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Sweet Dough Yeasted Rings (Busolai) Recipe

Beans and Sardines
May 31, 2023 by tina oblak in All year round recipe, baked dish, baking, biscuits, breakfast, brunch, celebratory desserts, Celebratory dish, cookies, dessert, Easter, Easter recipes, easy baking, Easy recipe, Enriched dough, festive bakes, festive dessert, festive sweet things, home baking, Istrian cuisine, Istrian food, Istrian gastronomy, recipe from Northern Ital, simple recipe, Slovenian cuisine, Slovenian Easter Sweet Br, Slovenian food, Slovenian gastronomy, Snacks, Sweet bread, sweet course, sweet nibbles, Sweet Things

Busolai (also spelled Bussolai or Buzolai) are sweet treats that originate in the region of Veneto in north-east Italy. They are characteristic of Venice, and in particular on the fishermen island of Burano, hence these baked delights are also called Buranei (Burano buiscuits).

They are known as biscuits as they have the consistency of a biscuit, the dough does not contain the yeast, and it can be shaped into a ring or like the letter “S” (not a coincidence, since the S-shaped form of the biscuits makes it easier to dunk into milk or sweet wines).

They used to be only prepared and enjoyed during Easter festivities but nowadays almost every bakery on the island of Burano and in Venice sells them all year round.

Apparently, the letter from the Government of Venice, which still exists, has been found in the national archives of Italy, warning the nuns of the convent of St. Matthew on an island in the Venetian Lagoon that they should cut the number of Bussolai enjoyed during Easter festivities or otherwise they would encounter financial troubles.

The recipe for these biscuits, however, travelled further east, through the region of Friuli, and reached the city of Trieste (in Italy), and the land of Slovenian Istria across the “border”, where the recipe took a slightly different turn

The yeast was added to the dough making these baked goodies resemble more like soft doughnuts than the cookies, in fact, in the area they are described by the locals as sweet bread rings (obročki iz sladkega kruha).

As soon as they were freshly baked, it was a custom of some locals to spoon a bit of rum or grappa over them and sprinkle them with extra sugar.

Being like biscuits or doughnuts, they have one unmistakable characteristic in common, they have a hole in the centre, called “busa” in Venetian dialect”, hence their name, Busolai.

To make things more confusing in terms of naming this sweet treat, busolai are sometimes known as “kolach”, name originated from Old Slavonic word kolo meaning “wheel” or “circle”.

Once again, they were baked during festivities, especially during Easter since a great percentage of eggs are used in the recipe (egg representing the symbol of rebirth and resurrection).

These sweet baked rings were traditionally very popular during Confirmation (a rite in the Christian Church, at which baptized persons affirm their Christian belief, and are admitted as a full member of the Church).

Busolai were made into a garland with the use of a simple string and the godfather would gift these to his god child. This is described by a very well know and famous proverb in local dialect “Chi ga santoli ga buzzolai” (only the one who has a godfather will get busolai).

This tradition would be furthermore highlighted by another proverb in the local dialect “Bezi, basi e bussolai no i xe boni se no I xe assai,” which translates in standard Italian as (Soldi, baci e bussolai non sono buoni se non sono assai), and in English means that money, kisses and bussolai are no good if not given in abundance.

My husband’s uncle (known as zio Livio) with a garland of bussolai received on his Confirmation day by his godfather

This custom used to be very popular in Slovenian Istra, and almost each village would have a slightly different recipe for it. I am sharing with you my nona's recipe from the village of Marezige, a few kilometres from a coastal town of Koper where there used to be only one baker in town, at the time when my nona was a little girl, selling busolai, run by a family of Venetian origin.

Very sadly, there are no bakers selling busolai anymore, moreover, the custom of godfathers gifting the children with busolai has completely died out, and younger generations have never seen or heard of busolai.

Only a bunch of elderly people still alive today will tell you, with nostalgic voices and tearful eyes, with touching and emotional stories about their Confirmation Day, and they very much anticipated sugar coated busola, the only gift they received, if they were lucky enough.

