Hot Cross Buns Recipe with a Spicy Southeast Asian Twist

My hot cross buns recipe for Easter makes a delightful dough that’s rich, spicy and fruity. As I’ve been baking these hot cross buns for Easter in our Cambodian kitchen for many years now, I’ve given this Good Friday treat a Southeast Asian twist with gentle hints of spice and candied tropical fruits, yet still kept the traditional texture.

Some years ago we were at Lara’s mum’s house in Bendigo, Australia, eating terribly disappointing hot cross buns that we’d bought from the local bakery and supermarket. They squashed to next to nothing beneath your finger tips and lacked the spice notes we both remembered fondly from the hot cross buns we ate as kids growing up in Australia.

Most of our two decades living abroad have been spent in Southeast Asia and the Middle East, which means we use a lot of spices in our everyday cooking. It also means we haven’t had many Easters and therefore haven’t eaten a whole lot of hot cross buns. That means cravings. And not only cravings for hot cross buns.

If you follow us on Instagram, in addition to cooking Southeast Asian food, Lara cooks a fair bit of her family’s Russian-Ukrainian food and I do a lot of sourdough baking, primarily to satisfy cravings for things we miss from ‘home’. But also because it’s difficult to get good bread in Cambodia and I can make better quality bread at home. So naturally, every year as Easter is approaching, I’m making hot cross buns.

Before you scroll down to my hot cross buns recipe, we have a favour to ask. Grantourismo is reader-funded. If you make this hot cross buns recipe or any of our recipes and enjoy them, please consider supporting Grantourismo so we can keep creating recipes and stories. Click through to this post for ways to support Grantourismo, such as shopping at our online store for gifts for food lovers created from my images.

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Hot Cross Buns Recipe for Easter with a Spicy Fruity Southeast Asian Twist

I started experimenting with this hot cross buns recipe many years ago. I have always had a tendency – Lara calls it an obsession – to test out an array of different recipes until I find just the right one and then tweak and tweak them until they’re absolutely perfect.

But since we’ve been living in Siem Reap I’ve also found myself giving Australian and European dishes a Cambodian or Southeast Asian twist by substituting or adding local ingredients such as Asian spices to recipes. (Lara does the same with her recipes, especially cocktails, as she did with this Cuban mojito recipe).

This is to explain why this hot cross buns recipe is made with five spice instead of allspice and candied ginger and candied tamarind, all produced locally here in Cambodia. Dried tropical fruits, candied tropical fruits and fruit leather are all very easy to get here in Cambodia and they are wonderful and fresh.

Nothing is wasted here. Near the end of each fruit season, as you travel through villages in the countryside, you’ll see farmers will have various fruits finely sliced, pressed or diced, and laid out on trays or on flat baskets in the sun to dry.

Tips to Making this Hot Cross Buns Recipe

Just a few tips to making my hot cross buns recipe. Instead of adding allspice to the dough mix, I’m using five-spice in its place. I’ve also added dried ground cardamom as well, for its camphor and lemony notes.

An English or Australian hot cross buns recipe would call for dried fruit, such as currants and orange peel, but I’ve used raisins (which are easier to get here than currants), and I’ve added candied ginger and candied tamarind, which are very local.

If you can’t find candied ginger and tamarind, experiment with other candied or dried fruits you can source.

The dough mix for this hot cross buns recipe is a very wet one which makes it difficult, but not impossible to knead by hand. I prefer to use a stand mixer or a hand mixer, requiring very little hand kneading, apart from adding the dried fruit mix and shaping the buns.

A tip: depending just how wet the mix is, coat the palms of your hands with vegetable oil or flour to stop the mix from sticking to your hands.

From my childhood memories in Australia, hot cross buns were always baked so that they touched each other and rose together in a tall cake tin or loaf tin.

A lot of the English recipes I tested tried to not have the buns come in contact with each other. While I like both ways you’ll get a taller rise from the joint buns as the separate buns will spread more while proving.

