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A saffron bun, Cornish tea treat bun or revel bun, is a rich, spiced yeast-leavened sweet bun that is flavoured with saffron and contains dried fruit including currants and raisins similar to a teacake. The main ingredients are plain flour, butter, yeast, caster sugar, currants and sultanas. [1]
A Swedish-style saffron bun, traditionally consumed before Christmas. The saffron bun has Swedish and Cornish variants and in Swedish is known as lussekatt (literally "Lucy cat", after Saint Lucy) or lussebulle. The latter is a rich yeast dough bun that is enhanced with saffron, along with cinnamon or nutmeg and currants.
Saffron bun – A rich, spiced, yeast-leavened sweet bun, flavored with saffron and cinnamon or nutmeg, and contains currants, similar to a teacake; Sally Lunn bun – Brioche-like soft sweet yeast bread associated with the city of Bath in the West Country of England
Saffron infused sweet bread is shaped into a lovely “S” and baked with a golden raisin tucked into each end. If using ground cardamom, substitute 1/2 teaspoon for the whole pods. 10.
It’s a traditional wheat bun spiced with black cardamom and sunny saffron, and curled into a double cat-tail with a raisin or currant pressed into the center of each coil.
Skolebrød A sticky bun and nut loaf. Saffron bun – Sweet bun flavoured with saffron [3] Sally Lunn bun – English sweet bun [3] Scone – Traditional British baked good; Shortcake – Dessert with a crumbly scone-like texture; Singing hinny – Type of bannock, griddle cake or scone
Many local forms of the spiced bun exist, an example of which is the Cornish saffron bun. The hot cross bun [1] is probably the most well-known manifestation of the spiced bun, and a great tradition has grown up around it in England. Hot cross buns are traditionally baked on Good Friday, although they can often be purchased at other times of year.
A Sally Lunn is a large bun or teacake, a type of batter bread, made with a yeast dough including cream and eggs, similar to the sweet brioche breads of France. Sometimes served warm and sliced, with butter, it was first recorded in 1780 [1] in the spa town of Bath in southwest England. As a tea cake, it is popular in Canada and England.