The Best Monkey Bread
This pull-apart monkey bread is ooey, gooey, and full of buttery cinnamon sugar goodness. The from-scratch dough is so easy to work with!
Monkey bread is a delight that I fully believe everyone should experience. This easy, homemade version is one of our go-to holiday breakfasts. Think of it like a pull-apart cinnamon roll!

Easy-to-Worth-With Dough
Many versions of monkey bread call for using canned biscuit dough. No disrespect to those versions, but making a homemade dough is a game changer for monkey bread.
This dough is simple to make a dream to work with!
- Make the dough and let it rise until doubled
- Turn the dough onto a lightly floured or greased countertop and pat into a thick square or rectangle.
- Cut the dough into 64 equal pieces.
- Roll each piece into a round shape (doesn’t have to be perfect!)
If you end up with a few more or a few less pieces, no biggie. If the pieces aren’t all exactly uniform and resemble dented ping pong balls rather than perfectly round balls, again, no biggie! A rustic attempt is a totally valid attempt here, because it all works out in the end.




Assembling Monkey Bread
Dip the dough pieces in melted butter followed by a roll in cinnamon + brown sugar.
You don’t have to do this one at a time. It works to pile a bunch of dough pieces in the melted butter, let the excess butter drip off, and then load those buttered pieces over to the cinnamon and sugar bowl for a quick dusting.


Layer all the coated dough balls in a well-buttered bundt pan.
Try to arrange them as evenly as possible staggering them slightly so they aren’t stacked exactly on top of each other.
Let the monkey bread rise until very puffy. This step is crucial! Rising long enough here ensures a light and fluffy pull-apart monkey bread that is irresistible (as compared to heavy dense pieces of monkey bread that will only make you very sad).
Bake until golden and then turn out onto a serving tray or plate. While still a little bit warm, drizzle with the glaze. It will sneak into all the little nooks and crannies giving an extra boost to the ooey, gooey charm of this best-ever monkey bread.




Serve Warm
Without a doubt, this cinnamon sugar monkey bread is best served warm.
In fact, when I make it, my family helps devour it before it even has a chance to think about cooling off completely. The nibbly, bite-size, pull-apart pieces are irresistible.
There are hundreds of comments below of people who have tried variations or baked in different types of pans. Read through them for a whole heck of a lot of monkey bread inspiration!

Rave Reviews for Monkey Bread
This recipe has been receiving extremely high praise for over ten years. It really is the best monkey bread recipe.
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ 10/10 love this!!!! Will make again -Isabella
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ I am in love! Someone else commented that these taste like the center of a cinnamon roll and that is spot on. These are pillowy soft and indulgent. Your instructions were clear and I was able to create a picture perfect dessert. My family was certainly impressed. I must thank you so much for this recipe. I will be making these again and again for sure! -Sam
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Every piece tastes like the inside of a cinnamon roll, heaven!! I will never use biscuits again! Thanks for another winner. –Amanda
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ I made this for the first time today, and it was amazing. I did the make ahead method, and every step is informative and helpful. This really was the most delicious monkey bread I’ve ever had, It has a caramelized flavor that just keeps you going back for more. Wonderful Recipe! -Raquel

FAQ for Monkey Bread:
Yes! Follow the recipe through step #8. Cover the pan with plastic wrap and place the pan in the refrigerator before letting the monkey bread rise up to 12-18 hours. A couple hours before you want to bake it, remove the pan from the refrigerator and let the monkey bread come to room temperature and rise until puffy and risen 1-2 inches below the top of the pan (this exact measurement will depend on the dimensions of the Bundt pan you are using). Bake as directed in step #7 and proceed with the recipe. You can speed up the rising process by placing the refrigerated monkey bread into a warm oven (not warm enough it will bake the bread! just warm enough to help the rising – I preheat my oven to 170 degrees and then once it reaches temperature, I turn it off but keep the oven light on).
I have never baked this in another size/style of pan, but you could definitely experiment with a 9X13-inch pan for more of a rectangular presentation or split the dough into two loaf pans. I do not recommend an angel food cake pan; the sugar/butter mixture will leak out the bottom and make a big mess.
Yes.