Recipe

Ingredients

  • 500g regular plain flour

  • 1 cube of fresh (brewer's) yeast 42g or 14g of dry yeast

  • 100g unsalted butter, melted

  • 150g sugar

  • 2 medium eggs, lightly beaten

  • 2 egg yolks, lightly beaten

  • 100ml tepid lukewarm milk (semi skimmed or full fat)

  • 2 Tbsp dark rum or grappa (alcoholic, fragrant grape-based pomace brandy of Italian origin)

  • finely grated lemon zest of 1 unwaxed lemon

  • pinch of sea salt

  • 1 small egg, lightly beaten, for glazing (can use lightly beaten egg whites, the busolai will result lighter in colour after baking)

Method

In a small bowl place dry or fresh yeast (if using fresh yeast slightly brake it down into smaller pieces with your fingers).

Add 100ml of lukewarm milk and ¼ tsp of caster sugar.

Gently stir and leave for about 20 minutes or until gentle bubbles form on the surface.

In a separate mixing bowl put the eggs, egg yolks and beat them gently.

Add melted butter, sugar, rum or grappa, grated lemon zest and a pinch of sea salt, and with the fork mix well all the ingredients.

In a large mixing bowl put the flour, add egg mixture and the yeast mixture.

Combine well all the ingredients with the wooden spoon or spatula to start with. When all the ingredients are well combined transfer the mixture onto a clean, floured surface.

Work with your hands and knead the dough for about 10-15 minutes, stretching it and folding it, adding a little flour at the time if the dough is too sticky.

Knead the dough until it becomes smooth, soft, shiny and elastic (the dough should not stick to the surface or your hands).

Shape the dough in a ball, place it back into a previously oiled mixing bowl.

Cover tightly with cling film, leave to rest and prove in a draft free space at a room temperature for 3 hours.

After this time your dough should be at least double in size.

Line 2 large flat baking trays with baking parchment.

Take the dough out of the mixing bowl, place it on a working surface, knock the air out of the dough and shape it into a log.

View fullsize Busolai 3.jpg
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Divide the dough into more or less equal parts (10-12 parts each weighting roughly 100g).

Shape each piece of the dough into a sausage and form a ring, pinching the ends together (make sure you are generous with the size of the ring, during the baking the busalai rise and stretch quite a bit, if the whole is too small, after the baking you will end up with busolai that have almost a non-existing hole, not that this is really a problem).

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Place your ring-shaped sweet dough onto a tray.

Cover with clean tea towel and leave to prove for the second time for about 30 minutes.

Gently brush the sweet dough rings with lightly beaten egg or egg whites and sprinkle the top of the rings with sugar.

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Preheat the oven to 180°C and bake for 20 to25 minutes or until well risen and deep golden brown (they will be slightly lighter in colour if you brush them with egg whites).

Remove from the oven and transfer the busolai to a wire rack to cool completely.

Busolai are best eaten within a few hours.

You can easily freeze them, just make sure you freeze them as soon as they are completely cool.

Wine suggestion

Vin Santo di Torgiano DOC 2010 - Lungarotti

May 31, 2023 /tina oblak
sweet dough yeasted rings, Busolai, Bussolai, Buzolai, Istrian Busolai, obročki iz sladkega kruha, Buranei, Buranei buiscuits, Venitian Buiscuits, sweet dough, sweet bread, Cinfirmation sweet treats
All year round recipe, baked dish, baking, biscuits, breakfast, brunch, celebratory desserts, Celebratory dish, cookies, dessert, Easter, Easter recipes, easy baking, Easy recipe, Enriched dough, festive bakes, festive dessert, festive sweet things, home baking, Istrian cuisine, Istrian food, Istrian gastronomy, recipe from Northern Ital, simple recipe, Slovenian cuisine, Slovenian Easter Sweet Br, Slovenian food, Slovenian gastronomy, Snacks, Sweet bread, sweet course, sweet nibbles, Sweet Things
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Easter Sweet Plaited Bread (Tičice) Istrian Recipe

