Classic Homemade Dinner Rolls Recipe | Sweet Pea's Kitchen (2024)

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Classic Homemade Dinner Rolls Recipe | Sweet Pea's Kitchen (1)

Nothing completes a meal more than these Homemade Dinner Rolls. There also isn’t any food that’s more comforting than these fluffy dinner rolls in my eyes. You may groan at the idea of making classic dinner rolls yourself instead of buying them pre-made.

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Classic Homemade Dinner Rolls Recipe

But, I’m telling you these are way better than the store-bought stuff! Trust me, I don’t want to spend hours and hours in the kitchen for one side item, either. Even if these soft dinner rolls did take hours and hours of hands-on work, I would still make them because they are seriously that good.

They will take a while, but most of the time is spent waiting on them to rise, not actual work time for you. Eat them with butter, use them to mop up gravy, or just have one plain, and you are going to be charmed by their yummy flavor.

Classic Homemade Dinner Rolls Recipe | Sweet Pea's Kitchen (2)

Homemade Dinner Rolls Ingredients

These fluffy dinner rolls are so yummy, and you only need 7 ingredients to whip up a batch. I love foods that don’t require tons of ingredients like these classic dinner rolls.

  • Whole milk – Using whole make helps these fluffy dinner rolls taste even more amazing.
  • Unsalted butter – It’s okay to use salted butter if you don’t add in the extra salt.
  • Sugar – These fluffy dinner rolls have a slight sweetness, but it’s not overbearing. It’s perfect!
  • Salt – A little bit of salt is just what you need to make the best dinner rolls ever.
  • Eggs – It’s vital to allow the eggs to be at room temperature before mixing the dough.
  • Rapid-rise yeast – If you don’t use rapid or quick rise yeast, the dinner rolls will take even longer to rise.
  • Unbleached all-purpose flour – Try to stick with all-purpose flour when making these classic dinner rolls, so they are the right texture.

How To Make Dinner Rolls

Preparing the dinner rolls does take some time, but you don’t have to do much. Mostly wait around and dream of biting into your soft dinner rolls! Take a look at these steps:

First Step: Begin preparing the dough bringing the milk to a boil in a small saucepan over medium heat. Remove the pan from the heat and let it stand until a skin forms along the surface, which takes around 3-5 minutes. Skim the skin off the surface with a soup spoon and throw it out. Pour the milk in the bowl of a stand mixer with the whisk attachment. Mix in 6 tablespoons of melted butter, salt, and sugar and combine. When the milk mixture is 90 – 100 degrees, whisk in the eggs and yeast until they are combined.

Second Step: Put the dough hook attachment on your mixer and slowly add flour to the bowl. Mix on low speed for 1-2 minutes until it’s combined. Speed up the mixer to medium-low and continue mixing for an additional 3 minutes. When you touch the dough, it should feel a little bit tacky and wet, but not stick to your finger. If you find that the dough does stick to your finger, add in 1-3 tablespoons of flour.

NOTE: The dough is supposed to be moist, so don’t worry about adding in extra flour unless it’s sticking to your fingers. Otherwise, they will end up dense and drier.

Third Step: Continue mixing the dough on medium-low until the dough becomes elastic and doesn’t stick to the sides or bottom of the bowl, which is about 4-5 more minutes.

Fourth Step: Put the dough on a lightly floured surface and begin kneading the dough by hand for 1-2 minutes. The dough should be very soft and moist but not too sticky. Dust your hands with flour if it does stick a little bit. Using cooking spray, lightly spray a medium-sized bowl. Place the dough in the bowl and lightly spray the surface of the dough with cooking spray. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and let it rise for 2-3 hours or until it’s doubled in size. It’s best to rise the dough in a warm location.

Fifth Step: Using two 9-inch round cake pans, coat them with cooking spray and set aside for later. Place the dough on a floured surface. Roll the dough into a 12 x 10-inch rectangle and gently press out any air. Start at the edge farthest away from you and roll the dough into an even cylinder stretching 18 inches in length. Cut the cylinder into 16 equally sized pieces using a bench scraper or a chef’s knife.

