Hot Cross Buns Recipe

By Cotswold Flour

“We’ve been scoffing hot cross buns at Easter for centuries but there is some debate regarding when they became commonplace seasonal fare.”

This year, March is packing in both Mother’s Day and an early Easter means school is out at the end of the month. Busy times.

A study has revealed that engaging in creative projects, such as cooking and baking, makes us happier in our day to day lives. If you need further encouragement, think of it as an act of mindfulness which comes with a bonus sense of achievement – and something delicious as the end result. The research, published in the Journal of Positive Psychology, has been endorsed by local producer of regeneratively farmed flours, Chipping Norton’s Matthews Cotswold Flour. Their online Baking Club is designed to support and encourage home bakers and they’ve kindly shared with us their recipe for an Easter favourite, Hot Cross Buns.

We’ve been scoffing hot cross buns at Easter for centuries but there is some debate regarding when they became commonplace seasonal fare. It is alleged that buns marked with a cross were enjoyed by the Greeks in the sixth century AD. Those we enjoy today are loaded with significance; the cross representing the crucifixion, the spices reference embalming, and the raisins, the body of Jesus. Originally made to be given to the poor on Good Friday, they have become a popular marker of the end of Lenten fasting.

Ingredients

Method

For more recipes head to the recipe page at cotswoldflour.com