Beans and Sardines
April 07, 2023 by tina oblak in Adriatic Recipe, baking, breakfast, brunch, celebratory desserts, Celebratory dish, child friendly dish, dessert, Easter, Easter recipes, Easter treats, easy baking, Easy recipe, Enriched dough, festive bakes, festive dessert, festive sweet things, home baking, Istrian cuisine, Istrian food, Istrian gastronomy, Rustic dish, Slovenian cuisine, Slovenian Easter Sweet Br, Slovenian food, Slovenian gastronomy, Spring recipe, Sweet bread, sweet course, sweet finger food, sweet nibbles, Sweet Things

This celebratory sweet bread is similar to Jewish Challah, and is very flavoursome, soft and fluffy. It is made with yeasted enriched dough, and is shaped into a plait (or braid), and decorated with hard boiled eggs. It is very popular and traditionally baked during Easter festivities in Slovenian and Croatian Istra, Dalmatia (in Croatia) and in neighbouring Trieste in Italy and its surrounding areas.

It is best eaten fresh straight away, on its own with tea, coffee, or sweet wine, or paired with, as is traditionally the case, with cooked ham, and a selection of cheeses or cold dry cured meats. It is equally very delicious toasted the following day with some butter or jam.

This traditional recipe for sweet bread can be distinguished from other recipes for sweet bread across Europe by the addition of dark rum or grappa in the dough for extra flavour, and by the quantity of eggs used. This makes the bread have a heavier and slightly denser texture and richer taste, but this also means that it also requires a longer proofing time.

The eggs in the bread have symbolic significance in Christianity. Eggs represent new birth, new life, and are a reminder of the Passion and Resurrection of Christ. Traditionally, new converts to Christianity were baptised on Easter Sunday, representing their new birth in the faith, and new life in the Church. During the Middle Ages eggs were also a real treat to eat on Easter Sunday since they were forbidden during Lent, the 40 days of fasting before Easter.

Most of the time every household back home would bake two kinds of bread: the dough would be divided in half, and one kind is pinca bread, and is shaped like a regular round type of bread, but with cross-shaped incision on the top (representing Christ’s Crucifixion), and the other kind of bread, using the other half of the dough, is tičice, the braided variation with a hard boiled egg.

I am sharing here the recipe for this very traditional Easter sweet bread that has been made in my family for generations, it will make your holiday even more special!

Recipe

Method

This recipe will make 2 braided breads.

To make sweet bread plait, follow the recipe for basic sweet bread (pinca).

After the dough has risen and doubled in volume, remove it from the bowl.

Tip it onto a lightly floured surface and divide the dough in half.

Divide one half of the dough into 3 equal parts (cover the other half of the dough with the tea towel to prevent it from drying).

Roll each piece of the dough into 3 logs.

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Join and pinch the ends of all 3 logs together to start shaping them into a braid.

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Pinch the opposite end of the braided dough together.

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Place it on a baking tray previously lined with baking parchment.

Repeat the process with the other half of the dough.

Decorate the plait with hard boiled eggs (you can use the eggs previously decorated and dyed, see my recipe how to decorate and dye the eggs, Easter Eggs Dyed with Onion Skins Recipe). Place hard boiled eggs at the end part of the braid, pressing down a bit, almost creating a little nest where the egg can sit.

Brush both plaits with the egg whites.

Allow braided loaf to rise in warm, draft free, room for about 1 hour.

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Bake in the preheated oven at 180C for about 30 minutes, tent it with the aluminium foil halfway through if the top starts browning too much.

Once baked, take from the oven.

Transfer on a cooling rack and let it cool a bit.

Best served fresh still a bit warm.

Just a thought

Best eaten freshly baked on the same day.

Store leftover sweet bread in an airtight container for up to three-four days.

You can toast the slices and enjoy them with butter, jam, peanut or almond butter or use it to make French toast or bread and butter pudding, delicious!

