Home » Side Dishes » Easy Yeast Rolls

Easy Yeast Rolls

Just a dozen easy yeast rolls? You got it. No more, no less, and all the easy steps you need to make light, airy rolls anytime you need them. 

brush spreading warm butter over dinner rolls in a muffin tin

This recipe was originally published in March, 2014

Yeast rolls seem like they terrify way too many people. Are you one of them? Or maybe you’ve been searching for the softest, most flavorful easy yeast rolls  that don’t make a blue ton or use 3 pounds of flour to put together.

You just need 12!

No matter what your situation, these easy yeast rolls will do it. This version is made by rolling two balls of dough about 2 inches in diameter and putting them side by side in a muffin tin to rise. That’s how you get the split down the middle. We called these butt rolls growing up. You can see why obviously.

If you don’t want to roll balls, just put them in the muffin tin in one larger ball or place them in a round cake pan barely touching–that’s another easy way to get your easy yeast rolls done with less fuss.

They’ll emerge from the oven so soft, warm and begging for a smear of butter and jam.

a close up of one dinner roll

How to make these easy yeast rolls

  • You’ll have to tackle yeast. Yes, I know. But you can do it. If you need some help, check out my post on how to activate yeast. It takes about 5 minutes. You can handle it. You can also watch me activate yeast on YouTube. 
  • Over the years I’ve tried a lot of flours–and a lot of brands of flours–to find one that works best. I actually find that the cheaper the flour is, the better it works, resulting in a lighter dough. If you want to use just all purpose flour, my favorites are King Arthur, Aldi’s flour or Hogsdon Mills from Walmart. I do not recommend Pillsbury or Gold Medal by any stretch.
  • Bread flour is also excellent here and something that I really just started using in the last year and a half or so. I really like it here–it has more gluten in it and gives your dough more structure as it rises and I think the the yeast rolls are lighter. I like King Arthur for bread flour. You could also do half all purpose and half bread flour if you wanted to go that route.
  • Avoid working too much flour into your dough when you knead it on the counter. A little stickiness won’t hurt anything. Keep your hands floured and avoid dumping it on the dough itself.
  • If you want a stronger yeast flavor in your dough, let it rise in a cooler area for longer–the yeast will develop more fully and give you that signature flavor.

The difference between active dry yeast and instant yeast and how to swap them

There have been tons of questions about the difference is between active dry and instant yeast. This recipe calls for active dry yeast which needs to be activated in warm water before using it. I use active dry yeast because it was the standard type of yeast developed before instant and most time trusted recipes are written for that type–but one isn’t necessarily better or worse than the other.

Instant yeast can be activated in water OR it can be added dry right into the flour or dry ingredients and then added to your recipe. Instant yeast does not rise faster than active dry despite the “fast rise” on the package.

If you only have instant yeast on hand

If you only have instant/rapid rise yeast on hand, add the water (warm) that’s used in the recipe in with the eggs and oil. Then open the package of yeast and add it into the flour before adding it to the recipe and proceed as the recipe instructs.

Remember: Instant yeast can still fail

Just because you don’t have to activate instant yeast doesn’t mean it will just automatically rise. Your water must still be the correct temperature (luke warm) and your other ingredients needs to be room temperature as well. Too cold and the yeast still won’t wake up and leaven your rolls.

Not looking to work with yeast? Try my no-yeast quick rolls  and give either version a big smear of my slow cooker apple butter.

How to develop a stronger yeast flavor

Yeast doughs develop flavor while they rise. The longer the rise, the more yeasty flavor that will develop. In order to do this, rise your dough in a cool location.

70-80 degree rooms will produce a doubled dough in 1 to 2 hours but to boost flavor, try moving your dough to a cooler part of your house or even a garage or closet that’s about 60 degrees until it doubles in size.
You can rise the dough in the refrigerator but only until it’s doubled–3 to 4 hours.

Can I rise the dough all night in the refrigerator?

Not in this case. I’ve tried it and the yeast amount is too aggressive for a long slow rise resulting in the digestion of all of the gluten in the flour. When morning comes you have a soup of sloppy dough you’ll have to throw out.

If you want to do an overnight or refrigerator roll, you’ll need a recipe written specifically for that process.

Watch me make these rolls on YouTube

Get instructions for this recipe as a loaf of bread here.

How to make these rolls ahead

Freeze them unbaked

The best way to make these ahead is to do the first rise, shape the dough, then freeze the dough balls on a cookie sheet or in the baking pan you want to bake in.

When you want to bake, remove from the freezer, place the dough balls in a greased muffin tin (if you didn’t freeze them in it) and cover with greased plastic wrap. Let the dough rise until doubled which will take 6 to 12 hours then bake.