We often touch on the history of dishes and recipes as it intrigues us both, but Oliver Thring has done a good job of examining the history of hot cross buns in The Guardian, so we’ll leave you with that to read while your buns bake.

Hot Cross Buns Recipe with a Southeast Asian Twist

Easy Home Cooked Hot Cross Buns Recipe for Easter with a Spicy Fruity Southeast Asian Twist. What to cook this weekend. Copyright © 2023 Terence Carter / Grantourismo. All Rights Reserved.

Hot Cross Buns Recipe

AuthorTerence Carter

Hot Cross Buns Recipe with an Asian Twist.

Prep Time 15 minutes

Cook Time 15 minutes

Total Time 30 minutes

Course Baking

Cuisine English

Servings made with recipe6 Buns

Calories 289 kcal

  • 250 g strong white flour
  • 25 g brown sugar
  • ½ tsp salt
  • ¼ tsp ground cardamom
  • ½ tsp ground cinnamon
  • 1 ½ tsp five spice powder
  • 1 tsp of vanilla extract
  • Zest of 1/4 orange
  • 4 g dried yeast
  • 150 ml milk
  • 1 egg
  • 25 g butterdiced
  • 100 g dried fruitwe use a mix of raisins, candied ginger and candied tamarind

The cross paste

  • 50 g plain flour
  • 20 g icing sugar
  • 30 ml milk
  • If you do not have a stand mixer or a powerful hand mixer with dough hooks, this is a difficult dough to mix by hand. It can be done by hand, but it’s a sticky mess!

  • Mix flour, salt and sugar in the bowl of the mixer. Add the five spice, cinnamon, cardamom, vanilla extract and orange zest to the flour.

  • Mix around to distribute the salt in particular as it can inhibit the yeast activation.

  • Mix the dough on a slow speed for 3 to 4 minutes. Add the butter piece by piece, allowing it to get distributed through the dough.

  • By this stage the dough should have come together and off the sides of the bowl and sticking to the dough hook. When this happens the dough is ready even though it looks wet and glossy.

  • With oil or flour coating the palms of your hands, place the dough on a floured workbench. Spread the dough out and add the dried and candied fruit to the dough. Gently knead the dough to mix the fruit through the dough for a couple of minutes.

  • Place the dough in an oiled bowl and cover with clingfilm that’s oiled on the side that might contact the dough as it rises. Prove for about 1½ – 2 hours in which time the dough should double.

  • Once this is achieved, place the dough on a lightly floured workbench and knock the dough back to expel the air.

  • Divide the dough into 6 equal pieces around 100g each. Prepare a large baking tray lined with parchment paper.

  • To prepare the bun dough shape, flatten the dough piece roughly and pick up a corner of the dough and press into the middle of the dough. Repeat until you have formed a tight ball. Turn the dough ball over, which should reveal a smooth, taught surface.

  • Place the finished buns evenly spaced in the baking tray and prove the buns for one hour lightly covered with oiled clingfilm.

  • Preheat the oven to 200°C. Brush each bun with an egg wash made form a beaten egg and a little salt.

  • Create the cross paste by mixing the ingredients for the paste in a small mixing bowl. It needs to be piped so a good firm consistency is best. Place the mix in a piping bag and mark the crosses.

  • Bake the buns for around 15 minutes, rotating the tray halfway through cooking. They should be a golden brown color.

  • Transfer to a wire rack to cool.

Calories: 289kcalCarbohydrates: 52gProtein: 7gFat: 6gSaturated Fat: 3gCholesterol: 39mgSodium: 251mgPotassium: 228mgFiber: 3gSugar: 17gVitamin A: 185IUVitamin C: 0.4mgCalcium: 83mgIron: 2.8mg

First Published 26 March 2018; Updated and Republished 28 March 2024

Do let us know if you bake my hot cross buns recipe this Easter and do feel free to share your own hot cross buns tips and twists in the Comments below. I’d love to try them.

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