Buttery Cinnamon Pull-Apart Bread {Dollywood Bread Knockoff}
The buttery soft dough for this cinnamon pull-apart bread is drenched with cinnamon and sugar in every nook and cranny. It is out-of-this-world delicious!
The inspiration for this recipe comes from the extremely popular bread mass produced at the Dollywood theme park by way of the Grist Mill eatery. With this knockoff recipe, you can easily make this famous cinnamon bread at home!
How to Make the Easy Cinnamon Bread
The bread dough in this recipe is very basic and simple.
You can use a stand mixer fitted with a dough hook or you can mix and knead by hand. If mixing by hand, add a few extra minutes to the kneading time.
The dough will be soft and smooth and just slightly sticky. It’s really important not to over flour the dough! Add flour just until the dough clears the sides of the bowl.
An Important Note About Cutting the Dough
At the Dollywood theme park, the loaves of bread aren’t cut all the way through into individual dough pieces. Instead, the top of the loaf is slashed and then the whole thing is dunked into butter and rolled into sugar (yes, I watched multiple videos about the process 😆).
Cutting the dough into individual strips, like we’re doing in this recipe, allows butter and sugar to permeate maximum surface area of the dough which means more ooey gooey cinnamon sugar goodness in every bite.
Can the dough be cut into thinner strips? (I know some of you are wondering that!) That’s up to you, but keep in mind that using thicker strips of dough ensures a super soft, fluffy baked bread. Thinner slices tend to dry out while baking (I know that from testing different variations). This bread is meant to have lusciously thick and soft layers, not papery thin pull-apart layers.
Assembling Cinnamon Pull-Apart Bread
See the pictures above for a helpful visual ⬆️
- Separate the dough into two equal pieces (the recipe makes two loaves).
- Flatten each piece into a thick rectangle.
- Cut each rectangle into five thick strips.
- Dip each strip into melted butter.
- Roll the butter-coated dough in the cinnamon-sugar mixture.
- Tuck each strip into the bread pan in a single layer.
- Let the bread rise until it noticeably puffy (it’ll reach almost to the top of the pan edge) and then bake.
Immediately out of the oven, brush a butter/cinnamon-sugar mixture over the hot bread. As the bread cools, this extra brushing of butter + cinnamon + sugar creates the most delightful sweet and buttery crust on top of the bread and greatly boosts the cinnamon flavor.
Finally, once the warm bread has been turned out, drizzle with a simple glaze and DIG IN. No, like, really, don’t wait on this. DIG IN NOW.
How is this bread sooo goood??
That’s the question I hear every time someone tries this bread.
The fluffy pieces easily pull apart revealing rivulets of buttery, cinnamon and sugar goodness everywhere. Remember, the slices are thick, so as they are pulled apart, they can be cut or torn by hand into smaller pieces and shared among many.
I mean, or not. 😉 In our house, five slices means FIVE SLICES. And it isn’t unheard of for a loaf of this bread to serve five…or less.
#teenageboys #hollowlegs #amiright
The deliciousness of this buttery cinnamon pull-apart bread is the sole reason to make this bread. No doubt about that.
However, a bonus reason to get this bread into your baking lineup ASAP is because you won’t believe how amazing your house will smell as this bread bakes and after it comes out of the oven.
If you live in a neighborhood where the houses are a split second apart and you make this bread, I can almost guarantee you will have neighbors casually walking over all wide-eyed and innocent trying to get a glimpse (or taste!) of what is GOING ON IN THERE.
I Can’t Believe I’m Saying This, But…
And now. I’d like to end our discussion about this other-worldly bread with a very bold statement: as much as I love and revere a really delicious cinnamon roll, I would take this cinnamon pull-apart bread any day over one. No question about it.
It’s so, so good, and I cannot wait for you to make it!
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Buttery Cinnamon Pull-Apart Bread
Ingredients
Bread:
- 1 ½ cups (350 g) warm water, 105-110 degrees F
- 6 tablespoons (75 g) melted butter
- ¼ cup (53 g) granulated sugar
- 1 ½ tablespoons instant or active dry yeast
- 1 ½ teaspoons salt
- 4 to 4 ¼ cups (604 g) all-purpose flour
- 8 tablespoons (113 g) melted butter, for dipping
Cinnamon Sugar Mix:
- ⅔ cup (141 g) packed brown sugar
- ⅓ cup (71 g) granulated sugar
- 2 tablespoons ground cinnamon
- 4 tablespoons (57 g) melted salted butter
Glaze:
- 1 cup (114 g) powdered sugar
- 3 tablespoons milk
Instructions
- For the dough, in a stand mixer fitted with the dough hook, combine the water, butter, sugar and yeast. Mix and let rest until foamy, 1 to 2 minutes.
- Add the salt and flour and mix until the dough comes together to form a shaggy ball that clears the sides of the bowl. Add additional flour a few tablespoons at a time, if needed (but don't over flour the dough). The dough should be soft and slightly sticky.
- Knead the dough in the mixer on medium speed for 4 to 5 minutes until the dough is smooth. Cover the mixer and let the dough rise until doubled (or transfer the dough to a lightly greased bowl for rising).
- In a medium bowl or shallow dish, like a pie plate, combine the brown sugar, granulated sugar, and cinnamon and mix until well-combined. Measure out 1/2 cup of the mixture and set aside.
- Grease two 8 1/2-inch by 4 1/2-inch loaf pans generously with cooking spray and set aside.
- Gently punch down the dough and divide into two equal pieces. Pat each piece into a thick rectangle, about 9 inches by 5 inches. Cut each rectangle into five thick strips.