The Best Monkey Bread
Ingredients
For the pan:
- 2 tablespoons softened butter
Dough:
- 2 tablespoons (28 g) melted butter
- 1 cup warm milk (about 105 to 110 degrees F)
- ⅓ cup warm water (about 105 to 110 degrees F)
- ¼ cup (53 g) granulated sugar
- 2 ¼ teaspoons instant yeast
- 3 ¼ cups (462 g) all-purpose flour
- 2 teaspoons salt
Brown Sugar Coating:
- 1 cup (212 g) packed light brown sugar
- 2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
- ½ cup (113 g) butter, melted
Glaze:
- 1 cup (114 g) confectioners’ sugar
- 2 tablespoons milk
Instructions
- In a large measuring cup or bowl, mix together the milk, water, melted butter, sugar, and yeast.
- In a stand mixer fitted with the dough hook, add the flour and salt. With the mixer on low speed, add the milk mixture. Increase to medium speed and knead until the dough is smooth, 5 to 7 minutes. Add additional flour a couple tablespoons at a time only if the dough is sticking to the bottom of the sides of the bowl. After kneading, the dough should be soft, supple and slightly sticky without leaving a lot of dough residue on your fingers.
- Place the dough in a lightly greased bowl, cover, and let the dough rise until doubled, 1 to 2 hours.
- Spread the softened butter evenly in a 12-cup bundt pan, using a pastry brush or piece of wax or parchment paper to ensure all the nooks and crannies of the pan are well-buttered. Set aside.
- Lightly punch down the dough. On a very lightly floured or greased countertop, press the dough into a thick rectangle or square, about 8 or 9 inches across. Use a bench scraper or pizza cutter to cut the dough into 64 small pieces.
- Roll each piece into a round ball shape. It doesn't have to be perfect.
- Combine the brown sugar and cinnamon in a bowl or shallow dish.
- Dip the dough pieces in melted butter and then roll evenly in the sugar mixture. Place the dough pieces in the prepared Bundt pan, offsetting the dough balls so they aren't stacked exactly on top of each other.
- Cover the Bundt pan and let the bread rise until noticeably puffy and nearly doubled, 1 to 2 hours.
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Uncover the bundt pan and bake until the bread is golden brown and the bread is baked through, 30 to 35 minutes. An instant-read thermometer inserted into the bread should read 190 to 200 degrees F.
- Cool the monkey bread in the pan for no longer than 5 minutes (any longer and the bread will be too sticky and hard to remove!). Turn the bread onto a platter.
- In a small bowl, whisk the confectioners' sugar and milk together until smooth. Drizzle the glaze over the top and sides of the warm monkey bread. Serve warm.
Notes
Recommended Products
Recipe Source: adapted slightly from Cook’s Illustrated
Recipe originally posted Oct. 2012; updated Jan. 2024 with new photos, recipe notes, etc.

I made this the day before Christmas and let it rise then bake while we were opening gifts Christmas morning. Fabulous recipe. Easy Delicious. Will make again and again. And oops- forgot the drizzle, but still loved it! Thank you and good job! We’ll be trying your giant cinnamon roll in the new year.
I’ve been making this recipe the past few years with my daughters, it’s now our Christmas tradition. It always comes out perfect. I’ve even assembled it (in a pinch) 2 days ahead, then baked day of, came out just as good. Thank you for such a great recipe! My girls say when they grow up they will be making this too .
Mel, have you ever tried stuffing a cube of cream cheese inside each ball? That’s how one of my roommates taught me to make monkey bread, so I thought all monkey bread was made like that! I’m going to try your recipe today as is because I’m sure it’s awesome, but I will be making it again with cream cheese!
We do cream cheese and a couple chocolate chips inside..so good
Good evening Mel!
Thanks for the great recipes. My daughter is vegan so no milk,eggs, etc. Do you have any bread or other recipes for her^
Quite a challenge!
Thanks
Mance
This is a great egg- and dairy-free bread recipe that can be used for many things: https://www.melskitchencafe.com/french-bread-rolls/
I would like to take this recipe for a brunch. Any idea on how best to take it? Wondering because of the 5 minutes given to flip.
