National hot cross buns day
September 11th, 2012
09:00 AM ET
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While you're frying up some eggs and bacon, we're cooking up something else: a way to celebrate today's food holiday.

"Hot Cross Buns! Hot Cross Buns!
One a penny, two a penny, Hot Cross Buns!
If you have no daughters, give them to your sons.
One a penny, two a penny Hot Cross Buns."

This is the song most children of British and Commonwealth countries sing around Easter time. Legend has it, the song was sung by vendors to attract buyers. Beyond that, the meaning of the lyrics is unclear.

But, back to the buns: They’re small and toasted brown, typically with a white cross over them in icing or white dough. Hot cross buns are typically served on Good Friday, with the cross representing the crucifixion. They’re associated with the Church of England but both the Saxons and the Greeks have laid claim to them. The Saxons ate them to honor the god Eostre, which is probably where the word Easter is derived from.

The dough is made from yeast, flour, eggs and oil, and is spiced with cinnamon and nutmeg. Traditional recipes also call for currants. Most buns are served cut in half and toasted like a bagel, and smeared with butter or honey.

Another interesting tidbit about hot cross buns is that they’re mired in superstitions. Here are a few:

- If you share a hot cross bun with someone else, you’re supposedly going to be friends for the year, especially if you say "Half for you and half for me. Between us two shall goodwill be" at the time.
- Some people believe in kissing the bun before eating it because it’s got a cross on it.
- They apparently protect against shipwrecks while at sea.
- And, if you hang one in your kitchen, they’ll protect against fire and make all your breads rise perfectly - so long as each year your replace the bun.

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Filed under: Breakfast Buffet • Food Holidays • News


soundoff (3 Responses)
  1. Uh, why 9/11 for this?

    Shouldn't National Hot Cross Buns Day (or whatever it's called) be somewhere around/before Easter as mentioned in the article? (The origin story that I've heard is that they were baked and sold during the week or so before Ash Wednesday as a way for bakers to use up all their luxury items [sugar, butter/fat, and per some accounts yeast] before Lent.) The choice of 9/11 seems a bit arbitrary, and given "recent [sic] developments," the odds are nearly 100% that at least a few morons out there will make up something about people choosing this date in an attempt to associate Christianity with 9/11 victims and, implicitly, Islam and all Muslims with the 9/11 terrorists. (Anyone know how many Muslims were 9/11 victims, by the way? Almost definitely at least a few dozen, probably at least 100...)

    September 12, 2012 at 4:37 am | Reply
    • What are you talking about?

      re·cent   /ˈrisənt/ Show Spelled[ree-suhnt] Show IPA
      adjective
      1. of late occurrence, appearance, or origin; lately happening, done, made, etc.: recent events; a recent trip.
      2. not long past: in recent years.
      3. of or belonging to a time not long past.
      4. ( initial capital letter ) Geology . noting or pertaining to the present epoch, originating at the end of the glacial period, about 10,000 years ago, and forming the latter half of the Quaternary Period; Holocene.

      September 12, 2012 at 8:00 am | Reply
  2. Jerv

    Mmmm, I bet the ones with currants are really good.

    September 11, 2012 at 11:53 am | Reply

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