Overnight Buttermilk Soft and Fluffy Cinnamon Rolls

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Overnight Cinnamon Rolls — These overnight cinnamon rolls are ultra soft and fluffy thanks to the buttermilk in the dough. Top them with homemade cream cheese frosting and enjoy!

Overnight Cinnamon Rolls with cream cheese frosting

The Best Overnight Cinnamon Rolls

Homemade cinnamon rolls sound great in theory until you do the math and realize in order to have a warm cinnamon roll with your 10am coffee, you need to wake up about 5am. No thanks!  

I solved that problem and made the fluffiest, softest, and best cinnamon rolls I’ve ever had.

Every recipe out there promises the best cinnamon rolls, and I have more recipes to try. Consider this the first installment in my Cinnamon Roll Recipe Showdown. But to date these are the best cinnamon rolls I have ever had, and I’m super picky. The next recipe will happen when I have time to work in an extra cardio session to make up for all the fluffiness I consumed.

Even if you’ve never worked with yeast or made cinnamon rolls, this overnight cinnamon roll recipe is do-able, but it’s not for everyone. There are no shortcuts, this is not bread-in-a-hurry, which is why I made the recipe work as overnight rolls.

At 5am, the last thing I am is wide awake and wanting to dive right into a yeast bread recipe. However, you can make it straight through if preferred, and start to finish you’re looking at about 5 hours of work. You’re either getting up at the wee hours, or you’re having afternoon cinnamon rolls.

These overnight cinnamon rolls have soft, fluffy, tender dough that’s buttery and scrumptious. They’re as light and feathery as cinnamon rolls can get. They’re lighter and not as dense, heavy, and ‘bready’ as Cinnabon’s. They still are heavy and filling, but less like a ton of bricks in your stomach. Maybe just a half ton.

While baking, the filling mixture of brown sugar and butter melts and caramelizes, producing a thick, sweet, caramely sauce, pleasantly spiced with cinnamon. That saucy filling, along with melted frosting, is what a cinnamon roll is all about.

Just like carrot cake needs cream cheese frosting, so do cinnamon rolls. The frosting is tangy from the cream cheese, rich from the butter, and densely satisfying. There is nothing like homemade cream cheese frosting. So smooth, creamy, indulgent, and blissful.

They were every bit as wonderful as I had hoped. Future recipes have their work cutout for them. To date, the best cinnamon roll I’ve ever had, and the family concurs.

homemade Cinnamon Rolls on two white plates

Overnight Cinnamon Rolls Ingredients 

To make the best cinnamon roll recipe ever, you’ll need: 

  • All-purpose flour
  • Granulated sugar
  • Instant dry yeast
  • Salt
  • Unsalted butter
  • Eggs
  • Buttermilk
  • Light brown sugar
  • Cinnamon
  • Cream cheese
  • Vanilla extract
  • Confectioners’ sugar
Overnight Cinnamon Roll cut in half on white plate

How to Make Homemade Cinnamon Rolls 

To the bowl of your stand mixer, add the all-purpose flour, instant dry yeast, sugar, optional salt. Let the dry ingredients hang out in the mixing bowl while you melt some butter, lightly beat the eggs, and warm the buttermilk.

I warm it in the microwave for about 45 seconds in a glass measuring cup. If after warming the buttermilk, it’s separated or gotten a little foamy, whisk it and it will smooth out.

The type of yeast you use and the manufacturer’s directions will dictate the necessary buttermilk temperature. For Platinum yeast, the water should be warmed to about 120ºF to 130ºF, which is notably warmer than most other instant dry yeast, which typically call for temps in the 100ºF range. Follow the manufacturer’s recommendations for whatever yeast you use.

Overnight Cinnamon Roll topped with frosting

Beat the dry and wet ingredients together with the paddle, and after a minute switch to the dough hook. Moist, wet batter will be stuck to your paddle, so just pick it off as best you can. Allow the dough hook to knead for 10 to 12 minutes.

If after 5 minutes the dough is still extremely wet and sloppy and not coming together, add one-quarter cup more flour, one tablespoon at a time, until it firms up.

