Mosbolletjies

Mosbolletjies /mɒsˈbɒləki/ is a traditional Afrikaner or Cape Dutch sweet-bun or bread traditionally made in the wine producing areas of the Western Cape province of South Africa.[1][2] The name is Afrikaans in origin and is a combination of mos (Afrikaans for "must" or unfermented grape juice) and bolletjies (Afrikaans for "balls" or "buns"). Mosbolletjies can be dried to make rusks. The buns are typically served with tea or coffee.

Mosbolletjies
Mosbolletjies is sweetened , leavened yeast bun flavoured with caraway and or anise seed.
CourseDessert
Place of originSouth Africa
Region or stateCape Winelands
Created byN/A
Inventedlate 1600s–1700s
Main ingredientsFlour, salt, butter, sugar, yeast, grape juice, milk, aniseed
VariationsMultiple

History

The bun originated from French Huguenots refugees who settled the town of Franschhoek in 1688 and introduced viticulture to the region. Mosbolletjies were typically made during the wine making season when its key ingredient was readily available.[1]

Composition

Traditionally grape must left over from the production of wine was used to as a leavening agent and added to dough.[3] Spices such as aniseed are added and the mixed dough is then baked. In modern times grape juice and yeast are typically used instead of grape must.[1]

The dough of the buns are rolled into balls and packed tightly into a backing tray giving it a consistent series of bumps that once baked make individual pieces easy to pull off.[1]

gollark: There are strict rules.
gollark: Amateur radio licenses don't let you just transmit ANYTHING on amateur bands.
gollark: Or at least they don't care much and can't enforce it.
gollark: It's allowed for really low powers, or something.
gollark: Unlegal is like legal, but the opposite.

See also

References

  1. Baker, Donald. "Mosbolletjies in South African Cuisine". www.ejozi.co.za. Retrieved 2018-01-20.
  2. Davidson, Alan (2014). The Oxford Companion to Food. Oxford University Press. p. 759. ISBN 0199677336. Retrieved 2018-01-20.
  3. Hennie, Fisher; T., Viljoen, Annemarie (2014-09-15). "Proudly South African cuisine". p. 36. Retrieved 2018-01-20.
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