Monkey bread explained

Monkey bread
Alternate Name:Pull-apart bread, bubble bread, Christmas morning delights
Place Of Origin:Hungary
Course:Breakfast
Type:Bread or pastry
Main Ingredient:bread flour[1]
Calories:352
Fat:15
Protein:4
Carbohydrate:51

Monkey bread (also known by other names including plucking cake, pull-apart bread, and bubble bread) 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 a midmorning/breakfast food and usually served at fairs and festivals.[2]

Name

The origin of the term "monkey bread" is unknown. Some food historians suggest that it comes from the pastry being a finger food, and that those eating it pick apart the bread with their hands as a monkey might. Others suggest that it comes from the pastry's resemblance to the monkey puzzle tree Araucaria araucana.[3]

Origins

What most people know as monkey bread today in the United States is actually the Hungarian dessert arany galuska ("golden dumpling"). Dating back to the 1880s in Hungarian literature, Hungarian immigrants brought this dish with them when they immigrated to America and began introducing it into the country's food landscape when Hungarian and Hungarian Jewish bakeries began selling it in the mid-twentieth century.[4]

In 1972, a cookbook published by Betty Crocker included a recipe for arany galuska, which they referred to as "Hungarian Coffee Cake". As it became more popular in America, arany galuska came to be confused with monkey bread in which the balls of dough are not dipped in cinnamon and sugar but only in butter. "Monkey bread" soon became the more common name for this Hungarian Jewish dessert.[5]

Recipes for the bread first appeared in American women's magazines and community cookbooks in the 1950s. During the 1980s, Nancy Reagan popularized serving monkey bread during Christmas by making it a staple of the Reagan White House Christmas.[6] Mrs. Reagan acquired the recipe from her fellow actress Zasu Pitts. According to food historian Gil Marks, she arranged for monkey bread to be served to President Reagan on the night before his testimony before Congress for the Iran-contra hearings. As legend goes, Ronald Reagan said, “Mommy, I may go to prison, but I’ll always remember this monkey bread.”

Preparation

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, and sugar. Chopped pecans are also commonly added.[7] It is traditionally served hot so that the baked segments can be easily torn away with the fingers and eaten by hand.[8]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Monkey bread recipe. taste.com.au. 7 July 2015.
  2. House of the Rising Bun . List of Good Eats episodes . Good Eats . . Good Eats . April 7, 2006 . 10 . EA1003 .
  3. Web site: The Food Timeline: history notes . . Lynne . Olver . Lynne Olver . October 4, 2008.
  4. Web site: Romanow. Katherine. 2011-03-30. Eating Jewish: Aranygaluska, or "Hungarian monkey bread". 2020-12-24. Jewish Women's Archive. en.
  5. Book: Gil Marks. Encyclopedia of Jewish Food. 17 November 2010. HMH. 978-0-544-18631-6.
  6. Web site: Atwood. Food for Thought Heather. 2016-03-08. Remembering Nancy Reagan and her monkey bread. 2020-12-24. Salem News. en.
  7. Web site: Brown . Alton . Alton Brown . Overnight Monkey Bread . "Good Eats" Recipes . Food Network . 2006 . September 10, 2007 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070920190024/http://www.foodnetwork.com/food/recipes/recipe/0,1977,FOOD_9936_33874,00.html . September 20, 2007 . dead .
  8. Web site: Boodro . Michael . Michael Boodro . Just Say Dough . "FOOD" Magazine . The New York Times Company . 2003 . 2016-09-11 .