The most important thing you can do in this entire recipe is trust that the high moisture level of the dough is high and not over-flour it. The more flour you add, the denser the dough becomes, and the heavier the rolls will be. It’s nice in theory to have a smooth, round, mound of satiny, non-sticky dough, but that’s not this cinnamon roll dough.

The cinnamon roll dough in this recipe is wet, gloppy, moist, messy, sticky, and of all the bread I’ve ever made, this dough gets the award as the sloppiest. I was cursing it. When kneading in a mixer, the rule of thumb for this type of dough is that it clears the sides of the bowl, but sticking the bottom of the bowl is fine.

the best cinnamon roll recipe

Transfer the sloppy mess to a cooking-sprayed large mixing bowl, cover it with plastic wrap, and let it rise for 2 to 2 1/2 hours, or until doubled in size. The sloppiness factor will diminish as the dough rises and all the moisture helps create light and fluffy rolls.

forkful of homemade cinnamon roll

Just look at the blubbery, wobbly, jiggly puffiness after 2 1/2 hours.

how to make cinnamon rolls

It was literally pillowy soft. It felt like I was punching a pillow.

how to make homemade cinnamon rolls

Pssssssss. Deflation. Trapped gases released. Talk about a limp, deflated state of affairs after the punchdown.

how to make cinnamon rolls

On a floured Silpat or counter, roll the dough out to a large rectangle, about 16×10 inches. I didn’t measure with a ruler because I know that’s just slightly larger than my Silpat, so I rolled it about that size.

Spread a stick of very soft butter over the dough and sprinkle with brown sugar and shake on the cinnamon. I used almost 5 teaspoons of cinnamon, but wrote to use 3 teaspoons in the recipe, or to taste.

I love cinnamon, especially in cinnamon rolls, hence their name. In no way was 5 teaspoons overpowering. That’s a lot of dough and it needs to be properly flavored, but season to taste.

making overnight cinnamon rolls

Starting on a long edge (I started where you can see some letters on the Silpat peeking out), roll up the dough into as tightly coiled log as possible. It’s messy and if your log isn’t perfect, that’s okay. Slice it into 12 pieces and put them onto the baking sheet.

For slicing, use a serrated knife or unwaxed and unflavored dental floss works great. You can pinch off the slices without compressing and squishing down the log. I used my trusty bench scraper.

I used a large jellyroll or sheetcake-style baking sheet with a raised edge, 11-by-16-inches. You could use a 9×13-inch pan, but I prefer the jellyroll pan because the rolls are less squished, have more room to spread out and rise, and baking is more uniform.

Some people complain their cinnamon rolls get too browned on the top before the center cooks through, which can happen if they’re too cramped in a pan. The jellyroll pan was $5.99 in my grocery store baking aisle and did the trick. I imagine that you could also make two eight-inch round pans.

slicing uncooked overnight cinnamon rolls

Cover with plastic wrap and now it’s decision time.

If you’re doing the overnight make-ahead option, slide the pan into the fridge and keep it there for up to 16 hours before baking the rolls. When it’s time to bake the next day, allow the rolls to come up to room temperature and rise for 1 hour on the counter, or until almost doubled in size. And then bake.

If you’re making them straight through, allow the rolls to rise in a warm, draft-free place for 60 to 90 minutes, or until almost doubled in size. And then bake.

Bake them at 350ºF for 22 to 25 minutes, or until lightly golden on top and cooked through, but not overly browned. I prefer these on the paler side. Nothing says dealbreaker like a hard or crusty cinnamon roll.

After 12 hours in the fridge, this is what my rolls looked like. They sat on the counter for 1 hour before I baked them.

making homemade cinnamon rolls

I baked for 23 minutes, and rotated the pan once. It’s amazing how much they puffed during the 1 hour rise and in the oven. The term for it is called oven spring. Yes, they sprung, which is why I can’t imagine a 9×13 pan.

While they bake, make the cream cheese frosting. However, if you’re doing the overnight option, I highly suggest making it the night before so it’s one less thing to think about the next day before you’ve had your coffee.

