Hey everyone, it is Brad, welcome to my recipe site. Today, I will show you a way to prepare a distinctive dish, sakura anpan (sweet bean paste filled buns with cherry blossoms) with a bread machine. One of my favorites. For mine, I will make it a bit tasty. This will be really delicious.
Great recipe for Sakura Anpan (Sweet Bean Paste Filled Buns with Cherry Blossoms) with a Bread Machine. I wanted to make homemade anpan for my son, who loves anko. I used a bread dough recipe I like and adapted it. ※ I used the "dough" program on a Panasonic bread machine. ※ Have the unsalted. With the sakura now blooming, it's time for cherry blossom viewing parties, or hanami, as it's called in Japanese.
Sakura Anpan (Sweet Bean Paste Filled Buns with Cherry Blossoms) with a Bread Machine is one of the most well liked of recent trending foods in the world. It is enjoyed by millions daily. It’s simple, it’s quick, it tastes delicious. Sakura Anpan (Sweet Bean Paste Filled Buns with Cherry Blossoms) with a Bread Machine is something that I’ve loved my whole life. They’re fine and they look fantastic.
To begin with this particular recipe, we must prepare a few components. You can have sakura anpan (sweet bean paste filled buns with cherry blossoms) with a bread machine using 12 ingredients and 26 steps. Here is how you can achieve that.
The ingredients needed to make Sakura Anpan (Sweet Bean Paste Filled Buns with Cherry Blossoms) with a Bread Machine:
- Prepare 200 grams Bread (strong) flour
- Make ready 3 tbsp Sugar
- Make ready 2/3 tsp Salt
- Get 30 grams Unsalted butter
- Make ready 20 grams Egg (whole)
- Prepare 110 ml Water
- Get 2/3 tsp Instant dry yeast
- Make ready For Toppings
- Take 240 grams Koshi-an (smooth sweet bean paste)
- Make ready 8 Salt-cured cherry blossoms
- Take To brush on the bread:
- Make ready 1 Egg (glaze)
My mom is a self-proclaimed bread connoisseur, and she loves exploring new bakeries and trying their bread in Japan. Unlike the US, there are many bakeries in most Japanese neighborhood and stations and many of them are outstanding. Anpan quickly caught on and helped bread gain the popularity it has today. Kimuraya still exists in Tokyo and is a great place to try a large variety of anko-filled bread.
Steps to make Sakura Anpan (Sweet Bean Paste Filled Buns with Cherry Blossoms) with a Bread Machine:
- Gently rinse the salt off the cherry blossoms, and pat them dry with paper towels.
- Divide the anko into 8 portions and form them into balls. Cover with plastic wrap. ※ Each portion weighs about 30 g.
- Put all the bread dough ingredients in the main bread machine compartment except for the yeast, and put the dry yeast in the yeast container. Press Start.
- The program to use will vary depending on your bread machine. Choose the one that will allow you to take the dough out after the 1st rising to form as you please.
- After the program is done (after the 1st rising), take the dough out.
- Weigh the dough and divide into 8 equal portions. Round each portion of into a smooth ball. For reference: The entire amount of dough weighs about 400 g, and 1 portion is about 50 g for a total of 8 portions.
- Cover the balls of dough with a tightly wrung out moistened kitchen towel so that they don't dry out. Leave to rest for 10 minutes.
- Press the dough balls evenly to deflate them and to make then about 10 cm in diamater. Put a ball of anko in the center. Make sure the thickness of the dough is even all over!
- Bring the top and bottom edges of the dough over the filling first.
- Then bring the left and right sides over the filling in the same way. Pinch the dough tightly sealed.
- Put the buns on a kitchen parchment paper lined baking tray with the seam sides down. Repeat for all 8 buns.
- Keep the dough covered with the moist kitchen towel as you work. Cover the dough on the tray with a piece of canvas.
- When all the buns are formed, press lightly down on each bun. If you do this with the canvas covering the buns, the surface will be nice and smooth.
- Put some bread flour (not listed in the ingredients) on your finger, and make a dent in the middle of each bun. Press down to about 1/3 of the depth of the bun.
- If you press straight down with your finger the dough may tear, so go in a bit diagonally to make the dent.
- Put a cherry blossom in the dent. Repeat for all 8 buns.
- Cover the buns with the piece of canvas cloth and then a tightly wrung out moistened kitchen towel. Leave to rise (2nd rising) for 15 minutes at 40°C Preheat the oven to 40°C beforehand.
- After letting the buns rise in the oven for 15 minutes, leave to rise for 10 to 15 minutes at room temperature. You need to take the buns out before they are done rising since the oven needs to be preheated for baking.
- Preheat the oven to 200°C. Start preheating it once you have taken the tray of buns out of the oven.
- The buns should rise enough that they are about doubled in volume. ※ This is the same even if you let them rise at room temperature for the whole 2nd rising.
- Brush the surface of the buns with egg wash. Brush them down to the bottom for a nice looking finish after baking.
- Bake in a 200°C oven for about 12 minutes, or 12 to 14 minutes.
- Check the buns after 12 minutes. Take them out once they are as browned as you want them to be.
- Cool the baked buns on a cooling rack. When they have cooled down, they're done!
- The buns look like this when you cut into them. The dough is pressed out in Step 8 in order to ensure the anko filling is distributed nicely, so be sure to press the dough out evenly.
- When adding the dry yeast and flour etc. to the bread machine, make sure the yeast and salt are not touching each other.
Anpan quickly caught on and helped bread gain the popularity it has today. Kimuraya still exists in Tokyo and is a great place to try a large variety of anko-filled bread. The buns were filled with an, a red paste made from adzuki beans that is widely used in Japanese sweet dishes, and had poppy seeds or white sesame seeds sprinkled on top. When the bakery owners were asked to make their rolls for the Emperor they garnished them with sakura, salted cherry blossoms, and this became another flavor option. If you cannot get your hands on a sakura anpan, why not try to make your own version of the Sakura Anpan at home?
So that’s going to wrap this up for this exceptional food sakura anpan (sweet bean paste filled buns with cherry blossoms) with a bread machine recipe. Thanks so much for reading. I’m sure you will make this at home. There is gonna be more interesting food in home recipes coming up. Remember to save this page in your browser, and share it to your loved ones, friends and colleague. Thank you for reading. Go on get cooking!