Sixth Step: Using one piece of dough at a time and leaving the rest of the dough pieces covered form them into smooth round balls. Place the dough on an unfloured workspace and loosely cup your hand around the dough without applying pressure move hand in circular motions. Put the dough ball in the cake pan, starting with the center and working your way out. Cover the pans with a lightly coated piece of plastic wrap and cover again with foil. Refrigerate the pans for 24 – 48 hours.

Seventh Step: To bake the rolls, you’ll need to remove the aluminum foil, but leave the plastic wrap on them. Let the dinner rolls rise in a cool room-temperature location until they have doubled in size, which usually takes 6-7 hours. When they have doubled in size, preheat the oven to 400 degrees F. and remove the plastic wrap. Use melted butter and brush each roll with it. Bake them for 14-18 minutes until they are a deep golden brown color. Cool the dinner rolls on a wire rack for 3 minutes, then break them apart and serve warm.

How Do You Make Homemade Dinner Rolls Rise Faster?

I know it sounds like forever to wait for the classic dinner rolls dough to rise, but there are some things you can do to make it go a little faster. First, warm your oven up to the lowest temperature it will go to. Every oven has different settings so that it will depend on yours specifically. Once it reaches that temperature, turn off the oven. Place a kitchen towel over the bowl or pan and place it over the dough. The heat will warm it up and allow it to rise without cooking it, as long as you don’t forget to turn the oven off.

Another option is to take a pan and put warm – hot water in it and set it on the bottom rack in your oven. Then place the bowl or pan on the rack above it and shut the door. The steam and warmth from the water will aid in raising the dough. Then you can follow the directions to bake the soft dinner rolls as directed.

How Long Do These Soft Dinner Rolls Last?

You can store these soft dinner rolls at room temperature in a sealed container for up to 5 days. If you want to reheat them, just toss the homemade dinner rolls in the microwave for about 15 seconds. Check them, and if they aren’t hot yet, you can warm them a little longer. You don’t want to go overboard because if you overheat the classic dinner rolls, they will get hard as they cool down.

Classic Homemade Dinner Rolls Recipe | Sweet Pea's Kitchen (3)

I love these fluffy dinner rolls because they go with so many meals I make. Take a look at a few main course recipes that will go perfectly with these classic dinner rolls:

  • Easy Baked Corned Beef And Cabbage – Your meal is complete once you serve some homemade rolls with it!
  • Guinness Shepherd’s Pie With Beef – Just thinking about this shepherd’s pie recipe makes my stomach growl because it’s so good.
  • Instant Pot Chicken And Rice – Dust off your pressure cooker and put it to some good use making this delectable chicken and rice.
  • Instant Pot Smothered Pork Chops – You will have a perfectly delicious comfort food meal when you make this, and the dinner rolls together.

Now, remember to save this recipe on Pinterest for later 🙂

Classic Homemade Dinner Rolls Recipe | Sweet Pea's Kitchen (4)

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Classic Homemade Dinner Rolls Recipe

Prep Time: 30 minutes minutes

Cook Time: 14 minutes minutes

Total Time: 44 minutes minutes

Servings: 16 rolls

Nothing completes a meal more than these Homemade Dinner Rolls. There also isn't any food that's more comforting than these fluffy dinner rolls in my eyes.

Classic Homemade Dinner Rolls Recipe | Sweet Pea's Kitchen (5)

4.25 from 4 votes

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Ingredients

  • 3/4 cup whole milk

  • 8 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted, (reserve 2 tablespoons for brushing on rolls before baking)

  • 6 tablespoons sugar

  • 1 1/2 teaspoons table salt

  • 2 large eggs, room temperature

  • 1 package rapid-rise yeast, 2 1/4 teaspoons, may also labeled "instant", "quick rise," or "perfect rise"

  • 3 cups unbleached all-purpose flour, 15 ounces, plus additional flour as needed (see note above).

