Bubble Loaf
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This breakfast recipe is gooey but tasty and can be a lot
of fun to make. It was always a challenge for mom to keep us from picking,
prodding, and poking at this fun breakfast treat while the bread dough was
rising. And even more of a challenge to keep us from burning our hands and
mouths on it after this sticky, gooey treat came out of the oven. It gets its
name from the fact that the pieces you put into it look like bubbles. It is a
good recipe to make for brunch since the dough takes some time to rise.
2 loaves partially frozen bread dough
1/2 cup sugar
2 teaspoons cinnamon
1 package butterscotch pudding
1/2 cup brown sugar
1/2 cup butter
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Mix together the sugar and cinnamon in a small bowl and set
aside. Mix together the butterscotch pudding and brown sugar and set aside. Cut
each loaf into 2 pieces. Cut 2 pieces lengthwise again. Cut each strip into
small pieces. Roll each piece into the sugar and cinnamon mixture. Pile (toss,
throw – this is where it can get fun) all of these pieces into a well-greased
bundt or solid tube pan. After all pieces are in the pan, take the butterscotch
pudding and brown sugar mixture and sprinkle it over the bread dough pieces.
Melt the butter and drizzle over the bread dough, pudding, and sugar mixture.
Cover the pan with wax paper and a towel and let rise for 1 1/2 hours. Bake at
350 degrees for 25 to 30 minutes. Allow to cool for a while, turn over pan, and
shake the bread out.
For making this into a quicker recipe: If you don’t want
to have to wait for it to rise, substitute 3 cans of buttermilk biscuits (10 to
a can) for the bread dough. You’ll also need to increase the cooking time to
30 to 35 minutes.
Kids can have fun helping with this one. Even really little
ones can have fun rolling the pieces in the cinnamon and sugar and tossing them
into the pan. Hopefully most of them will hit the pan! You can also make it into
a race; who can roll the most pieces. And for little ones learning to count, you
can make it a learning experience by counting the number of pieces you put into
the pan.