My secret to great pull-apart rolls? A dutch oven.


You know a Dutch oven Is great for making large loaves of crusty bread. But it is also an ideal vessel for a more unexpected bake: pull-apart rolls. Here's why.

The biggest benefit to baking bread in a Dutch oven is that it traps ambient steam of the moisture in the dough And keep it close to the crust. This trapped moisture keeps the crust pliable and prevents it from setting too soon, which allows the loaf to rise to its maximum potential as it bakes. Baking in a Dutch oven ensures an artisan loaf has maximum oven spring (as well as a nice crispy crust), but it's also a great tool to use to get high-rising rolls with a fluffy crumb, as the steam keeps the surface of The crumb. Rolls moist at the beginning of baking.

Indeed, for most dinner roll recipes, you will see instructions to brush the top with milk, water, egg wash, butter, or something similar; This is to keep the crust moist and pliable while the bread is baking. If you trap the steam with the rolls, you can skip this step (although I still usually brush with butter after the bake, because butter).

Proofed dinner rolls in Dutch oven

Photography by Patrick Marinello; Food styling by Yekaterina Buitsova

You can prove the rolls directly in the pot.

It's not just about steam, though: a Dutch oven also holds and transfers radiant heat well. The heat retention contributes to even baking and proper crust formation, which means you can get a dinner roll that is soft and fluffy on the inside, but has a pleasantly crisp outer crust, as opposed to a soggy bottom (because nobody likes a soggy .bottom). It also means that the dinner rolls all bake together, so that the sides are still soft and peel off in translucent sheets as you pull them apart, which frankly is one of life's greatest joys. in other words, This baking method gives you the best of both worlds: you get a crisp outer crust but also the soft, fluffy texture of pull-apart rolls.

As a bonus, the Dutch oven makes an ideal proofing chamber. Bread needs a warm, moist environment to rise, and I've found the inside of a dutch oven with the lid on, placed somewhere cozy like in front of a warm oven or on a Dough-rising matTo be just the ticket. This benefit is unique to rolls: When we bake artisan bread in a Dutch oven, we preheat the Dutch oven before placing the loaf inside – since the loaf is larger and has more mass, the oven needs more heat to begin with. But one of the best parts of making dinner rolls in a Dutch oven is that you don't need to preheat it first. The smaller, flatter mass of the dinner rolls transfers heat much more efficiently, so you can just proof the rolls in the lidded dutch oven, then pop it right into a hot oven.

Brush melted butter over baked dinner rolls in Dutch oven

Photography by Patrick Marinello; Food styling by Yekaterina Buitsova

More butter is always welcome.

Want to get started? Try this recipe for Dutch oven dinner rollsWhich include dried milk in the dough for an extra-soft texture and a coating of melted butter in the bottom of the pot for a crispy bottom crust. But this method is not only limited to dinner rolls. You can try it with Brioche Buns, Milk bread buns, Monkey bread (Like the morning bun monkey bread in my book, Baking bread with kids) – almost anything you can nestle together to bake and what you want to be soft and fluffy. Look for a roll recipe that is meant to be baked in an 8″ or 9″ round cake pan, and use the baking instructions in the Dutch oven dinner rolls Recipe as a guide.

While buns are always a jewel of the holiday table, they are a great back-pocket recipe year-round: they make amazing sandwiches for lunchboxes, leftovers or just a quick snack. Break out your dutch oven for Golden Pumpkin Dinner Rolls – and keep it around all year long Soft sourdough rolls And Whole grain dinner rollstoo.

From November 23 to December 31, the Cherry Staub 4 ct dutch oven is $220 off!

Staub 4 ct Dutch Oven – Cherry

4.5 out of 5 stars Out of 5 stars
8 reviews Reviews

$129.98

$349.95

Cover photo by Patrick Marinello; Food styling by Yekaterina Buitsova.

Leave a Reply

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