Put the frosting into an airtight container and slide it into the fridge along with rolls. The next morning, take them both out at the same time. You want the cream cheese frosting to be very soft so that it spreads smoothly over the rolls.

Immediately after taking the rolls out of the oven, generously frost them so it drips into all the cracks and crevices. And dig into a little piece of heaven.

overnight cinnamon rolls topped with cream cheese frosting

How to Tell If the Buttermilk Mixture is Warm Enough to Activate the Yeast

Some people just dip their finger into the liquid and if that’s the method you’re using, err on the side of warm bath water rather than hot because you don’t want to risk killing the yeast. In bread-making, I don’t like to guess and always use a candy thermometer. I just never use it for candy.

I urge you to buy a (cheapie) thermometer. They’re about $5.99 at the grocery store, Bed Bath & Beyond, or Target. It could save you from a bread fail and if you’re going to go to the work of making cinnamon rolls, having one is a no-brainer.

How to Encourage Your Dough to Rise

A trick for creating a warm environment for the dough to rise in is to turn on the oven for one minute to 400ºF, then shut the oven off. Repeat: don’t leave the oven on, you are just blasting in hot air for one minute only.

Quickly slide your bowl into the oven and let it stay there to rise. It will be about 85ºF inside the oven after the brief one-minute blast. This tricks the yeast into thinking it’s a nice, warm summer day in your kitchen, which is how do their best work.

For the 2 1/2 hours the dough bowl was parked inside my powered-off oven, I powered it on 3 times, every 45 minutes or so, for 1 minute each time. This kept the oven toasty because it was a cold night I made the dough and the oven and my warm environment was cooling off.

overnight cinnamon rolls

How to Store Cinnamon Rolls

The rolls are best eaten fresh, but will keep in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 5 days. Reheat leftover rolls for a few seconds in the microwave before serving. If you have issues with cream cheese frosting at room temperature, then refrigerate the leftover rolls; I don’t.

Can I Freeze Cinnamon Rolls?

Yes, these overnight cinnamon rolls freeze well. You’ll want to prep and bake the cinnamon rolls all the way through and then freeze them without the icing. When you’re ready to eat the frozen cinnamon rolls, set them on your counter to thaw and make a fresh batch of icing.  

piece of homemade cinnamon roll

What Type of Yeast Should I Use? 

I used Red Star Platinum yeast, which is my gold standard. It’s an instant dry yeast, so you don’t have to proof it first with water and wait for it to get bubbly and foamy. Just sprinkle it right into the bowl with the other ingredients and then pour the liquids over the top of everything. When I deviate from Platinum and use other yeast, my dough doesn’t rise as well and doesn’t bake up as puffy and fluffy.

Can I Make Overnight Cinnamon Rolls with Bread Flour? 

I love bread flour for producing extra chewy bread, rolls, and cookies, but for these homemade cinnamon rolls I didn’t want any chewiness. I wanted softness and fluffiness, and all-purpose flour is the way to go. It has a lower protein and thus lower gluten content, meaning the finished rolls will be more tender and soft with less chew-factor.

homemade cinnamon roll on white plate

Tips for Making Overnight Cinnamon Rolls

A stand mixer will make your life immensely easier because the dough needs to be kneaded for a minimum of 10 minutes. However, you can also do it by hand — and in the process, you’ll burn off enough calories that you easily deserve a couple rolls. 

Also, the recipe for cream cheese frosting — like all frosting — is dictated by personal preference. I simply used butter, cream cheese, vanilla, and confectioners’ sugar in it. Adding milk, cream, buttermilk, orange zest, almond extract, or whatever you like in your frosting is all up to you.

The amount of cream cheese frosting for cinnamon rolls I made is in excess of what you may need for your rolls if you don’t like a lot of frosting, but I do. Plus, frosting keeps for a couple weeks in the refrigerator and I have also frozen it for months. When I am dirtying the mixer to make it, I may as well make a decent amount.

Halve the recipe if preferred, but you’d be surprised that if you make it, people will want it and eat it. It’s not like making extra lima beans where requests for extra are nonexistent. A smear of extra frosting before nuking leftover cinnamon rolls is extra wonderful.

