This recipe is brought to you in partnership with Red Star Yeast. I originally published this recipe in 2015 and have since added new photos and more helpful success tips. I also made a few small changes to the recipe which are reflected in the printable recipe below. These soft, flaky, golden honey butter rolls might just be my very favorite rolls to make. I mean, I love my classic dinner rolls, but with the addition of honey, both in the rolls and on top? These rolls are the bee’s knees! I’ve made a few small changes to this recipe over the years. The recipe used to include granulated sugar, for proofing the yeast, but you can actually just use a teaspoon of honey for this! (Convenient, since you’re already using honey in the dough.) I’ve also extended the kneading time to 8–10 minutes, so they’re extra soft. If you’ve made these garlicky homemade breadsticks before, the kneading instructions are exactly the same. This is an old-fashioned, made-with-love dinner roll recipe, with honey butter going in and on the rolls.
Ingredients You Need for This Rich Dough
Making rolls from scratch may sound intimidating and time-consuming, but most of that time is hands-off. If you’re new to baking bread, reference my Baking with Yeast Guide.
Rich dough: The softer the bread, the more fat in the dough. For example, this dough includes whole milk, butter, and egg. Recipes like my easy cinnamon rolls, raspberry sweet rolls, pizza pull-apart rolls, sweet potato dinner rolls, and brown butter sage dinner rolls all start with a rich dough. Lean dough: The crustier and chewier the bread, the less fat in the dough. Recipes like chewy homemade bagels and soft pretzels, pizza dough, focaccia, and artisan bread all use a lean dough.
You need 7 ingredients total: The 1st step is to proof your yeast, a step I take even if I’m using instant yeast. All you do is mix the yeast with the warm liquid (milk), and a little sugar (honey). Cover and let it sit for 5–10 minutes until foamy and frothy on top. This proves your yeast is active and ready to get to work: Now you’ll add the rest of the dough ingredients. The process is really easy, and kneading is an important step.
Honey Butter Rolls: Kneading the Dough Is Key
Pictured on the left below is the dough after kneading. It’s smooth and stretchy, and ready to rise. Place the dough in a large greased bowl, turn the dough to coat it in the oil, and then cover it and set it aside. It will double in size in about 1–2 hours, pictured on the right. The dough should feel slightly tacky, but not overly sticky. On a lightly floured work surface, using the heels of your hands, stretch and fold the dough with gentle motion. If you’d like a visual of how to knead the dough by hand, you can watch the full video tutorial in my post on how to knead dough.
Shaping the Rolls
I didn’t snap a picture of the rolls after rising, but they puff up quite a bit. Then, bake until golden brown. Arrange them in a greased baking pan, loosely cover, and let the shaped rolls rise for another hour before baking.
Honey Butter Topping
You’ll have extra honey butter to serve alongside the rolls. Make sure your butter is super soft, so you can easily mix it with the honey. I just use a fork to do this, but you could use an electric mixer if you’d prefer. As soon as they’re out of the oven, spread the honey butter on top of the warm rolls. (Just use a knife, or an icing spatula also works great for this.)
How Are These Different?
My popular soft dinner rolls are flaky, soft, and buttery. And so are today’s honeyed version. But today’s recipe produces slightly sweeter and richer-tasting rolls, sort of like those “Hawaiian rolls” you can purchase at the store. They’re a real treat! Whole wheat version: Try my honey whole wheat dinner rolls. The make-ahead/overnight option detailed in the Notes below is especially helpful if you want fresh-baked honey butter rolls for a big holiday meal, such as Easter brunch or Thanksgiving dinner. Or, you know, Tuesday. 😉