The Best Soft and Fluffy Honey Dinner Rolls

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Soft & Fluffy Sweet Dinner Rolls โ€” Lightly sweetened from the honey in the dough and brushed with honey-butter prior to baking!! These dinner rolls are made from scratch and are baked to golden brown perfection! 

Soft & Fluffy Sweet Dinner Rolls โ€” Lightly sweetened from the honey in the dough and brushed with honey-butter prior to baking!! These dinner rolls are made from scratch and are baked to golden brown perfection! 

Sweet Dinner Rolls … From Scratch! 

There’s something about soft, warm, fresh homemade dinner rolls that makes them nearly impossible to resist. They’re so irresistible that I could happily and easily make a dinner out of dinner rolls.

Until these sweet dinner rolls, I had never made dinner rolls, but they turned out to be the best dinner rolls I’ve ever had. They’re going to be a very tough act to beat and even though my search for the perfect end-all-be-all chocolate chip cookie recipe isn’t over, I think my dinner roll recipe search is.

Rarely does recipe karma strike so perfectly that the first attempt at a recipe is the one I want to live with forever, but in this case, I struck dinner roll gold.

Soft & Fluffy Sweet Dinner Rolls โ€” Lightly sweetened from the honey in the dough and brushed with honey-butter prior to baking!! These dinner rolls are made from scratch and are baked to golden brown perfection! 

Recipes for dinner rolls are like chocolate chip cookies. There are so many and they all promise to be the best. In chocolate chip cookies, among other variables, the ratios of brown and granulated sugars, butter, flour, baking soda or powder, dough chilling, baking times and temperatures all vary from recipe to recipe.

In dinner rolls, making the dough with water or milk, using butter or oil, including an egg or not, sweetening the dough and to what degree and with sugar or honey, kneading or no-knead recipes, are among the many wild cards.

Before making these, I read dinner roll, honey dinner roll, honey wheat dinner roll, and Parkerhouse dinner roll recipes like it was my job. Having a slightly sweet dinner roll was a priority, and one sweetened with honey was even better.

Honey is used twice in these golden puffballs, both in the dough and it’s brushed on top of the rolls just before baking them using a honey and melted butter mixture.

The resulting rolls are slightly sweet and the flavor of the honey is present and discernible. Sometimes when I bake with honey it gets lost, but not in these. The final sweeps of honey-butter brushed on the rolls before their stint in the oven goes a long way to enhance the overall honey-butter punch.

Soft & Fluffy Sweet Dinner Rolls โ€” Lightly sweetened from the honey in the dough and brushed with honey-butter prior to baking!! These dinner rolls are made from scratch and are baked to golden brown perfection! 

As a bonus, whatever mixture pools in the bottom of the pan creates a slightly caramelized and chewy honey-butter crust on the base of the rolls. If could pick off just those golden sticky bases from all the rolls in the pan, I would, just like I pick off muffin tops.

I used oil in the dough rather than butter. In my mind, butter-based doughs are reserved for pie crust, brioche, or decadent cinnamon rolls. Even though I wanted a buttery, soft, tender roll, butter wasn’t the way to that goal; oil was.

In doing research about bread-making, I’ve learned that oil keeps bread dough softer and more pliable than butter, much like using oil instead of butter in cakes keeps them moister and more tender, too.

The from scratch dinner rolls are soft, tender, supple, moist and the glorious honey-butter mixture brushed on the rolls before baking provides plenty of buttery flavor. The rolls are light, but not feather-light, and retain enough density for some hearty chewing.

Soft & Fluffy Sweet Dinner Rolls โ€” Lightly sweetened from the honey in the dough and brushed with honey-butter prior to baking!! These dinner rolls are made from scratch and are baked to golden brown perfection! 

Bread flour, rather than all-purpose flour, is used exclusively, and because of it’s higher gluten and protein content, it creates marvelous chewy texture. It’s always better to chew your food rather than just inhaling it, and these have just the right amount chew-factor; enough so that you don’t mindlessly inhale three in three minutes as is the case with feather light, flaky croissants.

It’s rare for me to say, but the rolls are fabulous plain and don’t actually need butter. But twist my arm, cinnamon sugar-butter or honey butter won’t hurt. 

These dinner rolls are every single thing I could ever want in a white dinner roll recipe. Light and fluffy balanced with chewy and hearty. Moist, soft, and tender and the slightly caramelized crust that forms on the base from the honey-butter is dreamy.