Wine suggestion

Fior d'arancio Colli Euganei Spumante Dolce DOCG 2021 - Alla Costiera

April 07, 2023 /tina oblak
Braided sweet bread, plaited sweet bread, Easter sweet bread, Easter sweet braided bread, Easter sweet plaited bread, Tičice, celebratory sweet bread, yeasted dough, enriched dough
Adriatic Recipe, baking, breakfast, brunch, celebratory desserts, Celebratory dish, child friendly dish, dessert, Easter, Easter recipes, Easter treats, easy baking, Easy recipe, Enriched dough, festive bakes, festive dessert, festive sweet things, home baking, Istrian cuisine, Istrian food, Istrian gastronomy, Rustic dish, Slovenian cuisine, Slovenian Easter Sweet Br, Slovenian food, Slovenian gastronomy, Spring recipe, Sweet bread, sweet course, sweet finger food, sweet nibbles, Sweet Things
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Pinza 21.jpg

Pinca (Sweet Easter Bread) recipe

Beans and Sardines
March 30, 2021 by tina oblak in Sweet Things, Sweet bread, Enriched dough, Easter treats, Slovenian Easter Sweet Br

Pinca is a type of egg enriched bread that is not very sweet, but is flavourful, soft and fluffy. It is similar to a brioche, but contains less butter, and is therefore lighter. It is eaten especially during Lent and Easter, but is also prepared all year round.

It is widely available in bakeries, food stores and supermarkets, but nothing compares to the one baked at home. It is so easy to make; yes, it is a bit lengthy, perhaps because of the proving times, but give it a go. When you taste the real thing you will never want to buy it again.

Traditional Italian Pinza is very popular in the province of Trieste and Gorizia. It became an essential part of culinary tradition in Istria where is called Pinca and along the Adriatic coast and Dalmatia.

Pinza bread is often mistaken for Venetian Pinza, which is very different, as the dough has distinct consistency, and it is well seasoned and flavoured, for example, with walnut kernels, sultanas soaked in rum or Marsala, soft dried figs, pine nuts and apples.

My nona Nada always made pincas for Lent, and she baked quite a few, and then gave them to the family to be enjoyed. As soon as you entered the main entrance porch of her house, the aromas were unmistakable, I instantly knew what she had been making that day, and I also knew Easter was coming soon.

Sadly, her 93 years old hands have no longer the strength to knead the dough. I bake pinca today for my family, using her exact recipe, and when I cut a slice of it, close my eyes and smell the aroma of it, I get immediately transported to her kitchen, and the vision of a pile of pincas on a wooden table, covered with hand embroidered white linen tea towels appear in my mind.

She also told me that the tradition wanted the pinca to be blessed in the church. People would fill their wicker baskets with pinca, cooked ham and hard boiled eggs and take it to the mass on Holy Saturday or early on Easter Sunday to be blessed.

Only after being blessed, it was served either for breakfast on Easter day with coffee, a selection of cured meats, cooked ham, cheese and hard boiled eggs and different types of jams and preserves or as a dessert after Easter lunch where a slice of pinca would be very commonly dunked into a sweet wine or Muscat, locally known as muškat.

The tradition is very strong and this is how it is still served today.

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Pinca has a typical incision on the surface either in the shape of a 'cross' that symbolizes the suffering of Jesus Christ, or a the 'letter Y,' dividing the pinca into three sections, symbolizing the Holy Trinity in Christianity.

It is believed, that the incisions represent Jesus as a martyr, and that the Pinca itself represents a kind of Holy Sponge from which Jesus, according to the Gospels, was offered a drink during the Crucifixion (Matthew 27:48, Mark 15: 36, John 19:29).

Pinca is enriched with eggs, which also has symbolic significance, since it is a kind of constant reminder of Christianity, and the resurrection of Christ, and can also be linked to perhaps other old traditions that celebrate the arrival of spring after the bleak winter period.

Ingredients

  • 500g regular plain flour

  • 1 cube of fresh (brewer’s) yeast 42g or 14g of dry yeast

  • 100g unsalted butter, melted

  • 150g caster sugar

  • 2 medium eggs, lightly beaten

  • 2 egg yolks, lightly beaten

  • 100 ml tepid, lukewarm milk (semi skimmed or full fat)

  • 2 Tbsp dark rum or grappa (alcoholic, fragrant, grape-based pomace brandy of Italian origin)

  • finely grated lemon zest of 1 unwaxed lemon

  • pinch of sea salt

  • 1 small egg, lightly beaten for glazing (you can use lighly beaten egg whites, it will result lighter in colour after baking)

Method

In a small bowl place fresh yeast and slightly brake it down into smaller pieces with your fingers. Add 100ml of tepid milk and ¼ Tsp of caster sugar. Gently stir and leave for about 20min or until gentle bubbles form on the surface.

