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Secret ingredient keeps cinnamon rolls moist

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Embrace the reality that cinnamon rolls are a nutritional catastrophe. (Photo provided)

By L.V. Anderson - SFlbThe Washington Post

There are few more axiomatic statements than this: Cinnamon rolls are delicious. Consider the success of Cinnabon, the processed-pastry mega-chain whose 880-calorie behemoths tempt weary mall patrons and air travelers at 770 locations worldwide. Each roll from Cinnabon is, as Louis C.K. memorably put it, “a 6-foot high, cinnamon-swirled cake made for one fat man.”

If you’re expecting a smug explanation of why homemade cinnamon rolls are nutritionally superior to Cinnabon’s, forget it. Homemade cinnamon rolls are terrible for you, chockablock with butter, sugar (two kinds), and refined flour, with some egg and salt thrown in for good measure. Healthwise, there’s not much difference between downing a Cinnabon Classic, eating a couple of homemade cinnamon rolls, or injecting buttercream frosting directly into your liver.

That doesn’t mean there are no good reasons to make cinnamon rolls from scratch. For one thing, homemade cinnamon rolls taste better than Cinnabon’s, with none of the latter’s chemical tang. For another, they’re inevitably cheaper than the kind from a kiosk. Finally, and most importantly, you get to eat them in the warm comfort of your own kitchen, rather than in the supremely depressing environments where Cinnabon outlets lurk.

There are only two secrets to making terrific homemade cinnamon rolls. The first is to embrace the fact that they are a nutritional catastrophe. Don’t try to redeem them with raisins or nuts, which distract from the three primary cinnamon-roll textures: tender, feathery bread; sticky cinnamon filling; and smooth, smooth icing.

The second secret is potato. Yes, that sounds absurd and perhaps even gimmicky. But adding a little mashed potato to cinnamon-roll dough results in incomparably moist, soft rolls. (This is true for virtually all yeast breads, since potato contains starch but none of the gluten that can make baked goods tough.) A ricer is the best tool for making boiled potato smooth enough to vanish into dough – and it conveniently separates the potato skin from the flesh – but if you don’t have one, you can peel the potato by hand and mash it with a fork or a traditional potato masher until the lumps are gone. Either way, no one will guess that there are traces of tuber in their breakfast bun. All they will notice is that they are eating a pastry as ethereal as the new Beach House album.

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