It really depends on what time your brunch is and how much time you have to make it? You could make the morning of and flip the bread onto a platter, glaze, and then take to your brunch.
Do you think I could leave it in the fridge for 36 hours or so?
as in before I bake it.
I think that might be a bit too long – I usually try to stick to 12-18 hours in the fridge for unbaked dough.
Hi Mel. Fantastic recipe. I never made monkey bread before.
My problem is, it did not hold its shape when I turned it out of the pan.
Any ideas of why this happened.
Thank You, Lisa
Do you think it needed longer baking time?
Excellent served warm!
The milk is a game changer. I’ve made other monkey bread recipes before, but this one was so much better. I added the cinnamon to the dough, melted the butter and brown sugar and then carmelized it a bit before I dipped the pieces. Also used my bread maker to make the dough. Made it for my son’s birthday but I can’t stop eating it.
Made this recipe 2 ways. First way following the directions as is and it came out absolutely perfect. The second way I made it was following the comment to make it as a garlic cheesy pull apart bread…that was amazing as well. My husband and 3 boys devoured it. I will definitely make this receipt both ways again and again following the recipe as is.
This dough is heavenly! Now I’m not a huge fan of a frosting-like glaze, so in my subsequent making of this, I switched up the topping for more of a sticky bun/caramel-y feel and the pairing with Mel’s dough was A-MAZING!
Here are my alterations in case anyone else wants to try it out!
–Keep everything with the dough the same & butter the pan as directed.
–After the first rise, add a half cup of granulated sugar with a tsp of cinnamon to a medium large bowl.
–Weigh the dough into 20g pieces & roll in your hands to form balls. Add the balls into the cinnamon sugar, shaking it around each time so they don’t stick together.
–Line the sugared balls in the buttered pan, along with 1/3 to 1/2 cup chopped walnuts. Let rise for approximately 20 minutes in a warm kitchen.
–In a 2-cup Pyrex measuring cup, melt a stick of butter. Then add a cup of brown sugar and 1/4 cup light corn syrup. Mix together and pour over the sugared dough balls.
–Bake on 325 degrees for a glass 9×13 until the edges get a bit brown and crunchy-looking (you can cheat and pull a piece out of the middle to make sure it’s cooked through).
–Flip over onto a platter/another 9×13 pan, and let cool a few minutes, then eat!
First time making dough and it was right on! Can’t wait to see how this comes ou!
This is sooooo good! I added a dash of chipolte chili powder to the brown sugar dip and serve the hot gooey mess out of the oven with vanilla ice cream (no icing)… what a treat!
I’m making it now and just wondered if I have extra brown sugar/ cinnamon mixture should i add it?
This will throw you for a loop!!
Our 13-year old youngest son wanted to make Garlic Pull-Aparts and mashed this recipe with a Garlic butter recipe to make an Italian Garlic Cheese Monkey Bread.
It was awesome.
Make the bread as normal.
Rather than adding the sugary coating to the dough in step 5, he dipped the bread into the Garlic butter and placed the bread in the pan like normal.
Garlic Butter
1/2 C Butter (melted)
2 Tbsp Grated parmesan Cheese
1/2 tsp Italian Seasoning
1/8 tsp Ground Paprika
1/2 Tbsp Minced Garlic
1/2 Tbsp Garlic Salt
1/8 tsp Black Pepper
Mix until smooth
What?? This is amazing! Both because the garlic version sounds incredible and second, because WAY TO GO your 13-year old son!
I have made several different monkey bread recipes and taken it to work. This recipe by far got the most compliments!
Would this work the same with a 1/1 gluten free all purpose baking flour?
Unfortunately, I don’t think so.
This makes our Xmas morning – we now make Xmas eve- throw in fridge until early morning and then do last rise in the morning as you suggest in preheated oven – so easy and perfect every time – thank you!
Have you ever skipped the double rise on these? Wondering if O could make the dough, cut and form, and allow one rise to quicken the process.
I haven’t – I think the double rise helps make the little dough pieces super soft and fluffy.
Hey Mel! This looks amazing! Thank you for the recipe! One question: Is this a kind of dough that could be made the night before and then put in the fridge like a overnight cinnamon roll recipe? Could I let the dough do the first rise, roll the dough into balls and put them in the fridge and then in the morning bake them? Thank you so much for the help!