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In a separate mixing bowl put the egg, egg yolks and beat them gently. Add melted butter, sugar, rum or grappa, grated lemon zest, 100ml of milk and a pinch of sea salt. With the fork mix well all the ingredients.

Pinza 7.jpg

In a separate mixing bowl put the egg, egg yolks and beat them gently. Add melted butter, sugar, rum or grappa, grated lemon zest, 100ml of milk and a pinch of sea salt. With the fork mix well all the ingredients.

In a large mixing bowl put the flour, add egg mixture and the yeast mixture. Combine well all the ingredients with the wooden spoon or spatula to start with. When all the ingredients are well combined transfer the mixture onto a clean, very well floured surface.

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Work with your hands, adding a little flour at the time if the dough is too sticky, kneading the dough until you get a very smooth and soft dough with all the ingredients completely incorporated.

The dough will be at first quite wet and sticky, be very patient and do not be tempted to add too much flour too soon.

During the kneading, on the contrary, if you think the dough is too hard and dry add more tepid milk.

Knead the dough for about 10-15min, stretching it and folding it, until the dough is smooth in consistency and does not stick to the surface.

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Shape the dough in a ball, place it back into a previously oiled big mixing bowl. Cover with cling film, leave to rest and proof in a draft free space at a warm room temperature for a minimum of 2h. After this time your dough should be at least double in size.

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Take the dough out of the mixing bowl, place it on a floured surface and knead the dough once again. Divide the dough into two equal parts or three, if you wish a slightly smaller size bread and shape them into a sphere or other shapes if you prefer, maybe a plait.

Lay big baking tray with baking parchment or use a paper panettone mould if you prefer. Place the divided parts of the dough onto the baking tray. Cover with clean tea towel and put it in a warm place away from drafts and let them rest and proof for further 2h hours. I usually put the tray in the oven, by doing this I do not have to worry about the drafts or the room being too cold. Just make sure you take the tray out of the oven before turning it on in order to preheat it!

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Towards the end of proofing time, heat the oven to 180C.

With the very sharp knife decisively cut the cross on the surface or Y, making sure you do not drag the dough. The cut should be quite deep but not to the point of touching the bottom of the tray. Brush with the beaten egg and put in the preheated oven to bake for about 30-40 min or until nicely golden brown in colour on the surface.

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I suggest you check the colour of your pinca after about 20-25min, if it is browning too quickly, tent it with the aluminium foil and bake further.

You might want to double check if it is baked completely by pricking the centre with a clean wooden skewer (the skewer should come out clean) or use an instant food thermometer if you have one (it should register a temperature between 195 and 200C). If still wet, cover the pinca with the aluminium foil and bake for further few minutes.

It is a good idea to make sure that pinca is thoroughly baked as it browns quite quickly during the baking and therefore it is easy to undertake.

Pinza 19.jpg

Remove from the tray and let cool completely on a cooling rack. Slice and serve.

Pinza 20.jpg

Pinca can be stored for about 2-3 days or frozen for later use. You can also serve it sliced and slightly toasted.

Just a thought

Pinca dough can be also shaped into a plait.

Nowadays, a bit of a vanilla extract is often added to the pinca dough for extra flavour. However, it is important to remember that pinca is a humble bread, and originally only has lemon zest and dark rum or grappa added to the dough for the aroma. My nona Nada also told me that in her days vanilla was not very common to use, simply because it was a very difficult ingredient to get a hold of, and far too expensive.

Pinza 1.jpg

Wine suggestion

Breganze Torcolato 2018 by Maculan.

March 30, 2021 /tina oblak
Pinca, Pinza, enriched dough, sweet bread, celebratory bread
Sweet Things, Sweet bread, Enriched dough, Easter treats, Slovenian Easter Sweet Br
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