They’re generously sized, too. One is probably all you need, but needs and wants can vary when the sweet smell of bread baking has been tantalizing you.

Soft & Fluffy Sweet Dinner Rolls โ€” Lightly sweetened from the honey in the dough and brushed with honey-butter prior to baking!! These dinner rolls are made from scratch and are baked to golden brown perfection! 

What’s in Sweet Dinner Rolls?

To make this sweet dinner rolls recipe, you’ll need:

  • Water
  • Instant dry yeast
  • Honey
  • Egg
  • Canola oil
  • Salt
  • Bread flour
  • Unsalted butter

Soft & Fluffy Sweet Dinner Rolls โ€” Lightly sweetened from the honey in the dough and brushed with honey-butter prior to baking!! These dinner rolls are made from scratch and are baked to golden brown perfection! 

How to Make Sweet Dinner Rolls From Scratch

If you’ve never made bread using yeast before, these are not hard at all. The rolls can be made, from start to finish, in about three hours. Making the dough is a snap and it comes together in just minutes, about the same time as it takes to make cookie dough. Using a stand mixer is easier, but making without is completely viable.

After making and kneading the dough, it’s placed in a bowl and allowed to rise for about 90 minutes. Because the dough is made exclusively with white bread flour, and because I used Red Star Platinum yeast, there is almost no way to screw up the rising with this recipe.

In fact, my dough rose so well it almost blew the plastic wrap off the top of my bowl. When canning, the sound of a sealing jar is music to my ears and in bread-making, a big bowl of high rising dough is one of the most beautiful sights ever. Not worrying that the dough didn’t want to rise is a moot point with this recipe.

Soft & Fluffy Sweet Dinner Rolls โ€” Lightly sweetened from the honey in the dough and brushed with honey-butter prior to baking!! These dinner rolls are made from scratch and are baked to golden brown perfection! 

After the first rise and the dough has doubled in size, punch it down and knead it gently for a minute or two. Then, allow it to rest for 10 minutes, which makes shaping the dough into rolls easier because it gives the gluten a chance to relax a bit.

Then, from the big wad of pillowy dough, form one dozen rolls and place them in a pan and allow them to rise for about 30 minutes. Immediately before baking, brush the rolls with honey-butter and bake for 15 minutes.

They bake up very fast and are baked in a very hot oven because that blast of really hot oven air helps contribute to them rising well, known as oven spring. 

Soft & Fluffy Sweet Dinner Rolls โ€” Lightly sweetened from the honey in the dough and brushed with honey-butter prior to baking!! These dinner rolls are made from scratch and are baked to golden brown perfection! 

Can I Prepare the Rolls in Advance? 

Yes, these soft and fluffy dinner rolls can be made in advance! As is the case with most any bread, you can make a batch of the rolls from start to finish, freeze them, and then on the big day or on any day for breakfast, a snack, or to eat with dinner, just pull out one or four or two dozen, and allow them to thaw.

Warming them gently in a low oven immediately prior to serving them gives them that just-baked quality, with zero work on the day-of, which is my kind of recipe for Thanksgiving or on a busy Monday night for dinner. Effortless and stress-free at crunch time keeps the cook, and everyone around her, much happier.

Although I haven’t tried it, I would also venture to guess that after the first rise of 90 minutes, and after the dough has been shaped into rolls and placed in the pan, you could cover the pan and refrigerate it overnight, and bake the rolls off the next morning; a loose interpretation of the Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day principles. 

Soft & Fluffy Sweet Dinner Rolls โ€” Lightly sweetened from the honey in the dough and brushed with honey-butter prior to baking!! These dinner rolls are made from scratch and are baked to golden brown perfection! 

Tips for Making the Best Dinner Rolls 

For the dough to rise properly, it needs to be in a warm, draft-free environment. Preheating your oven for 1 minute to 400F, then shutting it off (make sure you shut it off!), and quickly sliding the bowl of dough in so the hot air doesn’t escape is one way to create a warm environment. 

Because of the high oven temperature in conjunction with the honey and the butter brushed on top of the rolls, they can burn as the baking time draws to a close. I recommend hanging out in the kitchen while these bake because things can change quickly and you don’t want burnt buns.

I am unsure if this recipe can be made in a bread machine as I don’t have one. I suspect the dough could also be baked in loaf pans; I’d use two 9-by-5 inch loaf pans, but I have not tried it.