Yes! I do that all the time with this recipe; works great!
I am wanting to do the same (make the night before), does this affect the cooking time?
Thanks & Happy Holidays!
The cooking time should be the same as long as the monkey bread has had time to come to room temperature out of the fridge and rise before baking.
I have made this many many times for Christmas morning. That being said, it is Christmas and a crazy time of year so I buy frozen bread dough to make these and they come out absolutely perfect.
Does the monkey bread have to be eaten immediately?
No, but I think it is best served warm and fresh.
I was gifted a fantastic pan with 6 mini bundt rounds instead of a typical bundt pan (that has one large center). Never made monkey bread (or any other type for that matter) and decided to give the new pan and recipe a try! I substituted 1 tbsp Torani vanilla bean (coffee) syrup for one of the two tbsps of milk in the glaze, and though the bread was so sweet, soft and moist the glaze could easily have been omitted- the vanilla gave it that little extra touch worth using on every piece! I am both excited and embarrassed to admit: I ate myself sick that morning… as did my two kids, husband, and mother!!! This recipe is dead on with instructions, measurements, and absolutely addictive for taste! I was amazed at how well it turned out, especially considering my inexperience and the time/temp adjustments I had to “wing” for the different pans I used. If there is a better recipe out there (doubtable), I sure will never know because I love this one so much I have no reason to look any further!
Thanks so much for the review of this recipe, Leah! Glad you loved it – and I love the idea of making mini versions. So cute!
Absolutely delicious! We moved to NZ from the USA a few years ago and it seems they don’t do frozen or canned dough here for us to use in our old recipe. We’ve been missing out this whole time. So glad we found your recipe tonight. Thank you!
It is scrummy didnt even last 24 hours and was all eaten.
Loved the recipe! It’s a must try.
Also, how long would I microwave for to reheat? Thanks!
I’m using this recipe for a show, and I have to make it the night before. Will the bread sink?
I’m not sure what you mean. Are you baking it the night before or making the dough and refrigerating overnight?
I’ve made this recipe many times and it always turns out perfectly. Our family just loves it. Thank you for sharing it.
This sounds wonderful! I want to make it for my New Year brunch. I’m planning on doing it the day before up to step 5. Can I use 2% milk ? It’s what we use in our house. Looking forward to your response thanks for a great recipe
Yes, that should be fine!
I’m anxious to try this Saturday for my card game. It sounds wonderful!
Don’t you first mix the yeast with warm water?
Is it okay to bake in Angel food cake pan?
Thanks!
If you are using instant yeast, there’s no need to proof in water. I’m afraid that the caramelly filling would leak out all over your oven if using an angel food cake pan, so maybe cover the outside of the pan with foil?
I don’t have a bundt pan . Would this work on a 9×13? Bake time the same?
I think that’s definitely worth a try, Jocy. I would probably lessen the baking time by a few minutes.
I followed the ingredients in this recipe exactly. I used my bread machine to mix the dough. The finished product was AMAZING! So pillowy, light and DELICIOUS! Thank you
I thought i would try this using gluten free flour so my sister could eat some but i advise against it. Didnt turn out at all.
Made this exactly as described except I mixed the dough by hand and used 1 teaspoon less of salt since I cook with salted butter. It was excellent and I can’t wait to make it for a special brunch, using the make ahead specifications!!
I did not use the glaze as a previous reviewer said it was already sweet enough. Thank you so much.
This is my family’s favorite thing I bake all year long. Taking it to a baby shower in the morning. I’ve made it many times, and it always comes out perfect. Thank you!!
Last night, before company came over, I put the whole dish together. Left it in the fridge overnight. Took it out about 1 /1/2 – 2 hours before baking. Turned out incredible. Almost didn’t need the glaze it was so sweet. My fault it was over sweet because I ran out of the brown sugar coating and added more…so the powder sugar at the end was over kill. This is a keeper recipe. Have a happy new year!
Made this recipe several times a couple of years ago, we all loved it, it was eaten in 2 seconds flat! Lost the recipe, and finally today I found it again, making it as I type. Thanks for such an easy and incredible good monkey bread.
