Recipe: Holiday Breakfast Wreath (2024)

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Sara Kate Gillingham

Sara Kate Gillingham

Sara Kate is the founding editor of The Kitchn. She co-founded the site in 2005 and has since written three cookbooks. She is most recently the co-author of The Kitchn Cookbook, published in October 2014 by Clarkson Potter.

updated May 3, 2019

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Recipe: Holiday Breakfast Wreath (1)

Serves12

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Recipe: Holiday Breakfast Wreath (2)

I’ve been writing about this wreath on the site since 2008, each year updating the story, because I think it’s worth reminding you how perfect this bread is to start a holiday morning. When I say I make it every year, I’m not kidding. It weaves its way deeper and deeper into our family’s memory each holiday.

Of all the Christmas gifts my mom has given me, the one I remember most and the one that is still with me is the tradition of cooking and eating on Christmas, and it is one that I’m now passing down to my daughter.

I’m sure there were toys and books, and I vaguely remember something in the early eighties about a sought-after Esprit outfit, but the holiday memories that stick out most in my mind are the meals. On Christmas Eve, we threw a tamale party, and the Christmas morning tradition was always a big spread of scrambled eggs, bratwurst, Mexican hot chocolate, and a braided Christmas bread from the tattered pages of a 1978 Sunset Magazine. Those breakfasts were gifts enough.

The original bread recipe included a filling that called for teeth-shattering candied red and green cherries. The past few years I’ve skipped those in favor of dried cranberries plumped up with brandy. Of course you can use other dried fruits, but avoid the kind that are preserved with sulphur dioxide and sweetened with high fructose corn syrup if you can. In my recipe redux here, I also upped the amounts of filling and glaze — the “saucing” as my daughter says.

This is our gift to each other this year. My daughter, now eight, will add her hands to the braiding effort and continue this cycle of absorbing holiday food traditions from the generations of cooks before her.

When you bake this Holiday Breakfast Wreath, present it to someone you love, still warm, with two hands. It is more than enough.

Comments

Holiday Breakfast Wreath with Cranberry-Almond Filling

Serves 12

Nutritional Info

Ingredients

For the dough:

  • 1 (1/4-ounce) packet

    active dry yeast

  • 1/4 cup

    warm water

  • 1/2 cup

    warm milk

  • 1/4 cup

    butter, softened to room temperature

  • 3 tablespoons

    sugar

  • 1 1/2 teaspoons

    salt

  • 1 teaspoon

    ground cardamom

  • 2

    large eggs

  • 2 teaspoons

    grated lemon peel

  • 3 1/2 cups

    unbleached all-purpose flour

For the cranberry-almond filling:

  • 3/4 cup

    dried cranberries or cherries, soaked in 1/2 cup brandy or other liqueur

  • 6 tablespoons

    butter, softened to room temperature

  • 1/3 cup

    unbleached all-purpose flour

  • 3/4 cup

    finely chopped blanched almonds

  • 3 tablespoons

    sugar

  • 1 teaspoon

    freshly grated lemon peel

  • 1 tablespoon

    almond extract

For the sugar glaze:

  • 1 cup

    powdered sugar

  • 2 tablespoons

    water

  • 1 tablespoon

    lemon juice

  • 1/4 tablespoon

    ground cardamom

Instructions

Prepare the dough:

  1. In a large mixing bowl, dissolve the yeast in the water and let it foam up for a minute or two. Blend in the milk, sugar, butter, salt, cardamom, eggs and lemon peel. Stir in two cups of the flour, one cup at a time. Beat for 2 minutes. Add remaining flour 1/2 cup at a time until you have a soft, workable dough — you might not need to use all the flour.

  2. Dump the dough out onto a lightly floured work surface and knead until smooth, 5 to 10 minutes. Add more flour if needed to prevent sticking. Place in a lightly oiled mixing bowl large enough to accommodate dough when doubled in size. Cover with plastic wrap and let it rise in a warm place until doubled in bulk, about 1 1/2 hours.

Prepare the cranberry-almond filling:

  1. Drain the dried fruit from the liqueur and reserve the liqueur for another use. In a small bowl, combine the drained fruit with remaining filling ingredients. Cover and refrigerate.

Shape the dough:

  1. When dough has doubled in size, punch it down and turn it out onto a lightly floured board, kneading just enough to release any air bubbles. Roll the dough into a 9x30-inch rectangle. Crumble the filling over the dough to within 1 inch of the edges. Starting along a long side, tightly roll up the dough, pinching edge against loaf to seal. With a sharp knife, cut roll in half lengthwise. Carefully turn the halves so the cut sides are facing up, and then loosely twist the halves around each other, keeping cut sides up. (See photos above for step-by-step instructions.)

  2. Line a baking sheet with parchment or non-stick baking mat. Carefully transfer the rope to the baking sheet and shape into a wreath, pinching the ends together to seal. Let it rise, uncovered, in a warm place until puffy, about 45 minutes.