Freeze them already baked

You can also bake the rolls and freeze them in an air tight container then wrap them in foil and reheat in a low oven for 10 to 12 minutes.

brush spreading warm butter over dinner rolls in a muffin tin

Homemade Yeast Rolls

The perfect recipe for a dozen delicious yeast rolls.
Prep Time 2 hours 30 minutes
Cook Time 12 minutes
Total Time 2 hours 42 minutes
Servings 12 people
Author Rachel Ballard

Ingredients
  

  • 1 cup water about 110 degrees or just slightly warmer than lukewarm
  • 1 package active dry yeast *see note 1 for using instant yeast instead
  • 3 tablespoons granulated sugar
  • 2 tablespoons flavorless oil I prefer avocado but vegetable or canola also works
  • 1 egg at room temperature
  • 3/4 teaspoons salt
  • 3-3 1/2 cups all purpose flour

Instructions
 

  • In a large bowl, dissolve the yeast in the warm water.
  • Add the sugar, oil, egg, salt, and half of the flour and mix until just combined.
  • Add one more cup of flour and mix until the flour is combined again.
  • Add between 1/2 of a cup to 1 whole cup of the remaining flour as needed until the dough comes together and is soft but not gooey. (Usually takes about 3/4 of a cup for me, but will depend on weather and humidity)
  • Spray the top with cooking spray and cover with plastic wrap.
  • Allow to rise in a warm place for one hour or until doubled.
  • Turn dough out onto a floured surface and knead 4 or 5 times until the dough is slightly smooth.
  • Spray muffin tin with cooking spray.
  • Pinch off balls of dough about 1 1/2 inches in diameter and place two in each muffin tin side by side.
  • Allow to rise about one hour more until doubled again.
  • Bake at 400 for 12-15 minutes and brush melted butter over the tops when you take them out of the oven.

Notes

Note 1: If using instant yeast, add the warm water called for to activate the yeast to the bowl with the sugar, oil, egg and salt. Add the packet of yeast in to the bowl when you add  the first half of the flour and continue with the recipe as written. 

Nutrition

Calories: 171kcal
Tried this recipe?Tag us on Instagram @feastandfarm and hashtag it #feastandfarm
Course Side Dish
Cuisine American

Similar Posts

285 Comments

    1. Eh…no it’s not but you will have to do the recipe differently. You’ll have to mix the yeast into the flour directly (just dump it in dry) and then mix that into the recipe. Just put warm water in your bowl instead of activating it first. Instant yeast doesn’t need to be activated–that’s the only difference. –Rachel

    1. Hey Jennifer, you sure can. You’d want to treat them like frozen bread dough you buy at the store if you do. To thaw, place them in a greased pan of your choice covered with greased plastic wrap and allow them to rise until doubled in size which could take 4 to 6 hours or more depending on the temperature in your house. Should work just fine though. 🙂 –Rachel

    1. Hey Nelda,

      It can but when it comes to baking it’s best to do it in two separate bowls and not in one large one. I’ve found that baked goods don’t always turn out well just by chucking everything off in one bowl together like you can with savory dishes. –Rachel

    1. In a mini muffin pan? No Laurie I don’t think I’d do that if yours is the size of mine. Your rolls would have to be the size of marbles to make them fit in there and then to bake them they’d be really tiny. You need a regular muffin tin for best results or you can roll balls and place them in a 9 inch round cake pan or even a 9×13 pan and they work great as well. –Rachel

  1. OMGosh, they are beautiful. And yes the whole house smells like a bakery, now I get the whole kneading bread concept. I was lost in thought before I knew it and forgot what I was doing. Baking bliss ???

  2. Third time trying to make these yeast rolls can’t get the dough to rise help. I watched video still can’t do it.

    1. Hey Robin, if the rolls won’t rise it has to be your yeast. Here are my thoughts:
      1) What yeast are you using? There’s active dry and instant yeast. Both come in packets. Make sure you have active dry.
      2) Is your yeast still within its expiration date? Check the back and see.
      3) Make sure your water is lukewarm. Not too hot and not too cold. Make sure it bubbles in the measuring cup with the water before proceeding. If you see it bubble and foam then you’ll know it is alive. I have a YouTube video for how to activate yeast and a written blog post with pictures up here on the site you can reference.
      4) As long as your yeast is alive when you add it to the recipe, then it’s still alive after its mixed. Bread needs temperatures around 80 degrees to rise properly. If your house is cold (65-70 degrees) you can expect your dough to take up to twice as long to rise as mine does.

      Hope that helps.
      –Rachel

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




About the Author

Rachel Ballard, RN, BSN brings more than 20 years of professional nursing expertise to Feast and Farm. With a love for nutrient dense foods that support wellness, she works to distill complex health information and current trends into recipes that fuel the best version of yourself. Read more about Rachel here.