Was awesome!!! Took a while but so worth it
First time I have ever made monkey bread, it was delicious! Takes a while, but a nice way to spend a rainy afternoon.
Extremely easy and wonderful recipe. I like to throw all ingredients into my bread maker for the mixing/rising process, and it works like a charm. Thank you for sharing!
Can I make the dough up the day before and refridgerate it to bake in the morning?
Yep! Works great.
This was my question too. I’m kind of a novice at this dough-from-scratch thing. Can you tell me at which point I’d refrigerate the dough before baking to allow it to rise properly? Thanks!
Sure! I’d make the recipe through step #5, cover with greased plastic wrap, and then refrigerate overnight. The next morning, take it out in time to rise (probably 3-4 hours) and then bake as directed. Does that help?
I love this bread. I don’t understand why anyone would glaze it though. It’s totally unnecessary. The bread is yummy and caramelly and perfect without it.
One day I had some positive energy on wanting to make something with yeast bread, and ran in to this recipe. A bit time consuming, yes, but in the end it was DEFINITELY worth the wait!! It is beyond any human means of the word “good”, and I can’t wait to make this again!! We made an alteration for the icing by having one tablespoon milk, and one tablespoon of a butter pecan flavored creamer, as well as vanilla extract (in the past when we did confectioners sugar and milk, it tastes only of the sugar), and nonetheless, this addition made it all the better
Perfect! Go the extra mile to make the dough from scratch (unlike other recipes) and you won’t be disappointed. My husband loves when I make this!
Does it make a big difference if you melt the butter with the sugar and cinnamon? And dip it that way instead of separate steps?
I don’t think the dough will get quite as even coverage of cinnamon and sugar – I think it would clump up and not adhere to the donuts.
Can’t wait to try the finished product. I flllowed the recipe as written, but added a few scoops of instant coffee to the dough. The dough is rising now, and the water to flour proportions worked perfectly for me – after kneading, it was shiny and soft. I bake quite a bit, and this was one of few recipes that did not need additional liquid to get the correct consistency. Smells wonderful!
Thanks, Emily! Hope the finished product was delicious!
I was just wondering how long this bread stayed good? Would it still taste good two days later?
It definitely won’t be good as the first day – but maybe lightly warmed in the microwave or oven, it would freshen up a bit?
It was okay. The dough was way way way too liquidy, I also had to add about 5 cups of flour just to get it to become dough. I went step by step with it all trust me. The dough was like water basically so cut back on the milk and water. I don’t see how you’ve done this “dozens and dozens of times” without running into this problem if you used the same exact measurements on your milk and water.
I’m guessing it’ s a difference in how we each measure flour (I scoop my cup into the flour container and level off?). Another commenter left details below about how she had this same problem (with other recipes) until she double checked her measuring cups to make sure they were an accurate 1 cup. Just something to consider. Sorry it was a frustrating recipe for you!
I’ve made this recipe several times (not dozens and dozens though). I did have a problem with the cinnamon/sugar coating one of the times, but it turned out to be my fault by not following the steps carefully. I’d recommend checking your steps to confirm everything was done as directed. Hopefully it works out for you in the future. This recipe is SO much worth the effort!
This is so delicious! It’s become a family tradition for special occasions. I make it the night before and put it in the fridge right after dipping the dough balls then take it out in the morning and we have an easy, yummy breakfast! My kids love dipping the balls for me.
Thanks for posting Sara! I was just looking at the comments to see if anyone has made it the night before. When taking it out of the refrigerator in the morning, do you let it rise for a bit?
I have never made monkey bread before and was looking for a solid recipe for an upcoming breakfast event. I gave this a trial run and it was delish! I followed the recipe except I did delay baking it after I had everything in the pan. It went in the refrigerator for about 4 hours and it never lost its rise. It got rave review from my guinea pigs. Plus it was fun to make. There is something so satisfying about working with yeast bread.
Thank you for the great recipe!!
Hi, I want to bake this off in the early morning as a before work breakfast surprise for my husbands birthday, but I have no desire to get up at like 1am! 🙂
Do you think I can prepare this the day before but not bake, and then retard in the fridge overnight and bake first thing the next morning?
Yes!