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5 from 6 votes

The Best Soft and Fluffy Honey Dinner Rolls

By Averie Sunshine
Lightly sweetened from the honey in the dough and brushed with honey-butter prior to baking!! These dinner rolls are made from scratch and are baked to golden brown perfection!
Prep Time: 30 minutes
Cook Time: 15 minutes
Rise Time: 2 hours 30 minutes
Total Time: 3 hours 15 minutes
Servings: 12
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Ingredients 

  • 1 cup water, warmed to 120 to 130F for Red Star Platinum yeast (or 105 to 115F for most other yeast, or according to package directions)
  • 2 ยผ teaspoons instant dry yeast (one 1/4-ounce packet, I use Red Star Platinum
  • 1 large egg
  • ยผ cup honey
  • 3 tablespoons canola oil
  • ยฝ teaspoon salt, or to taste
  • 3 ยพ cups bread flour King Arthur Unbleached Bread Flour
  • 2 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted
  • 2 tablespoons honey

Instructions 

Make the dough:

  • Add water to a glass measuring cup or microwave-safe bowl and heat on high power to warm it, about 30 seconds. Testing with a thermometer is highly recommended, but if testing with your finger, water should feel warm but not hot.
  • To the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, add the water and sprinkle the yeast on top of it. Beat on low speed for about 10 seconds, just to combine; let mixture stand for 10 minutes.
  • Add the egg, 1/4 cup honey, oil, salt, and mix until well-combined, about 2 minutes on low to medium-low speed.
  • Add 3 cups flour and beat until a sloppy, wet, loose dough forms. Scrape off any dough bits stuck to the paddle, remove the paddle attachment, and put on the dough hook.
  • With the dough hook attached, turn mixer on low speed, and slowly sprinkle in remaining 3/4 cup flour. If necessary to obtain soft, smooth, non-sticky dough, sprinkle in the full 1 cup flour that remains (for a total of 4 cups flour, rather than 3 3/4 cups, noting that the more flour used, the denser the finished rolls will be). Knead dough for about 8 minutes. It will be firm, smooth, not sticky, and elastic.
  • Turn dough out onto a Silpat Non-Stick Baking Mat or floured work surface and knead dough by hand for 1 to 2 minutes, just to get into the nooks and crannies with your fingers the dough hook may have missed and make sure dough is very smooth and uniform in texture.

First Rise:

  • Place mounded ball of dough in a cooking sprayed or lightly greased large bowl and cover with plastic wrap. Place bowl in a warm place until it has doubled in size, about 2 hours. Tip - Preheating your oven for 1 minute to 400F, then shutting it off (make sure you shut it off), and quickly sliding the bowl in so the hot air doesn't escape is one way to create a warm environment; think 85 or 90F summer day warm environment. A cooler environment simply means dough will take longer to rise.

Shape Into Rolls:

  • After dough has risen and doubled, punch it down to release the air bubbles, and turn it out onto a Silpat or floured work surface. Knead for about 1 minute.
  • Mound dough into a ball, place it back into the bowl, cover it, and allow it to rest and relax for about 10 minutes, making it easier to shape into rolls.
  • Prepare a 9-by-13-inch baking pan by lining it with aluminum foil, spray with cooking spray; set aside.
  • Place dough on Silpat or floured work surface, and using your hands, roll it into a long cylinder shape, about 12 to 15 inches in length, and it will about 3 to 4 inches in girth.
  • Divide the log into 12 uniformly-sized pieces with a dough cutter or sharp knife.
  • Roll each piece into a ball, creating surface tension on the top of the ball by stretching the dough over itself a bit and pinch off the bottom, tucking the dough into itself. Place each piece into the prepared pan, seam side down, uniformly spaced, four rows by three. (Dough may also be rolled into just a simple 'plain ball', without pulling on the top surface of dough to create tension and not bothering to pinch off the bottom a bit, but I find they rise better and are fluffier if they're pinched off rather than just round dough globes)

Second Rise:

  • After all pieces are in the pan, cover it with plastic wrap and allow to dough to rise for about 30 minutes. While dough rises, preheat oven to 400F. A good place for this rise is placing baking pan on the stovetop while oven is preheating for the carryover warmth.

