My Sunday school class is studying a series entitled "I Am." Each week we study a passage from John in which Jesus makes an "I am" statement.
I wanted to do something special each week to help the class remember the lesson. The first week, "I am the bread of life," I made homemade Avanti's bread rolls.
The second week, "I am the light of the world, " I emailed everyone a video of Nora singing "This Little Light of Mine."
The third week, "I am the gate," I put up a baby gate at the entrance to our classroom and made everyone step over it to enter class.
This week's lesson is "I am the good shepherd." I couldn't really find any shepherd recipes (besides Shepherd's Pie), but I found lots of cute sheep recipes. I finally decided to make a sheep out of cinnamon rolls.
This was my inspiration photo:
I can't tell you the name of the source because not a word of it is in English. You can visit the site
here.
From what I can tell, the inspiration photo is a bread recipe (not cinnamon rolls). The swirls reminded me of cinnamon rolls, and I thought they would be tasty for a Sunday morning.
I was worried about stacking my rolls and baking them in one big clump because the center might not get baked through. So I decided to bake individual cinnamon rolls and stack them after they're baked.
I started by making the dough. My go-to recipe for cinnamon rolls is
Everyday Cinnamon Rolls from Our Best Bites. I adjust the filling ingredients to be 3/4 cup packed brown sugar, 1 tablespoon cinnamon, and 3/4 butter (softened). The original recipe just made way too much filling and it oozed out and soaked the cinnamon rolls in a buttery bath. Also note that this recipe uses Rapid Rise yeast instead of the usual Active Dry yeast. I like it because it takes less time than a traditional recipe.
When the dough was ready to be shaped, I cut off a chunk of dough for the sheep's face and two little pieces for the ears (I divided that smaller piece of dough in two). I ultimately decided not to try to put cinnamon filling in the head.
To make the sheep's head, I first rolled the larger piece of dough into a ball. Then I divided the smaller piece in two and set the ears up against the head.
Then I shaped the face a bit.
Then I rolled out the dough for the cinnamon rolls. Normally, I roll it out about 12" x 14" to make normal size rolls. For this project, I wanted lots of mini rolls, so I rolled out my dough to be narrow and long.
I spread my filling over the dough.
Then I rolled it up.
I cut it into rolls about 3/4" thick.
Normally, I put the rolls in a 9x13 pan for rising and baking. However, when they touch as they rise and bake, they become more square in shape. I wanted nice round little swirls, so I put my rolls on cookie sheets, making sure they wouldn't touch.
I originally put the sheep head on one of the pans with rolls, but then I realized it would likely need to bake longer, so I moved it to its own pan. I only have two Silpat mats, so I just put parchment paper on the third pan. I should have wiped away those blobs of cinnamon filling after I moved the rolls off that pan. Oh well.
I let the rolls rise for 30 minutes and then baked at 350 for about 13 minutes. I checked after 10, moved the pans around, and just kept checking them.
Even though I had adjusted the filling like I usually do, it still oozed out of all the rolls. Since the filling oozed out, the rolls didn't stay tightly rolled. I adjusted them by hand as best as I could.
|
You see why I should have wiped that cinnamon filling off? It burned on the paper. |
At this point I thought, "What have I gotten myself into? Why do I always do this to myself?" I suddenly wished I had made cupcakes or something else. I was very frustrated that my work had not produced cute little swirled rolls.
{By the way, I promise these rolls have worked every time I've made them normal size and baked in a 9x13.}
I let everything cool.
I decided to lay out my sheep with the head off to one side and the body made of stacked cinnamon rolls. I used my cupcake carrier (without the cupcake trays) so I could put a lid on the cinnamon rolls overnight and easily transport them to church.
I looked at my inspiration photo as well as this picture to help me:
I started with the head and one layer of rolls.
Then I added two more layers of cinnamon rolls. This was my "dry fit" run.
I wasn't
thrilled with the overall layout/shape, but I had to make it fit on what I had (the bottom of the cupcake carrier). I had a mental hissy fit about the shape not being right. And then I got over it.
I mixed up a quick icing. I used powdered sugar, milk, and clear vanilla so the icing would remain white.
I repeated the roll layering process, this time icing the rolls in between.
I added more powdered sugar to the remaining icing until I had a very thick, crumbly mixture. I shaped it by hand to create two large discs for the eyes and two little dots for the nose.
I used two jumbo chocolate chips for the pupils of the eyes.
I looked at my little sheep. I looked at my pictures. I just couldn't figure out how to make it look better. I finally decided to add a little mouth.
It still didn't seem quite right. I felt my frustration rising. Then I realized I was being ridiculous over a treat for my Sunday school class. It's not perfect. But it's good enough.
So here is my cinnamon roll sheep:
"I am the good shepherd; I know my sheep and my sheep know me--just as the Father knows me and I know the Father--and I lay down my life for the sheep." John 10:14-15
Jessica