And finally, please note that I wrote the recipe below as clearly and descriptively as possible. Before making these homemade cinnamon rolls, read it over at least three times so you know where you’re going, what’s next, and more importantly, how much butter you need to set aside.

Overnight Buttermilk Soft and Fluffy Cinnamon Rolls - Move over Cinnabon, this recipe is my favorite! Easy recipe at averiecooks.com

Overnight Cinnamon Rolls — These overnight cinnamon rolls are ultra soft and fluffy thanks to the buttermilk in the dough. Top them with homemade cream cheese frosting and enjoy!

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4.64 from 103 votes

Overnight Soft and Fluffy Cinnamon Rolls

By Averie Sunshine
These overnight cinnamon rolls are ultra soft and fluffy thanks to the buttermilk in the dough. Top them with homemade cream cheese frosting and enjoy!
Prep Time: 30 minutes
Cook Time: 22 minutes
Rise Time: 4 hours
Total Time: 4 hours 52 minutes
Servings: 12
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Ingredients 

Dough

  • up to 4 1/4 cups all-purpose flour, divided
  • cup granulated sugar
  • 2 ¼ teaspoons instant dry yeast, one 1/4-ounce packet, I use Red Star Platinum
  • pinch salt, optional and to taste
  • 6 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted (3/4 of one stick)
  • 3 large eggs, lightly whisked
  • ¾ cup buttermilk*, See Notes

Filling

  • ½ cup unsalted butter, 1 stick, very soft – let it sit out while dough rises
  • 1 to 1 ¼ cups light brown sugar, packed (granulated sugar or a half-and-half combo of white and brown sugars may be substituted)
  • 3 to 4 teaspoons cinnamon, or to taste (I use 5 teaspoons)

Cream Cheese Frosting

  • ½ cup unsalted butter, softened
  • 6 ounces cream cheese, softened
  • 1 tablespoon vanilla extract
  • 1 pound confectioners’ sugar, 4 cups
  • ½ teaspoon salt, optional and to taste

