Monday, November 24, 2008

My Mom's Orange Rolls

So this past week I was so honored to have one of my recipes featured on my dear foodie friend Becca's blog and thought I'd share her post. She is a really gifted chef, and since my idea of hot breakfast is chocolate milk warmed up in a sippy cup, I think my reluctance to share this recipe is understandable...

Becca writes:

I believe in a lot of things. I believe in being nice. I believe in forgiveness. I believe in Hot Breakfasts. As my daughter G used to say, "for real life, I do." However, mornings are tight at our house. The bathroom is in heavy demand, people are practicing instruments, almost all major appliances are up and running. Speaking of running, I am usually back from my run and instead of running on the street, by 7:30am I am running around my house barking orders to play the right note, start the dishwasher, or get out of the bathroom. So, given the morning craziness, my strong belief in Hot Breakfasts suffers dearly. Enter Fake Cinnamon Rolls.


My dear friend H introduced these to me a few years ago. She brought this towering gooey mess of Orange Rolls to Easter Dinner. I couldn't stop eating them. I took four just for myself. When my daughter asked me if there were any more of H's orange rolls, I lied and said, "I don't think so", when in fact there were about seven left. I wanted them all for myself. Whenever somebody reached for one, I gave their hand a dirty look. I resented H for not making these sooner, and I told her so. She said, "well, I didn't think you made things out of a can." "What?" I replied. "These are just canned biscuits dipped in butter, sugar and orange peel, then baked in a bundt pan." "Oh.", I humbly replied.
Fast forward a few years later. I make these fake cinnamon/orange rolls all the time. When I have an extra fifteen minutes in the morning, I pop these puppies in the oven and wha-la, the girls treat themselves to a yummy breakfast dessert (post scrambled eggs, mind you). And if any of you are grossing out that I in fact use biscuits from a can, too bad. I guess that means you can't come over and try one. Just kidding. I said I believe in forgiveness, and for real life, I do.
Marilyn's Orange Rolls (including a cinnamon roll variation)
3 cans prepared biscuits --Pillsbury Biscuits (buttermilk)
1/2 cup butter, melted
3/4 cup sugar
grated rind of one orange
Mix butter, sugar, and rind. Dip biscuits in mix, then stand on end around greased bundt pan. Pour extra mix on top (I add a bit of the orange's juice as well). Bake at 350 for 30-45 minutes.
For Fake Cinnamon Rolls, I use 1 teaspoon of cinnamon instead of orange rind. I also use 1/2 cup white sugar and 1/4 cup brown sugar, but be sure to watch closely because the brown sugar causes potential gooey-ness to drip over the pan.
Finally, I don't use all 3 cans of biscuits for my girls in the morning, I reduce the whole recipe and use one can, and bake it in any sort of small baking dish. Yummy.

6 comments:

Rachel said...

Am I retarded if I don't understand the "stand on end" part of the recipe? A must try in my life kind of think. I'm already salvating.

Carly said...

Heather- it's Carly (John) Nielson. My mom told me I just had to check out your blog. It is hilarious. If you are bored (really bored) you can read ours- bigdlittle.blogspot.com.

Carly said...

I typed our blog address wrong. bigdlittlec.blogspot.com

Dava said...

YUM! Brings back good memories!

Did you know you can pull the dough of each biscuit to form a hole in it, 'like' a doughnut, fry them in some oil and dip them in cinnamon and sugar... and "walla"....a sugary, fat-filled doughnut!

YUM!

Dava

Anne said...

these are so good. my m-i-l makes these when we visit and i tried making them once myself (not so good -- honestly how can i screw up something so relatively simple?)

but i like the sound of the cinammon twist version

Stefawn Von Gordon said...

Overachiever. The Pillsbury "ready made" Orange Rolls are already formed in little spiral bun shapes, and come with a small container of goopy orange icing, which you drizzle over the whole mess when they're cooked. Voila! No oranges to grate, no butter to melt. I thought I knew you, I really did... So disappointing.

Try them. You will never melt butter again.

xoxo
s