Cloverleaf Dinner Rolls

This is one recipe I will never stop making.  My mother made these for us growing up and they were my favorite then and remain one of my favorites now.  Pop them out of the oven and just try to resist opening them up, putting some butter on and popping into your mouth.  Enjoy!

Sweet Roll Dough (Cloverleaf  Dinner Rolls)

Measure into bowl – ½ cup warm water (not hot) add, stirring to dissolve 2 packages of dry yeast.

Stir in the following:

  •  1-1/2 Cup lukewarm milk
  • ½ Cup sugar
  • 2 Teaspoons salt
  • 2 eggs
  • ½ Cup shortening
  • 7 – 7-1/2 Cups flour

Mix with spoon until smooth.  Add enough remaining flour to handle easily.  Mix with hands.  Turn onto lightly floured board; knead until smooth and elastic (approximately 10 minutes).  Round up in greased bowl, greased side up.  Cover and let rise in warm place until double (approximately 1-1/2 – 2 hours).

Punch down and round into balls, placing three balls into muffin tins. Cover and let rise until double (approximately 30 minutes to 1 hour).

Bake at 350 for 10 minutes.

I’ve Discovered my Bliss …………… Honey Dinner Rolls

Honey Dinner Rolls

The fragrant smell of bread, baking in the oven, is filling my senses … a smell like no other …… intoxicating …drawing me back to the kitchen … out of the oven comes some of the best rolls you have ever eaten.  Ahhhhh BLISS … I’m euphoric!

The be all and end all of rolls … I’ve found my Bliss … now find yours …ENJOY!

Honey Dinner Rolls

Ingredients:

  • 1 cup water, warmed to 120 to 130F for Red Star Platinum yeast (or 105 to 115F for most other yeast, or according to package directions)
  • 2 1/4 teaspoons instant dry yeast (one 1/4-ounce packet, I use Red Star Platinum)
  • 1 large egg
  • 1/4 cup honey
  • 3 tablespoons canola oil
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt, or to taste
  • 3 3/4 to 4 cups bread flour
  • 2 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted
  • 2 tablespoons honey

Directions:

Add water to a glass measuring cup or microwave-safe bowl and heat on high power to warm it, about 15 seconds. Testing with a thermometer is highly recommended, but if testing with your finger, water should feel warm but not hot.

To the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, add the water and sprinkle the yeast on top of it. Beat on low speed for about 10 seconds, just to combine; let mixture stand for 10 minutes.

Add the egg, 1/4 cup honey, oil, salt, and mix until well-combined, about 2 minutes on low to medium-low speed. Add 3 cups flour and beat until a sloppy, wet, loose dough forms. Scrape off any dough bits stuck to the paddle, remove the paddle attachment, and put on the dough hook.

With the dough hook attached, turn mixer on low speed, and slowly sprinkle in remaining 3/4 cup flour. If necessary to obtain soft, smooth, non-sticky dough, sprinkle in the full 1 cup flour that remains (for a total of 4 cups flour, rather than 3 3/4 cups, noting that the more flour used, the denser the finished rolls will be). Knead dough for about 8 minutes. It will be firm, smooth, not sticky, and elastic. Turn dough out onto a Silpat Non-Stick Baking Mat or floured work surface and knead dough by hand for 1 to 2 minutes, just to get into the nooks and crannies with your fingers the dough hook may have missed and make sure dough is very smooth and uniform in texture. Place mounded ball of dough in a cooking sprayed or lightly greased large bowl and cover with plastic wrap. Place bowl in a warm place until it has doubled in size, about 2 hours. Tip – Preheating your oven for 1 minute to 400F, then shutting it off (make sure you shut it off), and quickly sliding the bowl in so the hot air doesn’t escape is one way to create a warm environment; think 85 or 90F summer day warm environment. A cooler environment simply means dough will take longer to rise.

