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
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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
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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
Made this for the first time after watching Jennifer Garber on YouTube do it. You guys make it look so easy and beautiful! I’m in Canada but the recipe turned out well but not as picturesque as yours Mel. I guess I just need more practice.
Can you tell me if there are any adjustments that need made for higher altitude? I recently moved to Colorado and I have found it difficult to get used to baking in a higher altitude.
Hi Cindy, I don’t live at high altitude and so I’m not a high altitude baking expert, but there are some great resources online if you google “high altitude baking adjustments for yeast bread” Good luck!
Hi Mel,
LOVE all your recipes. You make me look like a fantastic chef. If you were making these for Thanksgiving would you suggest freezing them beforehand or following the slow rise in the refrigerator method?
Thanks!
Maureen
Hi Maureen! Thank you! If you have the fridge space, I’d do the slow rise in the fridge and bake them the day of. Otherwise freezing works fine (they’re just SO GOOD fresh from the oven).
The easiest, fluffiest, perfectly browned rolls I have ever made! Great recipe – thank you so much for sharing. This will be my Thanksgiving 2024 rolls. My family thanks you in advance!
These are excellent! I made them as an experiment in my bread machine – the heating element seemed to have quit working, but rather than buy a new machine I decided to try using it just to knead the dough, then put the dough in the oven to rise, and it worked. (I didn’t bake in the bread machine, it never turned out well.) Anyway, the rolls were great and my guys gobbled them up…I only got to eat one!
Glad to hear it worked out!
These rolls were delicious and very easy to make. They were light and flaky with a soft crust and a nice chew. These will be made many times over. Thank you for such a great recipe.
Sorry, I didn’t thank you for this recipe for rolls, heck thank you for your site a real treasure trove of great recipes!
I did check all the bread recipes on your site for an ancient grains multi grain loaf or roll recipe.
Also had noticed a couple or errors last time….rolls wouldn’t brown at 350, and I used f not c I didn’t specify
I appreciate any help 🙂
Hi Linda, try baking them at a higher temperature (375 degrees) or adjusting the oven rack up or down to see if that will help them brown.
Love these buns, I have baked them at 400as don’ brow at 370.
Tonight didn’t heard the timers d they crusty outside and soft inside …Amazing!
Wonder if you have an ancient grain cereal recipe (loaf or roll)?
I tried making dinner rolls with other recipes and they turned out horrible so I never tried again until I saw a video of Jennifer Garner made your fluffy dinner rolls and thought to give it a try. They turned out perfect!!! Wish I could send you a photo. Thank you! Now I have confidence to bake bread and rolls again!
Loved reading this, Frannie! So glad the rolls worked out so well for you!
Absolutely delicious and PERFECT in every way 😁
I will make these everytime!!!!!!
Thank You ☺️
help! my dough didn’t rise after 1 hr in slightly warm oven. how can i fix it?
If the dough didn’t rise it could be because the yeast wasn’t active (expired or died in too-hot liquid). So unfortunately there isn’t a way to fix this current batch if the dough isn’t rising.
Made these and they were delicious.Will the mixer knead the dough? When I made these I turned them out and hand kneaded the dough.Did I need to do that?
It depends on the mixer you have, but I always knead the dough in my mixer (a Bosch mixer – a KitchenAid mixer can also knead the dough).
I followed the recipe exactly and they were light and fluffy and looked as good as the pictures in the article! This will be my new go-to dinner roll recipe!! I think they would also be the perfect rolls for pulled pork sliders. Delicious!
I used this recipe to make beirox and everyone loved them!!! I was able to get about 15 per batch. Thank you for this recipe
I made two loaves of amazing bread using this recipe. Happy mouth!
My teenage daughter made these for Easter. Best rolls ever! I’m a long time fan of your site and love trying new to us recipes! Thanks Mel!
Thank you, Krista! And your daughter is amazing!
this rolls a so good they got a lot bigger than ecpected and where so fluffy but they had to cook a lot longer than the recipe said but still so good
These were perfect and soft! Thanks, Mel
Thanks for the recipe! These were really good but the bottoms didn’t brown well. I covered the top with foil because the tops were brown, but the bottoms stayed pale and soft even after 10 minutes beyond the 20 minute suggested bake time. Do you have and tips on how get the bottoms to cook more? Thank you!!
