You need to plan ahead if you want to make these for Easter Sunday. Start the process on Saturday morning to bake the buns late Sunday morning. You will notice the ingredients are mostly in gram amounts, I have learned (from experience) when it comes to bread baking this will give the most consistent results. Digital scales work best and keep within 2g of the ingredient weight. Another handy and very affordable piece of equipment is a dough scraper for folding the dough and cutting without severing the gluten.
Ingredients
Production Starter
50gbubbly sourdough starter
50g white flour - spelt, standard or high grade
50gwater
Dry ingredients
320gwhite flour - spelt, standard or high grade
5gsea salt
2teaspoonssugar
1teaspooncinnamon
1/2teaspoonground ginger
1/2teaspoonground cloves
pinchof nutmeg
100graisins or sultanas
Wet ingredients
150gmilk
30gbutter
200gmashed roasted pumpkin or kumara - see note below
melted butter for brushing
Instructions
Make the production starter around mid-morning of the first day (Saturday morning). Cover with a plate and leave to ferment for about 6 hours - after this time the starter will have visible bubbles and at least doubled in size. *Or use 150g healthy bubbly starter from your sourdough starter jar (fed 6 hours prior).
Once the starter is ready make the dough. First weigh the dry ingredients into a large mixing bowl. Use a whisk to combine and aerate.
Cover the bowl with a plastic bag so the dough doesn't dry out and leave to rise at room temperature (if it is cool in your kitchen then place the bowl somewhere warm) for 3 hours. During this time you can apply 1-2 sets of stretch and folds to the dough if you are inclined, but this is not essential. Before bed place the bowl into the fridge to retard the dough for 10 - 12 hours.
In the morning (about 7 - 8am) remove the dough from the fridge and tip onto a bench - resist the urge to add extra flour, the cold risen dough will be easy to handle. Knead half a dozen times to develop the gluten for the final rise. Next use a dough scraper or 'blunt' butter knife to cut into 12 even sized pieces. Use your fingers to gently fold the cut edges under to make a rounded bun shape and then cup the dough with your hand and roll into a ball. Place the buns on a lined baking tray (approx. 20x25cm) seam side down with 1cm space between each. Cover with a plastic bag and set aside in a warm position to rise for 3 - 4 hours (how long they take to rise depends on the temperature of your kitchen). Once the buns are just touching and visibly risen they are ready to bake.
Preheat the oven to 220C (200C fan bake). Make the crosses - see below. Place the buns into the hot oven and immediately turn the temperature down to 200C (180C fan bake). Bake for 25-30 minutes until golden. Check after 20 minutes and if the buns are getting nicely brown on top cover with a sheet of baking paper so they don't brown further. Remove from the oven and cool on a rack, brush with warm honey or maple syrup to give the buns a nice glaze. Best eaten warm from the oven with a thick spread of butter - and they are also lovely toasted the next day.
Notes
To make the crosses combine 3 tablespoons flour with 2 tablespoons water, spoon into a ziplock bag and cut a small hole (approx 2mm) in one of the corners. Twist the bag and slowly squeeze out the paste onto the buns to make crosses. Roast Pumpkin - when roasting pumpkin for dinner I often bake extra for adding to baking. I slice the pumpkin into wedges - leaving the skin on as this is easy to peel off once cooked. Brush with a little ghee or coconut oil and season lightly with salt. Roast for 30 minutes at 190C until tender, flipping the pumpkin wedges after 15 minutes for even cooking. Cool then remove the skin and mash or puree.