- Working with one set of five strips at a time, dip each strip in the melted butter and then roll in the cinnamon-sugar mixture until evenly coated. Place the strip at the top (of the short side) in one of the prepared loaf pans and repeat with the remaining four strips, tucking each strip in to fit in an even, single layer.
- Repeat with the remaining strips for the second loaf pan. If there is extra cinnamon sugar mixture, sprinkle it evenly over the loaves.
- Cover the pans and let the bread rise until noticeably puffy and the dough has risen to almost reach the top of the pan.
- While the bread rises, ensure an oven rack is in the center position and preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. If you are worried about cinnamon-sugar dripping onto your oven rack/floor, place the bread pans on a sheet pan before baking (the bread doesn't overflow/leak in my oven, but depending on how high the bread rises and/or your elevation, it may be a helpful word of caution).
- Bake the bread for 30 to 32 minutes until golden and baked through (an instant-read thermometer inserted in the thickest part of the bread should register 190 to 200 degrees F.)
- While the bread bakes, mix the reserved cinnamon-sugar mixture with the 4 tablespoons melted butter until well combined.
- Remove the bread from the oven, keep it in the bread pan, and immediately brush the tops of each loaf evenly with the cinnamon-sugar/butter mixture.
- Let the bread cool for 10 to 15 minutes in the pan. Run a sharp, thin knife around the edges and gently turn the bread out onto a plate, serving tray or cutting board (so that it is right side up).
- For the glaze, whisk together the powdered sugar and milk until no lumps remain. If needed, add additional powdered sugar or milk to achieve a thick drizzling consistency. Drizzle the glaze over the warm bread.
- Serve warm or at room temperature.
Notes
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Recipe Source: inspired by a recipe in Cook’s Country magazine that led me down a rabbit hole of research about the Grist Mill Dollywood Cinnamon Bread (changed basically everything to make two loaves, increase quantities for more substantial loaves, etc.)
Well. At first I tried it and thought, “okay, this was decent.” But then I kept tearing off and eating more and more pieces (as we’re trying to get out the door for church). I said to my husband, “okay, apparently I actually love it because I can’t stop eating it!” It’s so good and so easy!
We made this tonight, and it was A-MAZING!! Every piece is like the best part of a cinnamon roll…the middle!! We shared them with the missionaries and they said, “This is Heaven!”
Thank you for sharing this recipe! We are making it again tomorrow!!
PHENOMENAL! Truly the best there is. It was like eating the middle of a cinnamon roll but in loaf form. This fills all my cinnamon roll dreams without the fuss of making individual rolls. Thanks for another stellar recipe!
You summed up exactly how I feel about this bread, Amber! So, so happy you loved it!
Mel was right. Made this on halloween and people keep looking past the candy and ask what I’m baking. So yummy!
What a treat to trick-or-treat at a house that smells so amazing!!
Oh my this the best cinnamon bread I have ever made . I told my husband I had a treat for him ! He said I can’t eat that whole piece , one slice of the 5 , so I cut the piece in half and left kitchen , when I returned he had eaten the half and another slice !!!!
Hahaha…that made me laugh! Thanks for leaving a review – so happy you (and your husband!) loved it!
Nooooo, not Dollywood! It’s Silver Dollar City bread! 😂 We are season pass holders and the cinnamon bread is one of the few foods I’m willing to spend money on. Now I can just make it at home! Can’t what to try it.
Approximately how long should it/could it take to rise? Looking forward to trying this soon!
It really depends on the warmth of your kitchen, but I’d plan for right around an hour, maybe slightly longer.
Thank you!
Could you halve the recipe for just 1 loaf? Looks amazing!
Sure!
I happened to be searching on your site last night for a cinnamon pull-apart bread and was coming up empty handed. Lo and behold, you posted this today. We’re just eating it now and it’s phenomenal. So, so delicious. And so easy too. Bless you.
Well I’m glad I got something posted then! I can’t believe you made it so quickly. Thanks for taking the time to let me know what you thought!
My home MTC missionary saw your preview of this the other day and lost it when I said we had to wait until Wednesday. Man was it worth the wait! I agree better than cinnamon rolls. Maybe better than your monkey bread too!? Love it!
Hahaha, I’m glad I got the recipe posted while they were still at home! So glad you loved it!!
I also saw this in Cook’s Country and made it immediately! It’s amazing and reminded me so much of my trip to Dollywood!
It really is so yummy!
East Tennesseean here and Dollywood season pass holder!! Dollywood cinnamon bread is the best!!!
Would this work with GF flour??
Unfortunately, I don’t think so. Sorry! Gluten free yeast breads can be very tricky and usually GF flour can’t be subbed 1:1 in yeast bread recipes.
Okay, so if this bread is better than a cinnamon roll, how does it compare to monkey bread???
It’s similar but dare I say, even more cinnamon and sugary!
Can’t wait to make this. Can I use a bread machine to do the mixing and rising? Also, can I use bread flour? Thank you.
Hi Terrie, I don’t have a bread machine, but it should work as long as the quantity of dough fits in the machine. And yes, bread flour should work (I would recommend kneading the dough a bit longer if using bread flour).
This looks amazing. My sister-in-law is helping a child in foster care this weekend, and I’ve been thinking of how I can be supportive. I believe making them a loaf or two of this bread will do nicely!! Thanks Mel. You are the best!
Oh, that is such a sweet gesture, Joy!
This looks amazing! Going on my baking list for the weekend!
Quick question: do you think there’s any way to do part of this ahead of time, like the “make ahead” variation on your bundt pull-apart bread?
Hey Molly! I haven’t tried a make-ahead version, but I think it would work! I would prep the bread in the loaf pans and then immediately cover and refrigerate. It’ll likely rise a bit in the fridge…let it rise fully when it comes out and then proceed with the recipe. Does that help?