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Dinner rolls read to eat

Dinner Rolls-aka Red Neck Rolls

It is not a bad term Red Neck Rolls.  It refers to the soft white bread which makes these yeast rolls so darned good.  They are simple rolls, but simple does not mean boring or uninteresting.  And, I've developed a twist, pun intended (you'll see) in the notes.

Course Bread
Cuisine American
Keyword Dinner rolls, Garlic rolls, Hamburger buns, hotdog buns, onion rolls, Soft rolls, Yeast rolls
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Fermenting 2 hours
Total Time 30 minutes
Servings 12 People
Author Dann Reid

Ingredients

Milk Bread

  • 18.75 g Fresh yeast 7 g Instant
  • 240 g Whole milk, room temperature
  • 228 g Bread flour
  • 185 g Cake flour
  • 18 g Sugar
  • 8 g Salt
  • 56 g Whole unsalted butter, room temperature, diced

Instructions

Mix the dough

  1. Add the flours, salt, sugar, butter and yeast to the mixing bowl. Use the dough hook on slow, add the milk slowly to allow it to form a ball. As the dough mixes, the butter will blend into the dough. Mix the dough until all the ingredients are incorporated and the dough forms a ball.

  2. Place the dough into a lightly buttered bowl, cover the bowl with plastic wrap and place in a slightly warm area to ferment for about 30 minutes. Remove the dough to your work space and start portioning the dough.

  3. I like big buns. Yeah, that’s silly but it’s true. Dinner rolls I scale at 2 ounces and hamburger buns 5 ounces. Hot dog rolls I make 4 ounces.

  4. I prefer baking my dinner rolls in a cake pan so they are forced to rise high and I also like them touching so I get all the soft edges. If you prefer individual rolls, place them spaced on a sheet pan instead. In either case I brush them lightly with milk to help get the color. For an extra yummy treat, when they come out of the oven, brush the tops with Parmesan cheese and garlic powder mixed with melted butter!

Recipe Video

Recipe Notes

As rolls or burger or hot dog buns, these are good.

I've lit on an idea which makes perfect sense for garlic rolls and it worked.

I prepare the dough as if I were making Danish, but instead of cream cheese filling between the dough, I add garlic butter!  Then, proceed as if making Danish.

Boy, Howdy!, are those good.

Here's a link to a video of me making them.