Question Author
Hi Jeanette, I found the recipe by putting the title in Google, it was an american recipe, but I then simply adapted it to an english recipe.
You first chop up 2 medium onions into small dice and fry with butter or oil on a medium heat until light brown, stirring to make sure it does not burn. Then you add 2 teaspoonfuls of brown sugar, I used dark brown soft sugar and fry this for another 5 to 10 minutes on a gentle heat. Then you are really supposed to let it go cold, but I had already made up my dough and added it warm. You add the onions to a standard dough mixture to make up a 2lb loaf size, the dough mixture I made advised adding a couple of teaspoonfuls of sugar to the flour mixture, making it a little sweeter than normal. I used the recipe that was on the back of the hovis dried yeast box, I can let you have that if you need it!
Oh yes, if your bread came out like a lump, it may be you are not kneading it for long enough. I think the idea of kneading is to release the gluten in the bread and it goes very elastic and smooth once this happens (after about 5 mins of kneading). If you don't get to this stage then the bread can be very heavy.
Once you have added the onions to the dough mix, you then struggle to mix it in! Which prompted my question to the answerbank! It tends to make the dough go a bit 'slimy' which makes it a bit difficult to work with, but eventually it does mix in somewhat. Then you shape it into rolls, somehow(!) as the mixture is still a bit difficult to work with or otherwise just chuck the lot into a loaf tin. If you go for rolls you need to bake them for about 10 to 15 mins on a 185 fan assisted oven or equivalent. Keep an eye on them as the onion mix makes them brown off very quickly.
Take them out the oven and try not too eat immediately!
They are nice with butter or just eaten on their own.