Hi Parker! What kind of baking pan are you using? A glass pan will likely help the rolls brown better on the bottom – but you can also try lowering the oven rack so it is in the bottom third of the oven.
I doubled the recipe so I used a metal sheet pan. Thanks for the tips!
So confused. It calls for instant or active or yeast?
You can use either instant yeast or active dry yeast.
These were beyond delicious! My question is, can you make two loaves of bread from the recipe? This is so much better, easier, and healthier than brioche bread.
I haven’t tried loaves with this recipe, but I think it is definitely worth a try!
Could you use a non dairy milk? Have you ever tried or heard of someone trying that? I have a non dairy butter that I planned to use for the butter and it’s usually a good substitute. I’m just not sure on the milk!
I haven’t tried it, Lacey, but I think it should work ok!
I can’t thank you enough about these heavenly delicious buns. The recipe is PERFECT. My grandchildren loved them too.
Quick Question… If making them the night before do you let them rise at all? Or make the dough and form into balls and put in pan? Thank you! Can’t wait to try them.
Hi Keri – if making them the night before, place the shaped rolls on the baking pan and then immediately cover and refrigerate – they’ll likely rise a bit in the fridge overnight. Take them out to rise the rest of the way before baking.
Thank u so much for your recipe and great instructions, my 2nd batch is proofing now, love them!!!
A lovely easy virtually foolproof way to have terrific bread rolls. A great recipe to learn how to make yummy rolls at home!
Excellent rolls! Just Like this recipe has ….
We prefer rolls made with some milk in the ingredients, it just makes for a more tender roll.
Thank you for sharing this recipe
I have to agree! This recipe made great dinner rolls which got demolished as soon as they were out of the oven.
I used a total of 5 cups of flour and got 18 good sized rolls.
Incidentally I did everything manually as I didn’t have access to a stand mixer.
Hi I was wondering if this could be made with bread flour instead of all purpose? I have both but I’m just trying to use the bread flour since it is just sitting in my pantry lol. These look super good and I’m excited to try them! 🙂
Yes, you can use bread flour in this recipe (rolls will be a bit chewier).
What if you don’t have eggs can you substitute without messing it up
Hi Caitlin, I haven’t made these rolls without eggs, but you could definitely experiment and see how it goes
Amazing fluffy buns and so easy.Followed your recipe rose nice and high rolled into balls and placed in refrigerator over night they rose again baked and wow wow wow amazingly soft tender dinner rolls Thank you somuchfor this recipe .
This is a wonderful recipe. I want to do a quadruple batch and I saw with a triple batch you only use a double of yeast. So I was wondering how much yeast you use for a quadruple batch?
Don’t worry about my question. I learned that my machine is too small for a quadruple batch. Though ai ended up hand kneading the rest of the flour the rolls still turned out well.
Hi Alyssa, for a quadruple batch, I would use probably 2 1/2 tablespoons yeast.
This is my favorite roll recipe ever. They are SO TASTY. I’m missing something though in my second rise. I shape them into balls, brush w/ butter, cover, place in a warm environment .. but for some reason they don’t rise very much after that (and therefore, I am not getting the fuffy texture). What am I missing? This is the recipe I will die perfecting so give me all your tips!
Hi Debbie, is the dough rising well on the first rise? I would suggest letting them rise the second time without brushing with butter first – that can hinder the rising (and also keep a close eye on the dough texture – it’s possible you may need a touch less flour)
This is one recipe that actually worked, and it worked to perfection. I made these on Thanksgiving yesterday, and I got a lot of comments on good they were.
So thanks Mel!
New favorite rolls recipe! These were so soft and fluffy. Before baking, I brushed with melted butter and shook on a little garlic and salt. After baking, I sprinkled with dill and Parmesan. Thanks for another amazing recipe, Mel.
