Soft Bread Rolls
For a while now I’ve been looking for a good recipe for soft, light and fluffy bread buns. Don’t get me wrong, I LOVE bread with a good crunchy crust, but you can’t beat light and soft bread baps for for sandwiches, burgers etc. So after months of searching and several batches later I’ve come up with what I think is a great recipe.
The recipe shown here makes 6 large rolls but you could easily adjust the quantities to make more or less.
Ingredients for the Bread
- 300g Strong White Flour
- 100ml Milk
- 100ml Water
- 30g Butter
- 2tsp Sugar
- 1/2tsp Salt
- 1 7g Sachet of fast acting yeast
- 2tsp Vinegar
To Make the buns
- Put the milk, butter and water into a pan and GENTLY warm the mixture on a low heat until the butter has just melted. Do not let this get too hot, otherwise you will kill the yeast. It wants to be about body temperature.
- Sieve the flour into a bowl or your food mixer bowl and stir in the sugar, salt and yeast.
- Add the vinegar to the bowl. This is one of the secrets of soft bread rolls, it helps the yeast and you can’t taste it. It is used in a lot of air bun recipes.
- Pour in most of the warm milk/water/butter mixture and start stirring with a knife. Keep stiring until the mixture comes together into a a dough. It wants to be a fairly wet dough so add the remaining liquid if necessary. Different flours take up different amounts of liquid so you may not need all the liquid.
- Once everything is combined and you have a nice dough you need to start kneading. If using a mixer, turn it onto a low speed and let it work it’s magic for about 5 to 6 minutes. You will know when it’s done as it will have picked up everything from the sides and will be nice and elastic. If kneading by hand, you will have to knead for about 10 minutes.
- After kneading, shape into a flattish ball, put it into the bottom of a big bowl (at least twice the size of the dough), cover with cling film and put to one side.
- Leave to prove until it has doubled in size (about an hour). You don’t have to put it somewhere warm, just room temperature will do.
- Punch the dough down with your fist and bring the dough back into a ball
- Now, split the dough into 6 equal size pieces (I use a set of kitchen scales to make sure they are all the same size) and form each one into a small ball.
- Place a sheet of baking paper onto a tray and place the 6 balls onto the tray. Squash the balls down with your hand until the are about 2cm heigh. Make sure they are evenly spread out and leave a small gap between each one.
- lightly oil a piece of cling film and place over the top (to stop them drying out). Put to one side again for about 1 1/2 hours until doubled in size again. If you don’t leave them for long enough they won’t be as light and fluffy.
- Heat oven to 200C (Fan oven)
- Remove the cling film and place the rolls into the oven. Bake for about 12-14 minutes until they go a nice golden brown on top. You may need to spin the tray round half way through if your oven cooks unevenly.
- When you remove the rolls from the oven, if you want a super soft crust, cover them with a tea towel until they have cooled. This keeps the crust moist and therefore soft.
Next, you need to make the dough. You can either make the dough by hand or by using a food mixer with a dough hook (you could even you the dough setting of your bread machine if you have one). Personally I use a mixer with a dough hook.
March 21st, 2012 at 8:23 am
Great to see bread making on your blog. Have you come across Richard Bertnet’s book Dough? Brilliant book highly recommended
March 21st, 2012 at 8:48 am
Hi Vivien, I’m trying to make more and more of my own bread as it’s so much better than supermarket bought bread so watch out for more posts soon.
Thanks for the book recommendation – I’m currently on the lookout for a couple of good bread books so I’ll go and have a look at it.
April 22nd, 2013 at 11:55 am
Hi Vivien
I have tried these twice and got disappointing results each time. The texture was fine and so was the taste but they come out quite flat (only about 2cm thick). I have mixed the dough in a bread-maker then put the 6 rolls on a tray to rise covered in cling film. I did this in an oven set at just 40deg for 90min or so. The rolls start to rise then spread out and flatten. I think they double in size and the final texture is quite light.
To make the dough I put the warmed water, milk and butter in the bottom and added the mixed flour, yeast, sugar and salt on top. I sprinkled the vinegar on top of the dry ingredients. The bread-maker does the kneading and one proving but not the second.
Any idea why they are going flat? Do you think the dough may too moist (it seems OK to handle) or perhaps proving in the oven may be wrong. I have used strong white organic flour and all ingredients as per your recipe.
April 23rd, 2013 at 9:12 am
Hi Derek,
Bob here (the original author).
It sounds like you are over proving the dough on the second rise. The bread should rise up and double in size. If they collapse down and spread out, it means that the gas has built up inside too much and burst all the small air pockets (think of it like over inflating a balloon).
40deg is far too hot – just room temperature is fine.
If you want to speed up the proving process, you could put them in a gently warmed oven (around 25 – 30deg) but NOT for the full 90 minutes. At a guess, perhaps 40 minutes or so.
Hope this helps.
Bob.
May 4th, 2013 at 5:33 pm
Hi Foodie Bob
I just made a triple batch of these and they are excellent.. Going to be filled with pulled pork and BBQ sauce next weekend. Can’t wait.
Many thanks
Bob
May 5th, 2013 at 7:36 pm
Hi Bob,
Glad they turned out so well for you. Hope you have some great weather for the BBQ!