  3. Preheat the oven to 350°F. Bake the wreath until lightly browned, about 25 minutes. While the wreath is baking, stir together the ingredients for the glaze and set aside.

  4. When wreath is done, transfer to a cooling rack by picking up the sides of the parchment and then sliding the parchment out from underneath. Cool for a few minutes then drizzle the glaze over the warm wreath. Serve with extra butter if you're feeling decadent.

Recipe Notes

  • Make Ahead Wreath: The wreath can be baked up to 2 days ahead of time. Do not glaze the loaf — let the wreath cool completely, then wrap tightly in foil and store at room temperature. Re-heat the bread at 350°F for 10 to 15 minutes, and drizzle with the glaze just before serving.

Adapted from Sunset Magazine, December 1978 - This recipe has been updated. Originally published December 2008.

Filed in:

baked goods

Baking

Bread

Breakfast

Make Ahead

Side Dish

Recipe: Holiday Breakfast Wreath (2024)

FAQs

What are the steps of making a Christmas wreath? ›

How to make a Christmas wreath
  1. Create the base. First, you need a wreath base - choose from a wire ring or a fresh spruce wreath. ...
  2. Pick the theme. Decide how you will decorate your wreath. ...
  3. Attach the stems. ...
  4. Wrap the twine. ...
  5. Add the Christmas decorations. ...
  6. Wrap up the wreath.
Sep 1, 2016

What are Christmas wreaths made of? ›

Festive Christmas wreath

We've used more traditional plants like fir, holly and crab apples, but more unusual materials like echinops seedheads, sunflower seedheads and hydrangea bracts look great, too.

How to make a wreath from pine branches? ›

Place a single pine bough at an angle on your wreath form. Twist some floral wire around the bough and part of the form to secure it tightly. Place another pine bough at an angle, overlapping the bottom part of the first bough. Secure it tightly to the form with the wire.

What is the meaning of the Christmas wreath? ›

The wreath and candles are full of symbolism tied to the Christmas season. The wreath itself, which is made of various evergreens, signifies continuous life. The circle of the wreath, which has no beginning or end, symbolizes the eternity of God, the immortality of the soul, and the everlasting life we find in Christ.

How to make a homemade wreath step by step? ›

How to Make a Wreath
  1. Build a Bouquet or Bundle. To begin making a wreath, you first begin by making a small bouquet or a bundle of greenery and decorative items that look good in a small bunch. ...
  2. Add Bouquet to Wreath Form. ...
  3. Repeat Until the Wreath is Full. ...
  4. Add Final Bundle & Fill In the Gaps. ...
  5. Cut & Secure Wire. ...
  6. Add Decorations.
Nov 26, 2022

How to make a food wreath? ›

Edible Glue-Based Wreath
  1. Materials needed: • 1 package unflavored gelatin. ...
  2. Step 1: Mix Up Edible Glue. Stir the gelatin into the warm water until dissolved. ...
  3. Step 2: Stir in Birdseed. ...
  4. Step 3: Mold Wreath. ...
  5. Materials needed: ...
  6. Step 1: Melt Lard or Suet. ...
  7. Step 2: Stir in Birdseed. ...
  8. Step 3: Mold Wreath.
Nov 27, 2019

How to make a Christmas wreath on a budget? ›

Forage for your greenery in your garden or on common land, or ask your local tree supplier if they will give you some offcuts for free to keep costs down. Instead of a shop-bought wreath base, you could make your own from sturdy wire (or repurpose an old wire clothes hanger).

How to make a Christmas wreath without a frame? ›

2. All you need is florist wire to secure branches together, pruners and wire snips. If the plant material is very bendy, such as weeping blue atlas cedar, just wire overlapping branches together in one long, 6-to-8-foot strand and then coil it into a circle and wire the layers to hold its wreath shape.

What is the biblical meaning of the Christmas wreath? ›

For Christians, the Christmas wreath is more than a decoration; it's a symbol of eternal life through Christ our Savior. There is no beginning and no end. The long-lasting evergreen wreaths connect us to the pagan holiday of Yule, marking the winter solstice.

What is a traditional Christmas wreath? ›

While they can be made of almost anything, Christmas wreaths are most often made of fresh greenery and seasonal flowers. During this season, they are generally either placed flat on a surface for use as an Advent wreath or hung on one's wall or front door.

What does it say in the Bible about Christmas trees? ›

But did you know that there is no mention of Christmas trees—or even the date of Jesus's birth—in the New Testament?

How were wreaths made? ›

They were made of a variety of materials including flowers, olive leaves, laurel, even fabric and jewels. In ancient pagan, german and scandanavian cultures, wreaths have also symbolized nature and have been used to honour the return of the sun and the promise of spring.

How to make a willow wreath step by step? ›

Step 1: Take your willow piece and bend it round into a rough circle, tucking each end under so it stays in place. Step 2: Take a second piece of willow and bend it around the first one, tucking away the ends as before. Step 3: Keep adding more pieces and testing the strength of the wreath.

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