I made these rolls for Thanksgiving dinner and everyone raved about them! They cam out perfect. Super soft, flavorful and easy to make. Will definitely make them again!
Is it possible to divide them up into smaller rolls? If so, should I reduce the baking time?
Yes, they can definitely be made into smaller rolls! Depending on the size, you might need to watch the time and take them out a minute or two earlier.
Made these for the first time yesterday and they will become my new go-to rolls recipe! So good!
Thank you for the suggestion of the extra sugar. I ran a pre-Thanksgiving test batch and these came out perfect! Nice and fluffy and sweet – just how my family prefers! I will say, anyone complaining of dense or dry rolls, make sure you are not over flouring and/or overbaking. I used a bit less flour (I had 1/4’d the recipe so I can’t give exact amount, just that it was less than pre measured), and took them out right when they reached a light brown color on top. Best recipe I’ve used for rolls yet!
Can I freeze the dough balls to rise later (like Rhodes Dough) or do I need to bake first and then freeze?
I haven’t tried that with this particular recipe, but it should work just fine to freeze the dough (shaped into balls). I have frozen the rolls after they’ve been baked and that works well, too.
I tried it and it worked great!
could I make these in a bread machine, do you think?
If the quantity of dough fits in the bread machine, that should work (I don’t have a bread machine so I can’t say for sure, but I think it should be ok).
Is this whole milk you use? And so you add the sugar and water to the milk while it’s scalding hot? Sorry I’m knee to making buns but I’m gonna do a trial today so
I can make some for thanksgiving
In my experience any milk will work—whole is great but I’ve even used powdered milk and it’s just fine. Adding the sugar, water and especially the cold butter to the scalding hot milk helps cool the milk enough so the yeast isn’t killed. Good luck, you can do it!
Yes, you can use whole milk (I usually use 2%). And then yes, you add the sugar, water and butter to the hot milk.
This is the easiest recipe for rolls I have ever made and is absolutely the best.
They are fluffy with a lot of body and would be a meal in itself if you have enough butter on them.
It will be my go to from now on and thank you so much for posting it.
I baked them for 18-20 minutes, did have to cover with foil the last 3-5 minutes in order to get the bottom brown. This is my oven, not the recipe.
I have made these rolls a few times now and each time they have turned out perfect!
Best recipe for rolls! I made them into 24 smaller rolls and baked for 18 minutes. Perfect for thanksgiving
These rolls are fabulous! I made a double batch for a family get together and they were gone quickly. This is my new roll recipe for sure!
I tried to make these rolls three times . They were dense each time . Yeast was good ,. I let rise 2 hours each time . Seemed to double . When I rolled out they rose but not completely double and ended up dense each time. I give up!!
It’s likely you used far too much flour. The simplest way to prevent this is to weigh your ingredients. If you don’t have access to a kitchen scale, then make sure you use a spoon to lightly scoop the flour into your measuring cup, then level off without tapping. When the majority of people have good experiences with a recipe, it’s probably something you did, not anything wrong with the recipe. It’s unkind to leave a poor review on a cooking blogger’s website for that reason.
I have been searching for the perfect dinner roli recipe for years and I have finally found it. These rolls are amazing! They are light and fluffy, not dense but still have heft. I do like a sweeter roll so I think I will add the extra sugar next time I make them. This recipe is definitely going into the recipe box. Thanks Mel, these are GREAT!
Hi Mel. If you are letting these rise in the fridge overnight how long do you think they need to sit on the counter to warm up and rise? Thanks for all you do!
Hi Tracy – probably an hour or so.
Hi! Thanks for this delish recipe, I was wondering if there was any pro or con to sift the flour? I feel like it would incorporate more air but Everytime I sift, it changes the consistency of items….thanks for any reply u can give on this!
Hi there, I don’t sift the flour for roll recipes (and hardly ever for any other recipes besides cakes). I don’t know if it will change the outcome of the rolls or not to sift the flour – either way, if you do sift, make sure to measure and then sift.
These were soooo fluffy and delicious. I have been looking for a roll recipe like this for a very long time. We also used them for sliders and they were just as delicious as the day I made them.