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Instructions

  • To Make the Dough: In a small saucepan over medium heat, bring milk to boil. Remove from heat and let stand until skin forms on surface, about 3 to 5 minutes. Using soup spoon, skim the skin off the surface and discard. Transfer milk to bowl of stand mixer fitted with the whisk attachment. Add 6 tablespoons melted butter, sugar, and salt; whisk to combine and let cool. When mixture is warm to the touch (about 90 to 100 degrees), whisk in eggs and yeast until combined.

  • Add flour to the bowl; using the dough hook attachment, mix on low speed until combined, about 1 to 2 minutes. Increase speed to medium-low and mix about 3 minutes more; when pressed with finger, dough should feel tacky and moist but should not stick to finger. (If dough is sticky, add another 1 to 3 tablespoons flour.) (This dough should be moister than most. Resist the urge to add more flour than is needed to keep the dough from sticking to your hands. If they are made on a humid day, the dough may require more flour than if made on a dry day.) Continue to mix on medium-low until cohesive, elastic dough has formed and it clears the sides of bowl but stick to bottom, about 4 to 5 minutes longer.

  • Transfer to a lightly floured work surface. Knead dough by hand (1 to 2 minutes) to ensure that it is well kneaded. Dough will be very soft and moist but not overly sticky. (If dough sticks excessively to hands and work surface, dust only your hands with flour until dough is workable.) Lightly spray medium bowl with cooking spray. Transfer dough to bowl; lightly coat surface of dough with cooking spray and cover with plastic wrap. Let dough rise in warm location until doubled in volume, 2 to 3 hours.

  • To Shape the Rolls: Coat two 9-inch round cake pans with cooking spray; set aside. Turn dough out onto lightly floured work surface. Pat dough into rough 12 by 10-inch rectangle, gently pressing out air; starting from edge farthest from you, roll dough to form a even cylinder, stretching to 18-inch length. Using a bench scraper or chef's knife, cut cylinder into 16 equally sized pieces.

  • Working with one piece at a time (keeping remaining pieces covered with plastic wrap or kitchen towel) form into smooth rounds. Set piece of dough on unfloured area of work surface. Loosely cup hand around dough (not directly over it); without applying pressure to dough, move hand in small circular motions. (Tackiness of dough against work surface and circular motion should work dough into smooth, even ball.) Arrange shaped rolls in prepared cake pans (one in center and seven spaced evenly around edges) and cover cake pans with plastic wrap lightly coated with cooking spray, then cover pans securely with foil. Refrigerate at least 24 or up to 48 hours.

  • To Bake the Rolls: Remove foil (but not plastic wrap) from cake pans; let rolls rise in cool room-temperature location until doubled in volume (rolls should press against each other), 6 to 7 hours. When rolls are nearly doubled in volume, adjust oven rack to lower-middle position and heat oven to 400 degrees. (If your cake pans have a dark nonstick finish, bake the rolls in a 375-degree oven to moderate the browning.) Remove plastic wrap. Brush rolls with 2 tablespoons melted butter; bake until deep golden brown, 14 to 18 minutes. Cool rolls in pans on wire rack about 3 minutes, then invert onto rack. Break rolls apart and serve warm.

Nutrition

Serving: 1g | Calories: 200kcal | Carbohydrates: 29g | Protein: 5g | Fat: 7g | Saturated Fat: 4g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 3g | Cholesterol: 40mg | Sodium: 214mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 5g

Author: Laura

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March 7, 2020

  • American
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Classic Homemade Dinner Rolls Recipe | Sweet Pea's Kitchen (2024)

FAQs

Why are my homemade dinner rolls hard? ›

Too much flour, or not the right kind, could be to blame. Dough made only from flour with a high or even average amount of protein (like bread flour or all-purpose flour) can become tough from overmixing. Protein gives bread structure in the form of gluten—the more you mix and move the dough, the more gluten you get.

