Monkey bread

This article is about the breakfast pastry. For the fruit, see Adansonia.
Monkey bread
Alternative names Monkey puzzle bread, sticky bread, African coffee cake, golden crown, pinch-me cake, rip-a-chunk, bubbleloaf, Legal Brioche, monkey brains
Type Bread or pastry
Course Breakfast
Place of origin United States
Cookbook: Monkey bread  Media: Monkey bread
Another image of monkey bread

Monkey bread, also called monkey puzzle bread, sticky bread, African coffee cake, golden crown, pinch-me cake, and pluck-it cake is a soft, sweet, sticky pastry served in the United States for breakfast or as a treat. It consists of pieces of soft baked dough sprinkled with cinnamon. It is often served at fairs and festivals.[1]

Name

The origin of the term "monkey bread" comes from the pastry being a finger food, the consumer would pick apart the bread as a monkey would. .[2]

Origins

Recipes for the bread first appeared in American women's magazines and community cookbooks in the 1950s, but the dish is still virtually unknown outside the United States. The bread is made with pieces of sweet yeast dough (often frozen), which are baked in a cake pan at high heat after first being individually covered in melted butter, cinnamon, sugar, and chopped pecans.[3] It is traditionally served hot so that the baked segments can be easily torn away with the fingers and eaten by hand.[4]

See also

References

  1. "House of the Rising Bun". Good Eats. Season 10. Episode EA1003. 2006-04-07. Food Network.
  2. "The Food Timeline: history notes". Retrieved 2008-10-04.
  3. Brown, Alton (2006). "Overnight Monkey Bread". "Good Eats" Recipes. Food Network. Retrieved 2007-09-10.
  4. Boodro, Michael (2003). "Just Say Dough". "FOOD" Magazine. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 2016-09-11.
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