Published: · Modified: · About 4 minutes to read this article. · By Kim Nielsen
These traditional Danish Fastelavnsboller (Shrovetide Buns) are very delicious and actually quite easy to make. Serve as a snack in the afternoon or evening.
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Fastelavn is a Nordic holiday celebrated on Sunday or Monday before Ash Wednesday. It has some similarities to the American holiday Halloween where children dress up in costumes and go house to house to beg for candy.It is also a tradition in Denmark to 'slå katten af tønden' - 'beat the cat in the barrel'. It is a wooden barrel that is filled with candy inside and in the old days they actually put real cats inside the barrel! The children takes turn hitting the barrel with a bat and the one that knocks the bottom out of the barrel is crowned “kattedronning” (queen of the cats). The one who knocks down the last piece of the barrel becomes kattekonge ("king of cats"). Both the king and queen gets a crown to wear.
The children go door to door begging for candy. When they come to the door they will sing a little song called 'Boller op, boller ned'. (Buns up and bun down). In the song it says, that if the children don't get buns in their stomach, they will make trouble. And the buns the song are referring to is of course 'Fastelavnsboller', which is a very popular pastry served on this particular day.
There are many different kinds of Fastelavnsboller. Some is made of danish pastry and some is made of a regular yeast dough. Some are filled with a custard or jam and then baked, while others are sliced open and then filled with a custard or whipped cream filling. My recipe is made from a yeast dough and then filled with custard or marzipan remonce - so here is actually a recipe
for 2 different kinds of filling. Some actually put both remonce and custard inside of the bun, so if you wan't you can try that.
Fastelavnsboller
These traditional Danish Fastelavnsboller (Shrovetide Buns) are very delicious and actually quite easy to make. Serve as a snack in the afternoon or evening.
Print Recipe Rate Recipe
Prep Time: 45 minutes minutes
Cook Time: 1 hour hour 15 minutes minutes
Total Time: 2 hours hours
Course: Danish Pastry
Cuisine: Danish
Keyword: Fastelavn, Shrovetide
Servings: 24 buns
Author: NordicFoodLiving.com
Ingredients
Metric - US Customary
Dough
- 50 g fresh yeast or equivalent dry yeast
- 2 eggs
- 2,5 dl milk
- 200 g cold butter
- 2 tbsp sugar
- 600 g all-purpose flour
- 2 tsp cardamom
- 1 egg for egg wash
- Icing sugar Cocoa and water for the icing
Custard filling
- 2 eggs
- 4 tbsp sugar
- 2 tbsp corn starch
- 3 dl milk
- 1 vanilla bean the seeds
Marzipan Remonce
- 150 g sugar
- 150 g butter soft
- 150 g marzipan
Instructions
Dough
Mix flour, sugar and cardamom in a bowl.
Add the butter and crumble it between your hands.
Heat up the milk in a small pan until it is finger warm. Dissolve the yeast in the milk. If using dry yeast add this together with the flour.
Add the eggs to the milk/yeast mixture and whip it together.
Add the milk/yeast/egg mixture to the dry ingredients and mix it together. Knead the dough well and add more flour if the dough is too sticky.
Leave dough in bowl and cover with a tea towel. Let the dough rise for about 1/2 hour.
Custard filling
For the custard filling; Add all the ingredients in a small pan. Remember to add the empty vanilla bean as well (it has plenty of extra flavor)
Whip all of the ingredients together and heat it up slowly. Stir constantly in the custard until it comes to a boil and begins to thickens. Pour the custard in to a bowl and let it cool off. Remember to remove the vanilla bean.
Marzipan remonce
For the marzipan remonce; Mix sugar, soft butter and marzipan in a bowl. Knead it with your fingers.
Fastelavnsboller (The assembly)
When the dough is done rising; separate it into 24 pieces. Roll or press the pieces flat and add about 1 tsp of custard filling and 1 tsp of remonce filling.
Fold all corners up to the center and press to seal all edges. Turn the dough ball over, tuck in all edges and place on two baking sheets with the seam side down.
Brush the buns with a beaten egg.
Let them rise for 1/2 hour with a clean tea towel on top.
Bake the buns in the oven at 200 C (400 F) for 10-15 minutes or until they are nice and golden.
When the buns are cooled of you can decorate them with icing (made from icing sugar, water and maybe cocoa powder).
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Reader Interactions
Comments
Annie
These buns look nice but I really wanted to mention your custard recipe - I used it because I wanted a quick custard to put in some Chelsea buns I was making and it worked brilliantly! So easy! I added cardamom pods as I wanted a cardamom flavour rather than vanilla, It was lovely and worked really well in the Chelsea buns. I wonder why this simple, stir-it-all-together and heat method isn't used more often for crème patissière?
Reply
Louise Dam
Hi Annie, Thank you so much for your comment - sounds nice with the cardamom :-)
Reply
Anneli
Is it possible to use almond milk instead of regular mill?
Reply
Kim Nielsen
Hi Anneli. Actually I don't know. I'm not that familiar using almond milk as a substitute for regular milk. However, If you try I would love to hear from you how it turns out. Regards Kim
Reply
Ditte
I used oat milk and it worked well. The custard had a bit of a grey tint to the yellow, but overall tasted great.
Reply
Lucy Gabrielsen
Simpler to make than it first appears and dough ingredients list in order is from bottom up. Take care not to overfill and make sure to seal well, as I found that a teaspoon of each filling ended up overflowing out of the buns when baked.
Altogether a good recipe.Reply
Kristin Koontz
Is 50 grams of yeast correct? It seems a very large amount. Perhaps this is yeast cake rather than dry yeast as we use in the US.
Reply
Kim Nielsen
Yes it's 50 grams of fresh yeast which is normal to use in Europe. 50 grams of fresh yeast is about 1 oz of active dry yeast or 1/2 instant dry yeast. I hope it make sense :-)
Reply
Malene
Where do you get the marzipan from in the UK? I’m guessing that you can’t use the marzipan that they use to cover cakes with or what? (Danish marzipan is different right?)
Reply
Kim Nielsen
Danish marzipan is made by sugar, water and almonds (about 60%).
Reply
Helen
It's the same as in the UK. Cake equipment shops sell it. Tesco sells it round Xmas.Reply