Instructions 

  • Make the Dough
  • To the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, combine 4 cups flour, 1/3 cup sugar, yeast, salt to taste; set aside.
  • Place 6 tablespoons butter in a small microwave-safe bowl, and heat to melt, about 45 seconds; set aside.
  • Crack eggs in another bowl and whisk; set aside.
  • Add buttermilk to a glass measuring cup and warm to temperature, about 45 seconds on high power in the microwave. Tips – Based on the type of yeast used, milk temperatures will vary. Red Star Platinum yeast calls for warmer temperatures than most, 120 to 130F; other brands and yeast call for much lower temperatures, about 95 to 105F. Warm milk according to manufacturer’s recommendations on the packaging. Taking the temperature with a digital thermometer is highly recommended, but if you’re not, make sure the milk is warm, not hot. Err on the cooler rather than hotter side so you don’t kill the yeast. If the milk separates or gets a little funny looking after being warmed, whisk it to smooth it out.
  • To the dry ingredients in the stand mixer, add the melted butter, eggs, buttermilk, and beat on medium-low speed for about 1 minute, or until combined.
  • Switch to the dough hook (the dough will have stuck to the paddle and just pick off what you can and put it into the bowl) and knead for 10 to 12 minutes (15 to 18 minutes by hand).
  • If after 5 minutes more flour is needed, add the remaining 1/4 cup flour, 1 tablespoon at a time, until the dough clears the side of the bowl but sticks to the bottom. Tips – This is a very sticky, tacky, moist, and borderline sloppy dough; don’t be tempted to over-flour it. It’s supposed to be that way. The more flour you add now, the less fluffy and more dense the rolls will be. Dough should clear the sides of the mixer while kneading but sticking to the bottom is fine. However, if the dough is simply too sloppy to work with, you can't move it from mixing bowl to rising bowl, it does need more flour so add some, as little as you can get away with, until you can work with the dough more easily.
  • Remove the dough from the mixing bowl, spray a large mixing bowl with cooking spray, and place the dough in the bowl. Cover with plastic wrap and place it in a warm, draft-free place to rise for about 2 to 2 1/2 hours, or doubled in size. I keep my bowl inside a powered-off oven. Every 45 minutes or so, I power on the oven for 1 minute to 400F, as if I am preheating it, then I power it off. Do not, repeat not, keep the oven on. These short bursts of 1 minute of heat create a stable 85F-ish warm environment, ideal for the yeast. If your rising spot is cold, it will take longer than 2 1/2 hours.
  • Prepare a 11-by-17-inch or similar sized jellyroll pan or sheetcake pan with a raised edge, or use a 9-by-13-inch pan. I prefer a jellyroll pan because it’s slightly larger so the rolls are less squished, have more room to rise, and bake more evenly. Line pan with aluminum foil, spray with cooking spray; set aside.
  • Shape the Cinnamon Rolls
  • After dough has doubled in size, punch it down. Turn dough out onto a floured Silpat or floured countertop. Knead it lightly for about 2 minutes.
  • With a rolling pin, roll it out to a 16-by-12-inch rectangle; just slightly larger than a standard Silpat.
  • With a knife, butter the dough with 1/2 cup soft butter, leaving a 3/4-inch border around the edges.
  • Sprinkle the brown sugar over it. Sprinkle the cinnamon over the brown sugar; I was very generous with the cinnamon and used almost 5 teaspoons and recommend at least 3; just eyeball it and shake it on.
  • Loosen the dough from the counter using a bench scraper (or metal spatula), and starting with a long edge, roll the dough into a tight log. Pinch the seam closed and turn log so seam side is down.
  • Gently stretch the log to be 18 inches in length with an even diameter all the way around and pat the ends to even them up. Don’t fret if your log isn’t perfect; it’s okay.
  • Slice the cylinder into 12 evenly sized rolls (about 1 1/2 inches wide) using a bench scraper, serrated knife, or plain unwaxed dental floss (works great to not squish and compact the log).
  • Arrange the rolls cut side down in the prepared baking pan. Cover with plastic wrap.
  • If making the rolls straight through: Let rise in a warm, draft-free place until the rolls have nearly doubled in size, 1 to 1 1/2 hours.
  • If making the rolls overnight: Don’t let rolls rise after they’ve been sliced and placed in covered pan. Place pan in refrigerator for up to 16 hours. Before baking, let the rolls sit at room temperature until they have nearly doubled in size, about 1 hour.
  • Bake the Rolls
  • For either version, bake at 350ºF for 22 to 25 minutes, or until lightly golden on top and cooked through but not overly browned.
  • While the rolls cool, make the frosting.
  • Make the Cream Cheese Frosting
  • To the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, combine 1/2 cup butter, cream cheese, and beat on medium speed to combine, about 1 minute.
  • Add the vanilla, 3 cups confectioners’ sugar (I don’t bother sifting), and beat until smooth and fluffy, about 3 minutes, stopping to scrape down the sides of the bowl as necessary.
  • Add remaining 1 cup of sugar (or more, or none) as necessary, to taste, based on desired frosting consistency and flavor.
  • Spread the frosting over the tops of the semi-cooled rolls and serve. Tips – Make sure they're not too warm or the frosting will melt. You may not use all the frosting if you don't like a lot of frosting on your rolls. That's fine, you don't need to use it all. Extra frosting will keep airtight in the fridge for many weeks or you can freeze it.

