Chimney cake (Kürtöskalács in Hungarian or Trdelník in Czech) is a sweet bread with a crispy outside and soft fluffy inside. Its cylindrical hollow shape gives it the name ‘chimney’.
Course Breakfast, Dessert
Keyword bread, chimney cake
Prep Time 30 minutesminutes
Cook Time 20 minutesminutes
Resting time 1 hourhour
Total Time 35 minutesminutes
Servings 6medium sized chimneys
Author Noopur
Ingredients
250gall purpose flour
7gactive dried yeast- 1 envelope/2 tsp
50gsugar
1tspsalt
100mlwhole milk- lukewarm
1largeegg
75gunsalted butter- melted
additionalmelted butter for greasing
Toppings
100gcaster sugar
1tspcinnamon powder
Instructions
To make the sweet dough
Activate the yeast - take the lukewarm milk in a small bowl or a mug, add a teaspoon of sugar, sprinkle the yeast and mix. Let it rest for 10 minutes. The yeast will start getting frothy and bubbles will come up. (If this doesn’t happen, your yeast has either expired or the milk is too hot).
In a large bowl, sift your dry ingredients - flour, sugar and salt.
Whisk the egg into the melted butter. Add the melted butter-egg mixture and activated yeast-milk mixture to your dry ingredients. Mix with a wooden spoon till you get a shaggy dough.
Transfer everything to a clean surface and knead it for about 10 minutes till you get a soft and elastic dough. You can use your stand mixer with dough hook attachment as well for this.
Put the dough into a well-oiled bowl and cover with cling wrap and a clean kitchen towel. Let it rest for 60-90 minutes in a warm dry place till it doubles in size. (I keep mine in a switched-off microwave oven).
Preparing & baking the chimneys
Preheat the oven to 200C. Prepare your wooden rolling pin by wrapping it up tightly with 2-3 layers of aluminium foil. Grease it with melted butter.
Punch the dough in the bowl and take it out on a clean surface. If you are using a long rolling pin, use half of the dough and keep half aside. If your rolling pin is small like mine, use a quarter of the dough at a time. Take one part of dough onto your surface and keep rest of the dough covered in the bowl.
With a rolling pin, roll out the dough to about 1/2 inch. Cut into long ribbons of dough. Spiral the dough from one end of your rolling pin to the other, covering it but not overlapping the dough too much. If you run out of dough, gently press the start of another ribbon onto the end and continue with the new ribbon.
Gently roll the rolling pin onto your counter to press the edges together. In a plate, mix together the cinnamon and caster sugar and roll your pin into the sugar to coat it completely.
Suspend the rolling pin on a baking sheet such that the dough isn’t touching anything. Place it in the oven and bake at 200C for 15-18 minutes. Make sure you turn the rolling pin every 5-7 minutes to get even browning.
Once golden brown, remove from oven and let it cool for 5 minutes. Gently loosen it up and slide it off the rolling pin to create a hollow cylinder. You can re-roll the hot chimney cake into more cinnamon sugar, or brush them with sugar syrup and sprinkle coconut or colourful sprinkles. Roll the rest of the dough and wrap the rolling pins and bake again.
Eat them while they are still hot or allow them to cool and fill them with toppings of your choice.