Perfect Soft and Fluffy Dinner Rolls
Get ready for the most perfect soft and fluffy dinner rolls of your life. They are fast, easy, and so delicious!
If you feel like I don’t have any business posting a new dinner roll recipe, think again.
These soft and fluffy dinner rolls are the culmination of every good roll I’ve ever talked about. They are perfect for a holiday meal…or for really ANY meal!
Dinner Roll Dough
Of all the many roll recipes living happily on my site, today’s soft and fluffy rolls are most like these epic French bread rolls except that this new recipe produces rolls that are slightly richer and even fluffier.
That is due, in part, to:
- milk + water
- addition of an egg
- butter instead of oil
The milk is scalded, which means it is heated until just before boiling and then cooled. This helps break down the protein structure (which makes yeast breads lighter and fluffier).
After it cools a bit, the sugar, butter and yeast is added and hangs out until the yeast gets bubbly and foamy.
The Secret to Making the Best Rolls
If I could share the biggest key to success for perfect dinner rolls every time, it would be watching the flour amount very closely so the dough isn’t over floured.
As much as I’d like to give an exact flour amount, there are many factors that can make the flour amount slightly different for people.
Humidity, elevation, liquid temperature, the way we each measure flour – those are just a few examples.
For this recipe, add 3 3/4 to 4 cups flour all at once and start the mixer. The dough will look shaggy and messy.
Continue adding flour gradually, and only if needed, until the dough just starts to clear the sides of the bowl and forms a sticky ball.
As the dough kneads, it will form a very soft, smooth ball of dough.
If the dough starts clinging to the bottom or sides of the bowl during kneading, add flour a tablespoon at a time until it clears the sides of the bowl again (you don’t need to restart kneading time if adding small amounts of flour).
Let the dough rise until doubled. I am usually lazy and let it rise right in the mixing bowl but you can transfer to a lightly greased bowl and cover to let rise.
Shape and Rise
A single batch of these soft and fluffy dinner rolls fits perfectly in a 9X13-inch pan.
A doubled batch fits great on a half sheet pan.
Each dough ball will weigh right around 3 ounces, give or take. Space them a little bit apart in the baking pan and let them rise until very puffy and the sides are touching.
Don’t skimp on the rising! If they don’t rise long enough, they won’t reach their fluff-fluffy potential.
How to Get Perfectly Golden Rolls
Bake the rolls for 18-20 minutes until golden on top and bottom.
If your rolls aren’t browning on top, even after the full baking time, it could be due to a couple of different reasons:
- oven rack position: I’ve found in my oven that positioning an oven rack in the middle or upper middle helps my rolls brown better than an oven rack in a lower position
- oven temperature: all ovens heat a little differently – even if set to the same temperature. It could very well be that your oven bakes on the cool side. Increasing the oven temp by 15-25 degrees can also help the rolls brown well on top.
Best Dinner Rolls Ever
This truly is one of the best dinner roll recipes ever. The rolls are insanely fluffy.
But even with the extreme fluffiness, they still have the heft and structure of a good, homemade roll.
Meaning: they won’t disintegrate into crumbly air or smoosh into oblivion with one swipe of butter.
They are sturdy and soft. Plush and perfect.
I’ve given some make-ahead instructions in the notes of the recipe. These rolls can be made ahead of time (to rise in the refrigerator and bake later) and/or frozen.
I’m actually making 252 of these babies later this week for a school banquet (that’s 21 batches – 10 double batches and one single batch 😅).
While it will undoubtedly be an extremely long day and not something I want to repeat again for at least a decade, I’m not worried about the rolls turning out, because this recipe is golden. Simple and foolproof.
My Go-To Dinner Roll Recipe
If you are looking for an easy go-to dinner roll, look no further. If you already have a favorite dinner roll, this one may change your mind.
I can’t wait for you to make these rolls and let me know what you think!
