Hot cross buns are a favorite of mine especially this sourdough version studded with currants, candied citron and orange. Thank you to Maurizio Leo for the sourdough tips and original recipe in The Perfect Loaf cookbook.
As with all sourdough, the exact timing depends on your climate and the temperature in your kitchen. My house is usually on the cool side, so bulk fermentation for this dough takes 4 hours then I shape and decide whether to bake same day or next day.
- For same-day bake: proof the buns for 3 hours then egg wash, pipe crosses, and bake
- For next-day bake: set the dish of shaped buns in the refrigerator overnight then proof, prep, and bake the next morning
edited from the archives, March 28, 2023
Sourdough Hot Cross Buns
makes 8–12 rolls depending on size; adapted from Maurizio Leo, The Perfect Loaf
Ingredients
Overnight Levain, yields 167 grams
- 64 grams white flour with protein content 12.5–14% Wheat Montana AP (blue bag) has 13% protein and is what I use
- 64 grams water
- 26 grams 100% hydration starter, ripe (e.g. last fed around 12 hours ago)
- 13 grams granulated sugar
Add-ins, any or all (keep total amount to ½–¾ cup)
- dried currants or raisins, soak in warm water while dough is fermenting
- candied citron, orange Agrimontana (I purchase from Market Hall Foods in Oakland CA)
Dough
- 51 grams unsalted butter, cut into pieces, room temperature about 4 tablespoons
- 450 grams white flour with protein content 12.5–14% Wheat Montana AP (blue bag)
- 167 grams levain (this should be weight of your levain after developing overnight, if not and it is close, use it all and proceed with recipe. If way off on the low end, add equal parts additional flour and water to build to 167 grams.)
- 154 grams whole milk warmed to 76°
- 105 grams water
- 42 grams granulated sugar, divided
- 1 egg 51 grams
- 10 grams Kosher salt 2½ teaspoons
- 1½ teaspoons ground cinnamon
- ½ teaspoon ground allspice or use pumpkin pie spice
- ½ teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg or use pumpkin pie spice
- 1 lemon, zested optional, especially if using candied fruit
- 1 orange, zested optional, especially if using candied fruit
Egg wash: 1 egg mixed with 1 tablespoon of cream or milk
Cross: ¼ cup white flour, pinch of salt, and about 3 tablespoons water to make a paste
Post-Bake Glaze: melted jam (currant, apricot, rose) or honey brushed on top of buns
Instructions
Overnight Levain
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Mix starter, flour, and water in a pint sized container. Cover loosely and let sit at room temperature overnight.
Dough
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Cut the butter into ½-inch pats and set on a plate to come to room temperature.
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Soak currants and/or raisins in a small bowl of warm water and set aside.
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Combine the flour, levain, milk, water, sugar, and egg in the bowl of a stand mixer with the dough hook attachment. Once combined, mix on medium speed with the dough hook for 5 minutes then let dough rest, covered, for 10 minutes.
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Add salt, spices, citrus zest (optional), and mix on low for 2 minutes. Turn the mixer up to medium speed and mix for 6 minutes to develop the dough—it should pass a "windowpane test" and if not, mix a couple minutes more.
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With mixer running on medium speed, add the butter, one pat at a time, mixing until incorporated before adding the next pat. Once all the butter has been added, mix on medium speed for 2 minutes and add the add-ins (well-drained currants/raisins, candied citron, candied orange). The dough should be smooth, elastic, and shiny.
Bulk Fermentation (3–4 hours at warm room temperature)
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Begin bulk fermentation with 3 sets of stretch-and-folds at 30-minute-intervals, either in the bowl or by removing the dough from the bowl and doing it on the counter.
How to do a set of stretch and folds in the bowl: Wet your hands and starting at the "noon" position of your bowl, scoop the dough from the bottom of the bowl up and fold it over towards the middle of the dough ball. Repeat this every quarter turn around the bowl—from "noon" to "3 o'clock" bottom stretch to middle, "6 o'clock", "9 o'clock"—one complete trip around the clock equals one set of stretch and folds.
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Let dough rest for the remainder of bulk fermentation; at the end the dough should be risen, jiggly, and "alive" feeling. If not, leave for 15 more minutes and check again. As Maurizio says, "The dough should be lofty at this point; don't rush it."
Shape and Proof (3–4 hours at warm room temperature or overnight in refrigerator)
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Butter baking pan—an 8-by-8-inch square for 9 buns or a larger rectangle for either 8 or 12
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Using a bench scraper, divide the dough into desired number of buns then round each into a taught ball, stretching the dough from the top, down the sides, and tucking it underneath. Transfer to buttered pan.
When all buns are in the pan, cover loosely with a piece of oiled-plastic wrap and set in a warm place to proof for 3–4 hours.
Alternatively, place covered dish in the refrigerator for a cold proof. In morning, remove dish from refrigerator and allow to proof until buns are puffy, 3–4 hours.
Baking
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Preheat oven to 400° F. Prepare egg wash and brush over the tops of the buns.
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Mix the cross paste with flour, water, and a pinch of salt in a small bowl until smooth—you want the paste thick enough to pipe and hold its shape.
Transfer the paste to a piping bag with a small tip or use a plastic sandwich bag with one corner nipped off. Pipe across the buns.
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Bake for 15 minutes at 400° then lower heat to 350°, rotate pan 180°, and continue to bake until finished, 10–15 more minutes until buns are golden brown with internal temperature at least 195°. Optionally brush tops of buns with melted jam or honey (see note.)
Recipe Notes / Tips
- If you don't have whole milk, use what you have—2% with some half-and-half or cream works great.
- Variation: These buns are fantastic made with chocolate chips—either all chocolate or mixed with dried cranberries.
- I prefer my hot cross buns unglazed because I like to split and toast them and a sticky top makes a mess.