Bake the rolls:

  • Prepare honey-butter mixture by melting butter in a microwave-safe bowl on high power, about 1 minute. To the melted butter, add 2 tablespoons honey and stir to combine; set aside.
  • After the rolls have risen and before baking, brush tops and sides of dough with the honey-butter mixture, getting into the sides and crevices and with a pastry brush.
  • Bake rolls for about 15 minutes or until golden; they bake up very fast and watch them closely so the honey-butter mixture doesn't burn in this very hot oven.
  • Allow rolls to cool before serving. Serve with Honey Butter or Cinnamon-Sugar Butter

Notes

Yeast: I highly recommend Red Star Platinum Yeast and King Arthur Bread Flour because they gave great results.
Equipment note: The recipe can be made by hand and kneaded by hand, it will just take you a bit longer. I am unsure if this recipe can be made in a bread machine as I don't have one. I suspect the dough could also be baked in loaf pans; I'd use two 9-by-5 inch loaf pans, but I have not tried it.
Make ahead option: The rolls can be made ahead of time, making them from start to finish, freezing the finished rolls, and can be unthawed prior to needing them, and if preferred warming them gently and briefly in a low oven for that just-baked taste is nice. Although I haven't tried it, I would guess that after the first rise of ninety minutes, and after the dough has been shaped into rolls and placed in the pan, you could cover the pan and refrigerate it overnight, and bake the rolls off the next morning.
Storage: Rolls may be stored at room temperature in an airtight container or ziplock bag for up to 4 days. Rolls also freeze very well and can be made from start to finish, cooled, and placed in a freezer-safe airtight container or a ziplock for up to 3 months. When ready to serve, unthaw them and if desired, immediately prior to serving warm them in a low oven (~175 to 200F) for a few minutes and just until warmed.
Recipe adapted from here.

Nutrition

Serving: 1, Calories: 243kcal, Carbohydrates: 40g, Protein: 6g, Fat: 7g, Saturated Fat: 2g, Polyunsaturated Fat: 4g, Cholesterol: 21mg, Sodium: 97mg, Fiber: 1g, Sugar: 9g

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

More Easy Yeast Bread Recipes:

ALL OF MY YEAST BREAD RECIPES! 

No-Knead Rolls with Honey Butter โ€” These soft, light, fluffy yeast dinner rolls are so easy to make! Theyโ€™re practically work-free because thereโ€™s no-kneading involved. 

Pumpkin Dinner Rolls โ€” These rolls are soft, slightly chewy, and the pumpkin puree keeps them moist and adds just enough tooth-sinking density.

No-Knead Whole Wheat Dinner Rolls โ€” These 100% whole wheat dinner rolls are soft, light, fluffy, and so easy. Theyโ€™re practically work-free because thereโ€™s no kneading. 

Copycat Outback Steakhouse Wheat Bread โ€” If you’ve never made yeast-based bread, this is an easy one to tackle. A very short ingredient list, no mixer, and nothing fancy is required.

How to Make Sourdough Breadโ€” This easy sourdough bread recipe uses yogurt and sour cream in place of a traditional sourdough starter, which makes it possible to prep a loaf in less than a day!

1 Hour Breadsticks โ€” Warm and fresh from the oven, these vegan buttery breadsticks are ridiculously good. Theyโ€™re soft, fluffy, tender, and make your house smell amazing while baking.

5 from 6 votes (2 ratings without comment)

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Comments

  1. My question is in the ( )

    “After the first rise and the dough has doubled in size, punch it down and knead it gently for a minute or two. Then, allow it to rest for ten minutes, which makes shaping the dough into rolls easier because it gives the gluten a chance to relax a bit. Then, from the big wad of pillowy dough, form one dozen rolls and place them in a pan … (at this point can I freeze them like they have frozen rolls in the grocery store?)

    and allow them to rise for about thirty minutes. Immediately before baking, brush the rolls with honey-butter and bake for fifteen minutes.”

    1. I don’t know about freezing them at that point because I never have. I do know that you can make the rolls from start to finish, freeze extra, and they thaw beautifully. Put them in a low oven for a couple minutes immediately prior to serving and you’re all set.

      I have never done what you’re suggesting; and I worry about killing the yeast by freezing it, and you still need some rising to happen during baking. The premade dough at the store is no doubt doctored up with so many chemicals to enable this; not sure about homemade and how it will work. If you try it, please LMK!

  2. Just discovered your web site..LOVE the details you provide to help ensure success as I’ve always steered away from anything with yeast. Going to give my new stand mixer a workout today! Thanks so much.