Just remember the two main rules to follow with homemade rolls:
- liberally butter the tops of the warm rolls right out of the oven
- don’t skimp on the butter (and jam) when it comes time to enjoy the finished product
And there, my friends, you have the secrets to a very happy life. 😉💗
One Year Ago: Pumpkin Rosemary Dinner Rolls
Two Years Ago: Creamy Baked Mashed Potatoes with Buttery Parmesan Crumbs {Make-Ahead!}
Three Years Ago: Pressure Cooker Lasagna Soup {+ Stovetop Directions}
Four Years Ago: Delicious Cranberry Pear Crumble
Five Years Ago: Buttery, Flaky Make-Ahead Overnight Crescent Dinner Rolls {No Kneading/No Stand Mixer}
Six Years Ago: Skillet Honey Garlic Chicken {20-Minute Meal}
Seven Years Ago: Stuffed Apple and Bacon Sweet Potato Casserole
Eight Years Ago: Warm Russian Tea
Nine Years Ago: Smoky Corn Chowder
Ten Years Ago: Whole Wheat Blender Pancakes
Perfect Soft and Fluffy Dinner Rolls
Ingredients
- 1 ¼ cups milk
- ¼ cup water
- ¼ cup (57 g) butter, softened or melted
- 2 tablespoons (27 g) granulated sugar (see note)
- 1 tablespoon instant or active dry yeast
- 1 large egg
- 1 ¼ teaspoons salt
- 4 ¼ to 4 ½ cups (604-639 g) all-purpose flour
- Additional butter, for brushing hot, baked rolls
Instructions
- Heat the milk until tiny bubbles form around the edges and the milk is steaming. Pour into the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the dough hook.
- Add the water, butter, and sugar. Let the mixture cool until warm (if you dip a finger in, it should feel like a warm bath – not too hot, not too cold, just right).
- Stir in the yeast and let rest for 5-7 minutes until the yeast is foamy (technically, you don't need to let the yeast activate before adding the flour, but I find in yeast bread recipes with milk, the dough rises quicker/better if I let the yeast activate first).
- Add the egg, salt and flour (start with 3 3/4 to 4 cups flour) and mix, adding additional flour gradually, until the dough clears the sides of the bowl and forms a soft, sticky ball. Don't over flour the dough.
- Knead for 5-6 minutes until the dough is soft and smooth.
- Let the dough rise in a warm spot until doubled, about an hour or so. (I usually let the dough rise right in the mixing bowl, but you can transfer to a lightly greased bowl and cover.)
- Grease a 9X13-inch pan. Lightly punch down the dough and turn out onto a lightly greased countertop.
- Divide the dough into 12 equal pieces (3 to 3.5 ounces each). Roll each piece into a round ball and place in the prepared pan, spacing 1/2-inch or so apart (four rows of three rolls).
- Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F. Place an oven rack in the middle position.
- Cover and let the rolls rise until doubled. The rolls should be very puffy with the sides touching.
- Bake the rolls for 15-20 minutes until golden on the tops and bottoms. Butter the tops of the rolls immediately out of the oven.
Notes
Recipe Source: from Mel’s Kitchen Cafe
With all these awesome reviews I had to try for myself. I also never leave reviews. These are soooo good!!!! I made them today to test for Thanksgiving. They are delish. Pretty bready tasting. So I will add the extra 1-2 Tablespoons of sugar next time.
Thanks for the review, Stephanie!
I love your blender fluffy roll recipe and am excited to give this a try! Question, can I use Instant Quick Rise yeast? Thanks!
Yep!
I’m having Thanksgiving for 28 people and planning on making these rolls. Could I make the dough, shape into balls and freeze at that point, then take them out to thaw, rise and bake? Do you think they would still rise properly?
Hi Tracy – you could definitely try this. I personally haven’t had great luck freezing roll dough – the rolls never rise quite the same (but I know a lot of other people do it and it works just fine). If I’m going to freeze rolls, I make them, bake them, let them cool and freeze the baked rolls.
I’m having Thanksgiving for 28 people and planning on making these rolls. Could I make the dough, shape into balls and freeze at that point, then take them out to thaw, rise and bake? Do you think they would rise properly? Any suggestions on how you would prepare them in advance are welcome!
Thanks for another 5-start recipe! These were PERFECT.
Thanks, Julie!
These rolls turned out perfectly and they were really easy to make. I followed Mel’s flawless instructions and opted to add 1 extra T. of sugar to the dough, as suggested. I love my family roll recipe but it takes longer to make and roll out. This one is a great option! (On day two I sliced them in half, buttered the cut sides and browned them in a non-stick pan. They were fantastic with sandwiches.) Thanks, Mel!
I made these late in the day to have with dinner and of course I hadn’t decided what to make for dinner yet. I decided to try your cream of chicken soup recipe last minute. Added some chicken and egg noodles. Everything turned out beautifully. I didn’t think I would pull it off due to a self induced time crunch. I must thrive on pressure. These rolls were perfection! My husband thought they were to pretty to eat but he ate 3 of them and 2 bowls of soup as he kept commenting on how good it all was. They were simple and delicious. I can’t thank you enough for the recipe.