Notes

Buttermilk: You need to use buttermilk and I use fresh buttermilk (Trader Joe's brand). However, if you don't have fresh buttermilk on hand I recommend the following because you cannot just use regular milk or water.
  • Make your own buttermilk with whole milk and vinegar. Add 3/4 cup of 2% or whole milk to a large measuring cup. Stir in 1 tablespoon of white vinegar. Let that mixture sit for 2 minutes before using in the recipe.
  • You can use powdered buttermilk. You’ll mix how many ever tablespoons the package calls for, with 3/4 cup of water, to yield 3/4 cup of buttermilk. For those who bake with or use buttermilk semi-frequently, but not so frequently to keep in in your fridge, keeping a tub of powdered buttermilk in your pantry is very handy. 
Storing these rolls: Rolls are best eaten fresh, but will keep in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 5 days. Reheat leftover rolls for a few seconds in the microwave before serving. If you have issues with cream cheese frosting at room temperature, then refrigerate the leftover rolls; I don’t.
For longterm storage, I recommend making the rolls as directed and then freezing unfrosted rolls; allow to thaw at room temp prior to serving and frost as directed. I prefer freezing finished rolls rather than freezing uncooked dough.
For the cream cheese frosting: I recommend making this at night if you’re doing the overnight version, refrigerating it, and taking out along with the rolls as they rise so when you need it, it’s well softened.
Frosting may be halved (makes about 3 cups as written), but unused frosting can be stored in the refrigerator for up to 2 weeks and I have frozen frosting for up to 3 months; I’d rather have too much than not enough.
All measurements and ingredients are to taste; consider adding buttermilk, almond extract, orange zest, heavy cream, or your other favorite specialty tweaks as desired. I keep it very simple.

Nutrition

Serving: 1, Calories: 754kcal, Carbohydrates: 108g, Protein: 9g, Fat: 33g, Saturated Fat: 18g, Polyunsaturated Fat: 12g, Cholesterol: 117mg, Sodium: 279mg, Fiber: 2g, Sugar: 63g

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

More Cinnamon Roll Recipes: 

Nutella Cinnamon Rolls with Vanilla Glaze — A can of crescent rolls never tasted so good as when they’re stuffed with Nutella and rolled up. Ready from start to finish in 15 minutes, no joke

Nutella Cinnamon Rolls with Vanilla Glaze

The Best Glazed Orange Sweet Rolls — These homemade orange rolls are filled with a buttery orange filling and are topped with a simple orange glaze. They can be prepped the night before, if needed. 

The Best Glazed Orange Sweet Rolls 

Pumpkin Cinnamon Roll Bake — The recipe is easy, ready in 40 minutes, and you don’t even have to make scratch cinnamon roll dough.

Slice of Pumpkin Cinnamon Roll Bake on white bake

The BEST Pumpkin Cinnamon Rolls — The glaze soaks into the nooks and crannies and adds even more moisture and softness. Total gooey, cinnamon-and-sugary, juicy perfection.

One The BEST Pumpkin Cinnamon Rolls on white plate

1-Hour Cinnamon Rolls with Cream Cheese Frosting — The dough is made, rolled out, sliced, and immediately baked, which eliminates many hours and steps compared to most cinnamon roll recipes.

1-Hour Cinnamon Rolls with Cream Cheese Frosting

Caramel Apple Cinnamon Roll Bake — This cinnamon roll recipe with apples and caramel sauce is easy, ready in 30 minutes, and you don’t even have to make scratch cinnamon roll dough.

Caramel Apple Cinnamon Roll Bake in foil lined pan
4.64 from 103 votes (68 ratings without comment)

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Comments

  1. I love homemade cinnamon rolls and am happy with how easy they are to make. For some reason I always put them off, thinking it’s a daunting task, but each time I make them I’m reminded of how effortless it really is to get fluffy yummy breakfast cinnamon rolls. I’ve done this overnight method before too, a la Alton Brown, and like you been a fan since you don’t have to wake up with the chickens…not that my kids would have it any other way, but you know. :)

  2. Thank you so much for this wonderful recipe! I had Googled “Soft and Tender Cinnamon Rolls” and found your website. About 2 weeks ago, I had made dough for cinnamon rolls in my bread machine for the first time, but the dough consistency turned out rather dense. I want to thank you so much for your impressive recipe and the generous instructions and beautiful progressive photos. I also appreciated the tips you shared which will help me immensely. I do have a mixer with a dough hook which I have never used for making bread dough – I will try it for this recipe. I am wondering if a substitution for buttermilk would work effectively by mixing milk with lemon juice or vinegar. I noticed you made this recipe in San Diego. I’m a native Californian who lived in Fresno for approx. 60 years and retired to Brookings, Oregon near the California/Oregon border. We have a mild climate here, and I’m sure I’ll have no problem with the cinnamon rolls rising. Again, thank you so much for sharing this wonderful recipe.

