Tuesday, October 8, 2019

Soft Potato Buns #BreadBakers

These soft potato buns are made with cooked mash potatoes. They are light, fluffy and just sweet enough to qualify as sweet bread, especially with the vanilla custard crosses.

Food Lust People Love: These soft potato buns are made with cooked mash potatoes. They are light, fluffy and just sweet enough to qualify as sweet bread, especially with the vanilla custard crosses.


Years ago, when we first moved to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, I was delighted to discover the hypermarket chain Carrefour there. I first fell in love with Carrefour’s clean, bright, well-stocked stores in their native France and again when a branch opened just outside of Rio de Janeiro, when we lived in Brazil. My friends and I would drop the kids at school, drive two and a half hours there for a big shopping trip, then turn around and drive back home. Good times!

One thing that Carrefour does very well wherever they do business is offer high quality local products and traditional flavors, as well as imported French specialties. The best of both worlds.

In KL and Singapore, the in-house bakery made sweet soft potato rolls very much like the ones I am sharing today. They were baked on enormous sheet pans, then divided into groups of nine and bagged up warm. Nothing made us happier than to arrive just as a fresh batch came out.

Often we’d buy two steamy bags because that first one didn’t even make it home; it was quickly devoured as soon as we got in the car.

Soft Potato Buns

This recipe was adapted from one in Singaporean Chef Agnes Chang’s book I Can Bake which I found on the blog Bake for Happy Kids and adapted further. My elder daughter has been making it for the last couple of years, always preparing the dough and leaving it to rise slowly overnight, because you want these buns for breakfast! If you don’t have time to cook homemade custard, you can certainly substitute store-bought or, as in Chef Chang's original recipe, custard made from powder.

Ingredients
For the dough:
5 1/3 oz or 150g peeled potato
2 3/4 cups or 350g bread flour
1/3 cup or 80ml water used to boil the potatoes
1/3 cup or 66g sugar
2 teaspoons active dry yeast
30g milk powder
1 large egg
1/3 cup or 75g butter, softened, plus a little extra for dough bowl

For the egg wash:
1 egg yolk
2 tablespoons milk
pinch of salt

For the custard:
1⁄4 cup or 55g fine (caster) sugar
1⁄3 cup or 42g all-purpose flour
1⁄8 teaspoon salt
1 cup or 240ml milk
2 egg yolks
2 teaspoons butter
1 teaspoons vanilla extract

Method
Boil your potato in enough water to cover. When the potato is tender, strain out the water, setting it aside to cool a little. Mash the potato until smooth and set aside to cool as well. You should end up with about 3/4 cup or 162g of mashed potatoes.

In the bowl of your stand mixer, proof the yeast with the sugar, the tepid potato water and 1 cup or 125g of the bread flour. When the yeast bubbles up, you know it’s good and can continue with the next steps.



Add in the rest of the bread flour, mashed potato, egg, powdered milk and salt.

Use the bread hook and mix all the ingredients until they form a soft dough. Continue with the bread hook, kneading the dough until it is smooth and stretchy. Add in the butter, a few slices at a time, and continue kneading until it is all incorporated into the dough.



Butter a mixing bowl with room for the dough to double that will fit comfortably in your refrigerator. Put the dough in the buttered bowl and cover with a damp towel or cling film. Put it in the refrigerator for the dough to rise overnight.



Meanwhile, make your custard. If you are doing homemade, I use the method on this post. With the ingredient amounts above, you will have much more than you need for the buns, but trust me, it will get eaten and quickly. You might even have enough for a small personal banana cream pie.

Take the dough out of the refrigerator, punch it down and give it another quick knead in the bowl. Divide the dough into 12 even pieces. My dough weighed 778g, so each ball was about 64g. Roll each into a ball and place in a baking pan lined with baking parchment.



If you are so lucky as to have a proofing bag, use it. If not, use a new plastic garbage bag and pop the baking pan inside. Keeping it full of air, pinch the opening closed and secure it with a clip. Leave the buns to rise for 45-60 minutes or until nearly doubled in size.



When the buns are almost fully risen, preheat your oven to 350°F or 180°C.

To make the egg wash, whisk the egg yolk with the milk and salt. Use a soft pastry brush to apply the wash to the tops of the buns. With a piping bag, make a cross with the custard across each bun. Bake in the preheated for about 18-22 minutes or until the buns are well risen and golden.

Food Lust People Love: These soft potato buns are made with cooked mash potatoes. They are light, fluffy and just sweet enough to qualify as sweet bread, especially with the vanilla custard crosses.


Remove from the oven and cool for about 10 minutes in the pan. Slide the buns and parchment out onto a wire rack to cool completely. Or eat the soft potato buns warm and in your car for the whole Southeast Asian Carrefour experience.

Enjoy!

Food Lust People Love: These soft potato buns are made with cooked mash potatoes. They are light, fluffy and just sweet enough to qualify as sweet bread, especially with the vanilla custard crosses.

Many thanks to our Bread Baker host this month, Karen of Karen Kitchen Stories, for our great theme of “make ahead bread” and all of her behind the scenes work. Check out all the other lovely breads we are sharing today:


#BreadBakers is a group of bread loving bakers who get together once a month to bake bread with a common ingredient or theme. You can see all our of lovely bread by following our Pinterest board right here.  Links are also updated after each event on the BreadBakers home page. We take turns hosting each month and choosing the theme/ingredient.
BreadBakers

Pin these Soft Potato Buns! 

Food Lust People Love: These soft potato buns are made with cooked mash potatoes. They are light, fluffy and just sweet enough to qualify as sweet bread, especially with the vanilla custard crosses.
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