YUMM really great recipe! I’m a die hard Blender Roll lady. But theses are excellent. They are more ” bready” and less “light fluffy” than the blender rolls, BUT they do a better job of holding meats for sandwiches. …if anyone is curious Do I just triple straight across if I want 3 batches? A mixing question. Am I the only one that has this happen…the bread dough always wraps around the center of the Bosch mixer!?? I have only had the mixer about 4mths so it’s newer to me but if you have any tips please fill me in!! Another great one Mel, thank you so much!!!!
Hey Gretchen! Often if the batch of dough is on the smaller end it can wrap around the center of the Bosch. Larger batches don’t have that problem as often, but it can also happen if the dough needs just a touch more flour, so keep your eye on that. For a triple batch, I only double the yeast.
Holy cow these are delicious exactly like you made them. I get frustrated when I read comments and they say they didn’t turn out…but they changed this, that or the other. If you follow every one of your recipes… they work perfectly. I’m not sure why anyone would want to experiment if it already has been tested and is 100% delicious. ♀️. Thank you once again Mel, every single recipe I’ve tried of yours is delicious. These will be my thanksgiving/every day rolls! Good luck with your huge rolls making project
Thank you so much, Julie!
Does it matter what milk to use…..whole, 2% or fat free? Can’t wait to make these! Thanks for all you do to help us bake such beautiful goodies!
Hi Pamela! I prefer using 1%, 2% or whole (sometimes using skim milk in roll recipes makes for a less fluffy roll).
Can I make these with plant milk so they are non dairy?
I haven’t tried that, but you could definitely experiment.
These rolls have been such a hit in our house! I’m trying to make them ahead of time to freeze for Thanksgiving, but I’ve made two batches and so far none of them have made it to the freezer. Hoping for better luck for the next batch.. haha! This is the first recipe I’ve made of yours and I’m excited to try others! Thank you!!
I’m so happy you’ve loved this recipe so much! And I agree…I somehow NEVER have leftover rolls either!
Whether or not my homemade rolls turn out is a little unpredictable. I’ve made these twice, once all white flour & once half white, half wheat. Both times they turned out beautiful and SO delicious. My new go-to roll recipe, thank you Mel!
Yay! Loved reading that, Meagen! Thank you for letting me know!
Absolutely amazing recipe! Fluffy, soft and a show stopper if you ask me!!
Thanks, Reyna!
Oh my! These are so delicious! I love rolls made with milk. I can’t quite put my finger on what exactly is different than just water, but maybe it’s just a little more depth of flavor. These were so good, so soft, and didn’t take as long to make as I expected.
Thanks for letting me know what you thought, Madison!
These are glorious! They look like a professional made them and they are absolutely DIVINE!!!!! So good!!!! Thank you for such a wonderful addition to my Thanksgiving this year! I’m already making your pumpkin rosemary rolls as well!
Thanks, Alexandra! (That’s quite the lineup of rolls – YUM!)
Delicious! Light, fluffy! Perfect! Thank you Mel for helping us have rockstar recipes!
Just made these for dinner tonight. They were delish. I did add an extra Tablespoon of sugar as you offered as an option. Really my first dinner rolls that looked good and tasted even better.
Chrisie! I’m so proud of you! Way to go!
These rolls are insanely good. Like, I’ve been making bread since I was 11 and I’m now 40 in a couple days and EVERY TIME I’ve made rolls they stink big time. Till now. Mel has the best tutorial on rolling out the perfect roll and this recipe is to die for. Fluffy deliciousness in an hour?!? YES THANK YOU! (I do use bread flour and instant yeast and I warm my oven from the start so rising is fast. Seriously, I think the longest I’ve had it take was an hour and a half because my toddler threw up and derailed my schedule.)
Oh yeah, and I brush or spray the tops before baking with MILK. It browns nicely and gives the perfect crust.
You are amazing, Stacey!!
About how long on the second rise? Thank you! Can’t air to try.
It depends on the warmth of your kitchen (if you put them in a very lightly warmed oven they’ll rise quicker) – but right around 45-60 minutes.
Hello Mel,
Any tips for someone like me that doesn’t have a food scale?
Hey Linda! You can just eyeball the rolls – should work just fine!
I just made these rolls today. They turned out amazing!!
So beautiful!! I made them pre-Thanksgiving to test them out. I’d like to add some whole wheat flour to them next time just for fun. Great recipe; thank you!!
