO STICKY BUNS



Cranberry-Pistachio Sticky Buns image

Looking for a fantastic brunch item? Then try these ooey-gooey good sticky buns. They use frozen roll dough and couldn't be simpler to make. The buns rise overnight in the refrigerator, so you just need to bake them the next morning.-Athena Russell, Florence, South Carolina

Provided by Taste of Home

Time 50m

Yield 2 dozen.

Number Of Ingredients 9

1 cup chopped pistachios
1/2 cup dried cranberries
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
24 frozen bread dough dinner rolls, thawed
1/2 cup butter, cubed
1 cup packed brown sugar
1 package (4.6 ounces) cook-and-serve vanilla pudding mix
2 tablespoons 2% milk
1/2 teaspoon orange extract

Steps:

  • Sprinkle pistachios, cranberries and cinnamon in a greased 13x9-in. baking dish. Arrange rolls in a single layer on top., In a small saucepan over low heat, melt butter. Remove from the heat; stir in the brown sugar, pudding mix, milk and extract until smooth. Pour over dough. Cover and refrigerate overnight. , Remove from the refrigerator 30 minutes before baking. Preheat oven to 350°. Bake until golden brown, 30-35 minutes. (Cover loosely with foil if top browns too quickly.) Cool 1 minute before inverting onto a serving platter.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 225 calories, Fat 8g fat (3g saturated fat), Cholesterol 10mg cholesterol, Sodium 283mg sodium, Carbohydrate 36g carbohydrate (16g sugars, Fiber 2g fiber), Protein 5g protein.

Tips:

  • To achieve the perfect flaky layers, ensure that the butter is cold and grated. This will prevent it from melting too quickly and seeping into the dough, which can make it tough.
  • Chilling the dough before shaping and baking will help to further develop the layers and prevent the buns from spreading too much in the oven.
  • If you don't have a stand mixer, you can make the dough by hand. Just be sure to knead it until it is smooth and elastic, about 10 minutes.
  • To make the pistachio filling, you can use either store-bought or homemade pistachio paste. If using homemade, be sure to grind the pistachios very finely to avoid a grainy texture.
  • If you don't have any orange zest, you can use lemon zest instead.
  • To get the perfect golden brown color on your buns, brush them with an egg wash before baking.

Conclusion:

Pistachio morning buns are a delicious and indulgent pastry that are perfect for a special breakfast or brunch. With their flaky layers, gooey pistachio filling, and sweet orange glaze, these buns are sure to be a hit with everyone who tries them. So next time you're looking for a treat to impress your friends and family, give these pistachio morning buns a try!

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