    1. Enjoy the rolls, Connie. Glad my thorough details help (I try!) and please report back and LMK how it goes!

  3. Hey Averie!
    Thought you’d like to know I made the dough in my breadmaker and then baked them in the oven! They turned out beautifully! I make country white rolls the same way and those rolls are very good as well…. I think if you added a bit of sugar to the dough they’d make the rolls incredible!!!! The best of both worlds with the two recipes

    1. Good to know the breadmaker worked for these and then oven-baked. I have actually thought of adding some sugar to this dough and keeping it just slightly more tacky/less flour (and maybe using just AP & no bread flour) and turning them into a cinnamon roll base. Or as you said, just add some sugar for the country white rolls idea!

      1. I think they’re lovely and the way they are now is great for dinner rolls…. I just like mine a little sweeter after tasting the ones I told you about
        The honey addition is beautiful and the rolls from your recipe looked fantastic… Thanks for the shaping tip … Never knew that!
        I love your blog… I admit I miss your raw/vegan abundance of posts but you are so inspiring with food either way :)
        Some of my favorites: your acv,sugar,veganaise dressing…. Wow!
        And your raw desserts… Yum!!!

      2. Thanks for being such a longtime reader! I wish I could post more raw/vegan recipes but the public votes with their clicks and people want the more traditional (fatty, sugary) desserts :)

        Here’s a recent raw/vegan-ish one you may like if you missed it
        https://www.loveveggiesandyoga.com/2013/02/peanut-butter-and-jelly-coconut-cashew-sandwich-cookies.html

        Your rolls sounds so good and glad my shaping tip & recipe worked out for you!

        And oh, I could live off that Veganaise/ACV dressing…lol Or at the very least, never need another salad dressing as long as I live!

  4. I made these today for a family dinner. I made a trip to the store to buy bread flour, then completely forgot to use it and used AP flour instead. They were still delicious! Very light and airy, and slightly sweet. This will be my go-to yeast roll recipe.

    1. Thanks for trying them, Marissa, and glad they’ll be come your go-to yeast roll recipe! Going to the store for a special ingredient, then forgetting to actually use it…oh boy, that’s something I do, like…all the time :)

  5. Can’t wait to make this so yummy looking rolls! Thanks so much for the post!! I’m positive that I’ll love them! Thanks again!

  6. Love these rolls! Thanks for the detailed instructions!! Glad to know the “refridgerator overnight” tip…I’m ‘carb cycle-ing” & wonder if you have a nutrition analysis on this recipe? Tomorrow’s my “free” day & I’m going to bake these rolls!! Thanks for the info!

    1. There are online calculators you can plug data into and it does that for you. Enjoy the rolls! I would just enjoy them and not worry about it :)

  7. Hi Averie!
    I’m debating between buying bread flour just to try this recipe, or using AP flour with a different recipe that promises soft rolls too. Obviously it’d be much simpler for me to use the other recipe, but I am so seduced by that plush texture that your rolls seem to have. Would you attribute that to the bread flour?

    1. “but I am so seduced by that plush texture that your rolls seem to have. Would you attribute that to the bread flour?” — yes. That’s what bread flour does for things. It’s 4.99 for a bag. Same price as other king arthur flour. I highly recommend it. The recipe will still ‘work’ without it, but that reallllllly plushness, that’s bread flour. And this is my fave dinner roll recipe of all time and next week I have another killer recipe coming that you can use bread flour with.

      Or in these cookies
      https://www.loveveggiesandyoga.com/2012/11/chocolate-chip-and-chunk-cookies.html
      https://www.loveveggiesandyoga.com/2013/01/brown-sugar-maple-cookies.html

      1. Thanks! I think I will invest in bread flour after all. I had those brown sugar maple cookies bookmarked on foodgawker so I guess there’s no harm in buying a bag; it can serve as an excuse to bake more (:

    1. I am so glad you made them and are loving them – they’re my favorite go-to dinner roll of all time!

  8. Great recipe!! Made these for trial run for my Sunday School Christmas party! They are so yummy….I do believe the best rolls I’ve made yet!!! Thank you for sharing your recipe!! May God Bless you today and always!!!!

    1. Nikki – what a sweet comment, thank you! Thanks for making the rolls and you are so smart to trial run things – wish more people did that! :) But this is a recipe that I know *works* and it’s my fave dinner roll recipe, too! Have an amazing holiday season!