How big should a dinner roll dough be? ›

Your best bet for even-sized rolls is to grab a calculator and kitchen scale. While you could divide your dough by eye, it's faster, easier, and more accurate to use the weight measurements, if possible. For size reference, the pre-bake weight of dinner rolls typically falls between 60g to 80g each.

What is the secret to a soft and fluffy bread? ›

Add Milk

To make your bread soft and fluffy, another trick used by commercial bakers is replacing water with milk. Milk has fats which make bread softer.

How can I make my bread fluffier instead of dense? ›

Potato Flakes or Potato Water

Starch helps the dough by trapping the gas from the yeast in the dough and makes the bubbles stronger. This helps the bread to rise and be lighter and fluffier. If you are boiling potatoes, you can use the unsalted water in place of the water in your bread recipe to help out the yeast.

How do you make homemade rolls less dense? ›

Don't rush the rising time.

For flavor and texture, these fluffy dinner rolls need an initial rise and then a second proof after they're shaped. This ensures that your rolls are light and fluffy and not dense bricks.

Is bread flour or all-purpose flour better for rolls? ›

You can also use all-purpose in many bun or roll recipes, which tend to have lower hydration and rely less on strong gluten and more on butter and sugar for texture. (Though bread flour can still give you a fluffier, almost cotton-candy-like texture in most buns and rolls.)

What happens if you add too much flour to dinner rolls? ›

Avoid adding too much extra flour to the dough.

These ingredients slow down gluten development and can make the dough a little sticky. Your instinct might be to add extra flour; however, any extra flour will create a denser, tougher roll instead of the light, fluffy, soft dinner roll we want.

What type of pan is best for baking rolls? ›

Cast iron can be used on the stove top or directly in the oven. If you don't have a large 11 inch cast iron pan, you can use a glass baking dish sprayed with nonstick spray. A 9×13 size would work well. It's best to have the rolls all touching each other when you arrange them in the pan, and I'll tell you why…

Should you brush dinner rolls before baking? ›

Butter basting: Rolls can be brushed with butter before, during, or after baking. While it doesn't brown the surface as much as egg wash will, it does promote browning and adds a lot of flavor.

Should rolls touch when baking? ›

Arrange the Dough For Baking

Arrange the rolls closer to each other, with enough room for them to expand into each other as they rise and bake. More traditional dinner rolls might be arranged on a baking sheet with lots of space in between so you get little orbs of golden brown goodness that don't touch.

Can I use regular flour instead of bread flour? ›

You can always substitute all-purpose flour for bread flour one for one in any recipe that calls for it. Your bread might not raise quite as high or have quite as much chew, if you are using all-purpose flour, but it will still be delicious and homemade and all the good things.

Is active dry yeast the same as instant yeast? ›

Active dry yeast and instant yeast can generally be used interchangeably, one-for-one (although active dry yeast may be slower to rise). So if a recipe calls for instant yeast and you use active dry yeast instead, you may want to consider adding an extra 10 to 15 minutes for the rise time.

How long to let buns rise before baking? ›

The dough rises in about 1-2 hours in a relatively warm environment. Punch down the dough to release the air and shape into rolls. Let the rolls rise for about 1 hour. Bake for 20-25 minutes until golden brown.

Why is my bread not light and fluffy? ›

Different Flours

The main ingredient is flour in bread making and it's not a surprise to find that the incorrect kind can make your bread heavy and dense. For baking light and fluffy bread, it is necessary to choose flour that has high levels of protein.

Does letting bread rise longer make it fluffier? ›

Does Rising Bread Affect Its Texture? For a fluffy bread texture, the key is to let the bread rise long enough.

Why are my rolls not doubling in size? ›

“The first thing that springs to mind,” Bertinet says, “is that your dough is probably too cold.” Or, put another way, the water you're using isn't warm enough. “It's vital you give the yeast a helping hand, otherwise it'll just slumber lazily,” he says, adding that your water/ flour/salt/yeast ratio is also crucial.

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