Thank you, Kathy!
I am excited to try these! I recently made some scones and bread with bread flour and I was amazed at the wonderful chewy texture that bread flour lends. Do you ever use bread flour for your baked goods like this? If not, I’m curious as to why? I always trust your advice on everything cooking! Thanks for everything, Mel! We love you!
Hi Heather, I don’t usually add bread flour to rolls (but I do add it to bread every now and again). I’ve found with rolls that it gives them a dense/chewy quality when I’d rather have them light and fluffy. But if you like the result of using bread flour, you could definitely try it in these rolls!
Rolls Texas
I made these rolls today—so easy to make and there turned out delicious and fluffy. I made 12 rolls as shown (3 ounces of dough for each) and they are substantial sized. Thank you for the recipe!
Thanks, Lousie! Glad you liked them!
Such an easy, straight forward recipe to make. The dough was beautiful to work with, honestly therapeutic. And the rolls were the most beautiful rolls I’ve ever made. And to top it all off, they were delicious! This is a winner.
So happy to hear this, Lindsey! Thanks for letting me know!
I made these tonight to go with minestrone soup. They are excellent! Very fluffy. I will be making these for Thanksgiving next week! Thanks for all of your great recipes. You never let me down Mel!
Thank you so much, Cyndi!
Ok, but are they better than the buttermilk rolls you have on your site??? My Thanksgiving is completely gluten free except for stuffing and dinner rolls that I make for the people who can still enjoy those things…and the buttermilk recipe is always very popular! But I do like switching things up…
I wouldn’t say they are better…just different! They are pretty glorious…I don’t think you’d be disappointed if you made them!
Well, looks like I’ll be making them!
Hi Mel,
I just made these to test them out for Thanksgiving this year (I’m bringing the rolls so they have to be fab) and they are GORGEOUS. They were easy to make (I used my scale to keep them uniform) and are SO DELICIOUS. Light and soft like little pillows. These are the ones!
I also would like to say how much I appreciate your dough tutorials. So many blogs or recipes don’t do the process justice; there are so many details you explain and show (LOVE the pics) that help make dough a pleasure to make. So thank you ❤️
Yay, Jen! I’m so, so happy you loved this recipe. And thank you so much for taking the time to report back! These are the ones I’m making for Thanksgiving this year, too. Thanks for your kind note! I always appreciate tutorials as well so I can actually get eyes on the process!
Mel you can talk rolls to me all day long! I can make rolls/bread thanks to you and I welcome every recipe you put out. I’m excited to try this new one. 🙂
Hope you love these rolls, Melissa!
These do look good. I love whole wheat bread better than white.
Bless you with your endeavor of making 252 rolls. YIKES!!!
It will be an adventure! 🙂
Just what I was looking for…a new roll recipe for thanksgiving. Thanks so much! Can’t wait to try this recipe.
Happy Thanksgiving, Teresa!
Will bread flour work as well?
Bread flour, because of the high gluten, can make soft rolls like this chewy and a little more dense, so I prefer using all-purpose flour.
I printed this recipe off during school with my kids this morning, got them started during our break at 11, and just now at 2 managed to not burn my mouth on the fresh-from-the-oven deliciousness!
I’m usually more of a chewy hard crust roll person but these are fantastic. And I don’t have to remember to do anything the night before. Definitely a keeper recipe!
Sarah, you are amazing for making them so fast!! Thanks for taking the time to let me know what you thought. Means a lot to me!
I want to make this recipe today however can evaporated canned milk be used in this recipe?
I haven’t tried that, but you could definitely experiment and see how it goes!
These look delicious! Do you prefer them baked in a glass pan? I usually use metal pans for rolls, but think I might try glass for these.
Either one works! I rarely use my glass pans to bake anything but casseroles (I prefer metal pans for brownies, cookie bars, etc) but for some reason I always grab them for rolls.
Can I use buttermilk in this roll recipe?
Could definitely try! I bet it would work great
I remember you posted a video showing how you made the rolls so round. I can’t find it. Could you please help me with that?
I use so many of your recipes. I think you know my niece Sarah Waetzig Miller. Her mom is my sister and told me about your site. I’ve given so many others your blog site information.
Thank you!
Liz, if you search for “rolls video” it pops right up. I also went back to review the technique for making these rolls today. 🙂
Happy Baking!
I can’t wait to try this. What is your go to type of milk for this recipe (ie skim, 1%)? thanks!
