Uncle Rocco’s Brioche Pandoro

Uncle Rocco’s brioche pandoro were all the rage last year: it was impossible not to come across these soft little clouds while browsing the web… and they won me over too 😊
I followed the recipe from Una famiglia in cucina, but made a few small tweaks. The first time I made them as in the original version, but they turned out huge! So I decided to make them again, reducing the portions and adjusting them a bit to our habits… and it was the right choice: now they’re perfect to enjoy without overdoing it.
The citrus aroma, the soft dough, and the eggless milk cream filling, made even fluffier with whipped cream… make these brioche truly irresistible. Just dust with powdered sugar and they’re ready to enjoy.
Plus, they freeze really well: just thaw and warm them up slightly to bring back all their softness, just like fresh out of the oven 😉
If you try them, I hope you like them as much as we do… let me know 💕
Uncle Rocco’s Brioche Pandoro
Uncle Rocco’s brioche pandoro were all the rage last year: it was impossible not to come across these soft little clouds while browsing the web… and they won me over too 😊
I followed the recipe from Una famiglia in cucina, but made a few small tweaks. The first time I made them as in the original version, but they turned out huge! So I decided to make them again, reducing the portions and adjusting them a bit to our habits… and it was the right choice: now they’re perfect to enjoy without overdoing it.
The citrus aroma, the soft dough, and the eggless milk cream filling, made even fluffier with whipped cream… make these brioche truly irresistible. Just dust with powdered sugar and they’re ready to enjoy.
Plus, they freeze really well: just thaw and warm them up slightly to bring back all their softness, just like fresh out of the oven 😉
If you try them, I hope you like them as much as we do… let me know 💕
Steps
- 1
A few hours ahead, take 1 tablespoon butter (about 15 grams) from the total amount for the dough, place it in a small cup, grate in the orange zest, and melt the butter in the microwave. Let cool to room temperature.
- 2
In the bowl of a stand mixer, add the flour, crumbled yeast, and sugar.
- 3
In a separate bowl, whisk together the milk and eggs with a fork. Pour half of this mixture into the flour and start kneading with the dough hook on medium speed.
- 4
Once the liquid is absorbed, gradually add the rest. Knead for about 15 minutes, until the dough is smooth and elastic.
- 5
Add the salt and let it absorb, then add the softened butter a little at a time, waiting for each addition to be absorbed before adding more. Add the orange-infused butter and finally the vanilla.
- 6
Turn the dough out with a dough scraper, restart the mixer, and repeat this process 3–4 times, continuing to knead until the dough is smooth and stretchy.
- 7
When the dough is smooth and uniform, turn it out onto a work surface, fold it a couple of times, then shape it into a ball.
- 8
Place the dough in a bowl, cover with plastic wrap, and let rise in a warm place (like an oven with the light on) for 2–2.5 hours, until doubled in size.
- 9
For the milk cream: While the dough is rising, prepare the milk cream so it has time to cool.
- 10
In a small bowl, dissolve the cornstarch in 3 tablespoons cold milk (about 50 ml, taken from the total 1 1/4 cups/300 ml). Mix well until smooth and lump-free. In a saucepan, add the remaining milk, sugar, vanilla, and the dissolved cornstarch.
- 11
Heat over medium, stirring constantly with a spoon until the cream thickens, about 2–3 minutes. It should be smooth and creamy.
- 12
Pour the cream into a bowl, cover with plastic wrap pressed directly onto the surface, and let cool completely.
- 13
Once cooled, beat the cream briefly to make it smooth and velvety again, with no lumps.
- 14
Whip the cold heavy cream and gently fold it into the milk cream using a spatula or spoon, mixing from bottom to top.
- 15
Once the dough has risen, the original recipe says to divide it into 6 pieces of about 5.8–6 ounces (165–170 grams) each and place them in individual aluminum molds (about 5x4x1.5 inches/13x10x4 cm). I did this, but they were really huge, so the next time I weighed the dough and divided it into 10 pieces. The smaller portions worked much better for us 😊.
- 16
I ran out of single-portion molds, so I used the next size up—long rectangular aluminum pans—cutting them down by about two-thirds, stacking the pieces, and folding the excess to close them. It’s easier than it sounds—photos would help!
- 17
I folded the edges inward to secure everything. This made them a bit smaller than the single-portion molds, perfect for the portion size I made. Then I lined them with parchment paper cut to fit.
- 18
Once you’ve divided the dough into 10 pieces, shape each into a ball. When all are shaped, take the first one, flatten it with your hands, and stretch it into a small rectangle.
- 19
Fold the short sides toward the center, then fold again the other way (hopefully the photos make this clearer 😅).
- 20
You’ll end up with ovals. Place them seam-side down in the parchment-lined aluminum molds.
- 21
Once all the brioche are shaped, cover with plastic wrap.
- 22
Let rise in the turned-off oven with the light on and a bowl of hot water on the bottom. Let rise again until very puffy, about 1 hour and 40 minutes.
- 23
Bake in a conventional oven at 340°F (170°C) for 15 minutes. If the edges are still too pale, cover with foil and bake for another 10 minutes with heat only from below.
- 24
As soon as they come out of the oven, brush them three times with milk (letting it absorb between each brushing) while still hot: this will give you a soft, shiny crust that’s irresistible!
- 25
Once cooled, remove from the molds and, using a piping bag, fill generously with the milk cream. The original recipe fills them from the top, but I prefer to fill them from the bottom. Finally, dust with powdered sugar and enjoy.
- 26
Similar Recipes
More Recipes
-

Rekha Bapodra
-

Mocha’r Chop / Banana blossom fritters
Madhumita Bishnu
-

Dangerously Delicious Grilled Sandwiches 🔥
OnlyProven Recipes
-

Prachi Phadke Puranik
-

Mango Fruity (Homemade Mango Drink)
Swati Ganguly Chatterjee
-

nunzdy
-

LT Cook
-

Suchitra S(Radhika S)
-

Mukti Sahay
-

Mridula Srivastava
-

Amazing Foodies
-

Becky
-

Lakshmi Sridharan Ph D
-

Vindhya Chawla
-

Josephine
-

Mukti Sahay
-

Hema Wane
-

Mallika Ramshatriya
-

Deepa Rupani
-

Shital Jataniya
-

Uzma Syed



















