After dough has risen and doubled, punch it down to release the air bubbles, and turn it out onto a Silpat or floured work surface. Knead for about 1 minute. Mound dough into a ball, place it back into the bowl, cover it, and allow it to rest and relax for about 10 minutes, making it easier to shape into rolls.

Prepare a 9-by-13-inch baking pan by lining it with aluminum foil, spray with cooking spray; set aside.

Place dough on Silpat or floured work surface, and using your hands, roll it into a long cylinder shape, about 12 to 15 inches in length, and it will about 3 to 4 inches in girth. Divide the log into 12 uniformly sized pieces with a dough cutter or sharp knife. Roll each piece into a ball, creating surface tension on the top of the ball by stretching the dough over itself a bit and pinch off the bottom, tucking the dough into itself. Place each piece into the prepared pan, seam side down, uniformly spaced, four rows by three. (Dough may also be rolled into just a simple ‘plain ball’, without pulling on the top surface of dough to create tension and not bothering to pinch off the bottom a bit, but I find they rise better and are fluffier if they’re pinched off rather than just round dough globes)

After all pieces are in the pan, cover it with plastic wrap and allow to dough to rise for about 30 minutes. While dough rises, preheat oven to 350 degrees. A good place for this rise is placing baking pan on the stove top while oven is preheating for the carryover warmth.

Prepare honey-butter mixture by melting butter in a microwave-safe bowl on high power, about 1 minute. To the melted butter, add 2 tablespoons honey and stir to combine; set aside. After the rolls have risen and before baking, brush tops and sides of dough with the honey-butter mixture, getting into the sides and crevices and with a pastry brush. Bake rolls for about 18 minutes or until golden; they bake up very fast and watch them closely so the honey-butter mixture doesn’t burn in this very hot oven. Allow rolls to cool before serving.

Recipe Source:  averiecooks.com

Honey Dinner Rolls

Rosemary Garlic Rolls

This “Sweet Roll Dough” is a recipe my mother gave me.  I have such wonderful childhood memories of my mother baking every Saturday morning and helping her.  She taught me to bake and I always looked forward to helping – it was our time together in the kitchen.  Usually when we had “company” for dinner or for the holidays she would bake cloverleaf dinner rolls with this recipe.  I could easily eat 3 or 4 of them, they were that good!  She also made cinnamon rolls as a special treat.  What would we do without our Mothers?  I know I am lucky to have the mother I do – thank you for this favorite recipe for “Sweet Roll Dough” and for all the special memories!

I was making tortellini soup and still had some rosemary in my garden to use up and thought a rosemary garlic roll would be a perfect accompaniment.  This recipe is very versatile and I’ve used it for cloverleaf dinner rolls, cinnamon rolls and now garlic rosemary rolls.

Sweet Roll Dough (Cloverleaf  Dinner Rolls)

Measure into bowl – ½ cup warm water (not hot) add, stirring to dissolve 2 packages of dry yeast.

 Stir in the following:

  •  1-1/2 Cup lukewarm milk
  • ½ Cup sugar
  • 2 Teaspoons salt
  • 2 eggs
  • ½ Cup shortening
  • 7 – 7-1/2 Cups flour

 Mix with spoon until smooth.  Add enough remaining flour to handle easily.  Mix with hands.  Turn onto lightly floured board; knead until smooth and elastic (approximately 10 minutes).  Round up in greased bowl, greased side up.  Cover and let rise in warm place until double (approximately 1-1/2 – 2 hours).

Punch down and round into balls, placing three balls into muffin tins. Cover and let rise until double (approximately 30 minutes to 1 hour).

 Bake at 350 for 10 minutes.

For rosemary garlic rolls I followed the recipe above except instead of shaping into balls I rolled the dough into a rectangle and spread a mixture of chopped garlic and rosemary, with softened butter onto the dough.  I then rolled the dough and cut slices to make the rolls and let rise for approximately 1 hour.

The scent that filled the kitchen was heavenly and the taste was divine!  Enjoy!