To make several batches do you just double the ingredients or fudge it a little? Thanks!
Well I had decided to try your buttermilk rolls but now I am torn. 😉 These look delicious!! I feel like homemade yeast rolls are truly one of the highlights of the meal. Always. Thanks for the recipe!
Can’t wait to try these! Thank you for the recipe. Yum!
Thanks, Karen!
I made your blender rolls and thought they were fantastic! How does this new recipe compare?
These rolls have a tighter, sturdier crumb than the blender rolls – but both are extremely light and fluffy. Can’t go wrong with either!
I’m excited to try this out! There is always room for another roll recipe!
Hope you like them, Stephanie!
Can I make these with just a bowl and spoon or do you recommend a mixer? Also, perfect timing! I searched your site the other day for soft dinner rolls and didn’t see one. I only trust you with bread recipes so this was just in time, thank you!
Yes, you could definitely make this dough by hand!
I’ve been making a similar recipe for years and it’s my absolute favorite! I’m impatient, though, and don’t want to wait for the hot milk mixture to cool, so I start by putting my yeast in 1/4 cup warm water. I add half my flour and the egg to the hot milk mixture and mix well, then it’s cool enough to pour in the yeast mixture before adding the rest of the flour. I’ve also shared my recipe with several people who have reported that their dough didn’t rise, and I think it’s because their milk mixture was still too hot and killed the yeast. Doing it this way makes it a little more foolproof.
Great tips, Michelle!
Hi! These look fantastic! I’d love to bring these to Thanksgiving dinner, but I have a terrible time getting dough to rise in my house. We keep the temperature at 68, but the counters and and window sills still feel cold. I’ve heard using the oven on a super low temperature works??? I always skip over your bread recipes because this is such a problem! I don’t want to skip them anymore! Lol! Thanks, Shantal
I’m sure Mel will respond, but I have the same issue.
Preheat your oven to 175 while you are making the dough. Once it is preheated, immediately Turn it off. put a small bowl with warm water on the bottom oven rack.
Put dough in oven to rise.
Now you have to be careful because you don’t want it too warm in the oven. But it works. You can also turn the oven light on to help keep it warm. It can take some practice but you can definitely make your oven a nice warm, draft free home for your dough.
Good luck!
Thank you Stephanie! Great ideas! I can’t wait to give this recipe a shot:)
Hi Shantal! Stephanie gave some great suggestions below! My house is pretty drafty and chilly also and dough doesn’t always rise great (or quickly), so I know what you are talking about. I use my oven to rise dough almost always through the winter. I preheat to the very lowest setting which is 175 degrees and usually don’t let it preheat all the way because it’s a little too warm for dough. I turn on the oven, let it preheat for 1-2 minutes and then turn it off. Then I pop the dough in there (covered with a tea towel) to rise and keep the oven light on for a little residual warmth. I know others that use a heating pad and rest the dough on a warmed up heating pad to rise as well. I’ve also heated several cups of water in a bowl until boiling and then placed the pan of rolls over the bowl to rise. Hopefully that helps a little!
I’ve looked all over the internet and couldn’t find anything this specific. Thank you so much! I’m very excited to try this:)
Hi Mel! Would these rolls do well if frozen as dough balls, thawed, and then left to rise before baking? I am in charge of Thanksgiving rolls every year at the in-laws and with too many cooks in the kitchen there isn’t room to start from scratch! These rolls look amazing and I never turn down a good roll recipe!
Hi Amanda! Most homemade rolls do fine frozen as dough balls, thawed and then baked. I’ve found the yeast taste is much stronger when doing that, and sometimes the rolls don’t rise quite as well, and so I usually prefer to bake and then freeze (and then thaw and warm lightly in the oven before serving).
I love seeing the email from “Mel’s Kitchen”. It is one of my very favorite places to go for recipes. Thanks for all the awesome recipes, they are precise and the notes to assist say in substituting ingredients and preserving baked goods is appreciated. Thanks again MEL!!!!
Thank you so much, Kathy! I really appreciate you and your comment!
“If you feel like I don’t have any business posting a new dinner roll recipe, think again.”—I love this statement and I’m so glad you love trying new dinner roll recipes. I can’t wait to try this one this week! I don’t do Instagram, but I will check later this week to see how the 252 rolls turn out! Good Luck!
Thanks, Tasha! 🙂 Appreciate you!
Can I put an egg wash on these before baking, and still use butter on them afterwards? Thanks!
Sure!