    1. Hi Sharon
      Thanks for the great comment and glad you found me and find the pics, instructions, and everything so helpful – that’s great! You can make buttermilk as you said by taking about 1 cup milk to about 1-2 tbsp lemon juice or vinegar and letting it stand. You could probably also use a big dollop of yogurt, cut with a little bit of milk. You just want something like that to add softness and help the rising. As long as you’re going to the trouble of making these, I probably would stick with real buttermilk the first time, then swap out from there after your comfortable with the recipe the next time. Your dough hook is going to be your new best friend. Just put it on, and let ‘er go! Walk away and do your nails or something :)

      And yes we live in San Diego. Love it here! Your area I’m sure is beautiful as well.

      Keep me posted how these go for you!

    1. I don’t use a bread machine and honestly have no idea how they fully operate. So if you’ve made other cinnamon roll dough in them with luck, I’d expect this to be similar. But I have no way of knowing for sure.

  3. Ok, made these tonight for tomorrow morning breakfast. Of course I had to try on tonight. These are heaven! Somethin I tired an it worked well for me is….when they were rising in the oven I put a pot of boiling water in the oven , even when they do their second rising, that only took about 35 min. It speeds up the proofing process. These only took 2.5 hour from start to in my belly finish. Everything else I followed perfectly. Thank you for our new wonderful cinnamon roll recipe!

    1. Thanks for trying them, Carrie, and glad you’re a fan and that they’ll be your new cinn roll recipe! What you describe with the water is a version on a theme of putting water in the oven in a pan having it sit there when baking pizza, bagels, baugettes. Lots of people say the steam helps to create thicker crust, which isn’t what I’d want for rolls but, like you said, it helps add moisture for the rising, which IS a great thing. Awesome little trick and thanks for sharing :)

  4. Just wanted to say that I made these today and the family adored them. They turned out so beautifully and looked AMAZING. Thank you!!

    1. I love hearing stories like this and so glad they turned out wonderfully and that the family adored them, too! Amazing feedback – thanks for trying the recipe!

  5. Your cinnamon rolls are to die for. I did not add anthing, i followed the exact measurements & it was perfect. Thank you for sharing this recipe with us.

    1. I am so happy to hear this! I love these rolls as well and so happy that the recipe, exactly as written, worked out so wonderfully for you. Thanks for coming back to tell me!

  6. Well they tasted ok, you’re right though, should have trusted my instincts. Unfortunately all the sugar and cinnamon kinda slid out overnight! So we ended up with more like frosted sweet bread!

    1. Sorry to hear that the cinnamon sugar slid out. At least you ended up with something that tasted ok but yes, next time, and with ALL bread making (all recipes, really) if what you see in your mixing bowl and your instincts differ from what’s written on a computer screen or book, you’ve always gotta go with your instincts and that ball of dough in front of you! :)

  7. Yikes, my dough did not come together, not sure why. I trusted the moisture, but after rising still a sloppy mess. I had to add more flour but its still sticky and sloppy. My cut cinnamon rolls do not look nice like yours, they are all droopy. We’ll see how they turn out tomorrow, not sure what I did wrong!

    1. Do you live in a humid climate? If so, you’re likely going to need more flour than I did when I made these in dry San Diego in the winter. If it’s sticky to the point that it wasn’t workable, not sure how you got them into rolls (add more flour next time – trust yourself and the dough in front of you!) But sounds like you did get them rolled up – okay good.

      Just let them sit and rise overnight in the fridge and then pull them out about 2 hours before you want to bake them, and let them rise at room temp. And then bake them. I have a feeling you will be okay. Sometimes bread dough can look pitiful before it bakes – like I’ve baked some things I was sure weren’t going to work, but they do.

      Keep me posted!

  8. Thanks for posting these! I really appreciate it! I’m going to make the dough today and do the overnight method.Your pictures look lovely ;) xo

      1. Yes, they were sooooo good! Almost like Cinnabon, actually! These are the most fluffiest ones I’ve ever made, usually because whenever I make yeasty breads I *always* end up with having them taste hard. And the dough rose so perfectly! I also ended up using more cinnamon ( I loveeeee cinnamon), about 4 1/2 teaspoons. They were so ooey and gooey. Especially the cinnamon filling. When I saw how the recipe needed buttermilk, I knew these were going to be good! Buttermilk makes everything so moist and fluffy!

