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Cream bun

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cream bun
A cream roll
TypeSweet roll, bun

Variations of cream buns or cream rolls exist all around the world. Typically they are made with an enriched dough bread roll that is split after baking and cooling and filled with cream.

Among the numerous international variations are the splits of Devon and Cornwall in southwest England, which are yeasted buns filled with clotted cream, the maritozzi [it; ja] of the Lazio region of Italy, which are enriched buns, made with dried fruit and filled with whipped cream, and the roombroodjes of the Netherlands, which are filled with pastry cream.

In Northern Europe, soft buns spiced with cardamom, called semla in Sweden, are eaten on Shrove Tuesday.[1]

Another specific national version is the Hong Kong sweet bun.[2] It is one of the most standard pastries in Hong Kong. It can also be found in most Chinatown bakery shops.[3] The bun has either buttercream or whipped cream filling down the middle with coconut sprinkles on the outside. Variations of it include the "Cream Horn", a pastry in a spiral shape, much like a horn, filled with cream.

In India, cream buns are sold at most bakeries and grocery stores. They have a wide elliptical shape and they are cut in middle along the major axis. Each of the flat bun surfaces on the inside are filled with cream and joined together.

In County Down region of Northern Ireland, a long cream and jam filled variation is known as a "Sailor's Doodle".

In Barreiro, a city in Portugal there is the 'Bola de Manteiga', where very light buns have a butter and cream filling.

In Edinburgh, a city in Scotland, cream buns have been known to be used as weapon, particularly a missile. However, the practice of throwing a cream bun at peoples faces is reserved only for individuals known as "neds", and the deployment of cream buns is used only in the rarest of circumstances. Usually as a last resort to deter unwanted aggressors when all reason has failed.

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Historian om Semlorna". semlor.eu. Archived from the original on 2015-11-17.
  2. ^ Qiu, Yongling (2011). 港麵包 港味道 (Popular bread in Hong Kong). 萬里機構 (Wan Li Book). p. 112. ISBN 9789621446473.
  3. ^ MyTravelFoods (7 October 2010). "Cream Bun". mytravelfoods.com. Retrieved 12 August 2012.