Bob.
May 18th, 2013 at 10:01 pm
Hi Bob
I have tried these three times since your helpful message. I have achieved better results but I still cannot produce rolls that look as high and light as yours. I tried the last 2 batches by hand rather than using the bread machine to knead. I have also tried different flour. My rolls are still generally quite flat and although the texture is good and by covering with a cloth the crusts are soft, they are not very light but more of a medium density. We do quite like them because they are easy to eat as a ‘sandwich’ but I would like them to be lighter. Of course I don’t expect you to explain the problems of all your followers but if you can think of what else I might try I would like to give it a go.
I still think it’s a great recipe regardless and will keep trying.
Cheers Derek.
May 20th, 2013 at 10:26 am
Hi
I just have a batch of dough proving, so not sure how they will turn out yet but excited to have found a recipe for soft white rolls at last!
However, in response to Derek’s post about the finished rolls turning out flatter than expected, I had similar problems when I first started making bread. The answer is to make sure that you form very tight balls of dough when giving them (rolls or bread) the final shape before the last proving.
You can be quite firm with bread dough, so make sure you stretch the rolls or round loaves using cupped hands and tucking in the edges underneath, tightening with the edges of your hands. I learned this on a workshop and haven’t had a flat loaf since.
Cheers
Pete
May 20th, 2013 at 3:14 pm
Soft white rolls an unqualified success using your great recipe. thanks, I’ll be making theses on a regular basis!
June 5th, 2013 at 12:18 pm
Hi Pete
I tried again taking note of your tip to keep the dough balls tight with a definite improvement to the end result. It is a small change but helps a lot. Still not perfect but good enough for me (it is quite a black art really)! Many thanks Pete (and Bob of course).
September 25th, 2013 at 7:42 pm
Am planning on baking at the weekend, what vinegar did you use, eg. White, balsamic etc?
September 26th, 2013 at 8:06 am
Hi, I just used ordinary white vinegar but any sort will do (even malt vinegar) as it’s used in such a small amount you can’t taste it. Bob.
November 5th, 2013 at 10:39 am
Hi There Is there any difference in using Butter or Stork Margerine
November 6th, 2013 at 10:28 am
Hi Kevin,
I’ve never tried using Stork to make bread with to be honest. However, I don’t think it will work very well as I’ve never seen anyone else use it either!. If you don’t have any butter you can always try using a vegetable oil instead.
November 6th, 2013 at 10:18 am
Hi Bob I tried your recipe but the dough hook on my kenwood had trouble mix the dough which clung on and would not let go Kevin
November 6th, 2013 at 10:30 am
Hi Kevin,
It will cling quite a lot but you should be able to get it off. If it is too sticky then try reducing the liquid in recipe a little bit or add in a tablespon or 2 of extra flour.
December 28th, 2013 at 12:06 pm
I love these bread rolls. I’ve tried the dough to make one large loaf and it came out perfect. Just before the end of cooking I added caramelised balsamic onions, goats cheese and pancetta to the top and it was delicious. By far the best bread recipe I’ve tried
February 3rd, 2014 at 2:01 pm
Bob,
Being a originally from the north if the UK i do like a bit of bread!! Been making bread on and off at home for years in the oven and with a bread maker… Throughout all this time I have strived to try and find a good Recipe for soft bread rolls… So after coming across your Blog I tried your recipe last night and have to say they are just perfect!!! I only wish i had found your recipe years ago…!!!
Good Work!
Thanks
Max
February 9th, 2015 at 11:34 am
Could you give me the quantities for this recipe to make twice the amount
February 17th, 2015 at 8:43 pm
Hi, You should just be able to double the quantities. However, if you do that you may want to reduce the amount of yeast a little bit (perhaps only use 3/4 of the second sachet). Thanks.
February 14th, 2015 at 6:03 pm
Wow only been making bread for a week all by hand no machinery required, just been doing ordinary loafs and they’ve been going down a treat, just decided to try bread rolls for a change and for a complete novice what a success your recipe is.
Thanks,
Russ.
August 20th, 2015 at 11:47 am
You can use Stork or indeed any of the baking margarines or even the spreadable butter substitutes such as Clover because it is the small amount of fat that adds flavour. But just be sure you don’t use one of the “light” ones which are basically water.
July 6th, 2016 at 8:26 pm
I have been trying for years to find a recipe that gives me ” lovely buns “. At last, I’ve found it, they were perfect.
October 4th, 2016 at 9:45 am
Absolutely the best recipe for bread rolls, I make a dozen at a time and freeze them. For the second proving on the baking trays I put them in a large polythene bag which gives them ample room to rise, I found cling film sticks to the dough.
March 22nd, 2017 at 4:48 pm
I tried, first time came out perfect.
Great recipe, appreciated you shared this.
July 27th, 2017 at 11:46 am
I suspect malt vinegar’s what most people will have in the cupboard – it works fine. I always warm the water, melt the butter in that and then use the milk to cool it down again.
December 29th, 2017 at 8:34 pm
I’ve just made a batch of these…absolutely yummy, they won’t last long. They’re so soft. I used my Kenwood dough hook to mix, it was very sticky but instead of flour I oil my hands and work top and it enables me to work with a wet dough.