        The frosting was HEAVENLY. These were such a hit at my house. Whenever I need a recipe for something soft, light, fluffy and moist, I’ll know where to look- at your website!

        Thanks again for posting this fab recipe! xo

      2. ๏ปฟ๏ปฟHi Liz – thanks for the glowing compliments about the rolls. So happy they turned out soft, light, fluffy & moist for you and that you had no issues with them & they turned out like Cinnabons for you! And yes to adding more cinnamon – love that – I always do too when I read recipes! And so glad to hear you’ll be trying out more of my recipes. Please LMK how they go!

  9. So…..this was my first time making cinnamon rolls and I am still kinda new to yeast doughs, but this was AMAZING and EASY. I truly appreciated the detailed instructions and your many responses to comments that were also very informative. I couldn’t find instant yeast so I used “highly active yeast” which worked perfectly in its place. Like another comment I misread and added all 4 1/2 cups of flour right of the bat and the dough was too stiff so I added another 2 T of melted butter and then it was perfect. I did it all in my stand mixer and refrigerated them overnight and we took the extras to church and they recieved rave reviews. Yay! Thank you thank you thank you!!!!

    1. YAY! Thanks for making them and coming back to tell me you had success! Being that your mistake was common (people speed-read and seem to miss the flour thing) I just updated the post and in the flour line changed it to read:
      up to 4 1/4 cups all-purpose flour, divided

      Hopefully that should do the trick. Good call on more melted butter. Can’t go wrong with more butter.

      And highly active yeast sounds like it probably was instant yeast. Good thinking!

      Thanks for LMK you tried these and that all my comments, replies, and post helped you have success! LMK if you try other recipes!

  10. These are AMAZING! These are the best rolls that I have ever made. My husband said that they are better than his grandmother’s!

    I just wanted to let you know that I cut short the initial rise by about an hour (since I was really tired and wanted to sleep) and they still turned out amazing. I’ll have to try it again when I have more time, but I thought that it was kind of neat that you can cut that step short if you run out of time.

    Thanks for the fabulous recipe!

    1. Thanks for LMK you made them and find them to be the best rolls you’ve ever made! They are my personal favorite as well! And the fact that they’re better than your hubs’ grandmas is high praise :)

      On cutting the rise time short, glad it worked out for you! As a general rule, in the summer/warmer times of the year you can get away with fudging yeast doughs a bit whereas in the dead of winter, the yeast are cold and need the full time to do their thing. Thanks for trying these!

  11. These are magnificent cinnamon buns! Moist, tender and fluffy. I added a half package of vanilla pudding and 1 tablespoon of vanilla extract to the dough. I increased the yeast to 1 tablespoon. When it came time to bake the buns, I put them in a cold oven and turned on the heat to 350 and baked them for 21 minutes. I learned this little trick from another website and it works wonderfully to get that last little rising out of your buns. Give it a try, you will be amazed. Fantastic recipe, a keeper for sure!

    1. Thanks for the detailed report, Irene! I have always wanted to mix a packet or half packet of vanilla pudding mix into the dough (I’ve read recipes that do that – unfortunately when I use pudding in recipes, I get all kinds of emails from intl readers as well as those who are deadly against pudding mix…so I’ve avoided it in yeast recipes til now). My fave banana recipe of ALL TIME (and I have 15+ on my site) uses pudding mix https://www.averiecooks.com/2012/08/banana-bread-with-vanilla-browned-butter-glaze.html

      Glad the 1 tbsp of yeast worked for you. 1 packet at 2 1/4 teaspoons is really close to a tbsp and with the Red Star Platinum yeast I swear by, they are SO PUFFY as it is, I don’t need to increase it or they may just fly away :)

      And the cold oven, interesting. I know with puff pastry you’re supposed to bake the dough when it’s cold in a hot oven. Interesting about using a cold oven. Never heard that one! Glad you love the recipe!