Budget Bytes

21 November 2011

no-knead cinnamon rolls

$1.47 recipe / $0.15 serving
This no-knead bread is the gift that keeps on giving... I just keep finding new things to do with it!

I love cinnamon rolls but have never even wanted to think about making them from scratch because they just take too long and who wants to wake up at 4 am just to have cinnamon rolls for breakfast? Not me. Hand me a can of pre-made cinnamon rolls, please. ...Until I tried this method.

Sure, you still have an hour rise time and a half hour bake, but it's still feasible for a lazy weekend morning when you want something special. The fact that you can mix up the dough the night before and there is no heavy kneading involved cuts the prep time in half, at least.

These would be perfect to keep the hungry masses away on Thanksgiving day or as an extra special treat Christmas morning. There's just something about fresh cinnamon rolls that says "Here's some love for ya."

no-knead cinnamon rolls

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Total Recipe cost: $1.47
Servings Per Recipe: 10
Cost per serving: $0.15
Prep time: 15 min. Cook time: 30 min. Rise time: 1 hr. Total: 1 hr. 45 min. (plus overnight refrigeration of dough)

DOUGH INGREDIENTS COST
2.25 cups flour $0.50
1 pkg (2.25 tsp) instant or bread machine yeast $0.18
1.25 tsp salt $0.06
1 Tbsp cinnamon $0.15
2 Tbsp brown sugar $0.04
approx. 1.5 cups water $0.00
FILLING INGREDIENTS COST
2 Tbsp butter $0.10
1/2 Tbsp cinnamon $0.08
2 Tbsp white sugar $0.02
ICING INGREDIENTS COST
1 cup powdered sugar $0.18
1/4 tsp vanilla extract $0.07
2 Tbsp milk $0.09
TOTAL $1.47

STEP 1: The night before, combine the flour, salt, instant yeast, cinnamon, and brown sugar in a bowl and thoroughly mix. Add one cup of room temperature water. Stir until it is fully absorbed. Add more water, a little at a time, until there is no dry flour left in the bowl and one cohesive ball of dough has formed. If the dough is wet and sticky, it's okay. Cover and refrigerate over night.

STEP 2: In the morning, take the dough out of the refrigerator and let it warm up a little (it's easier to shape when room temperature). Sprinkle the dough and your work surface generously with flour. Transfer the dough to the work surface and work in just enough flour to keep it from sticking to your hands - it's okay if the dough is still fairly wet, you just need it workable.

STEP 3: Stretch or roll the dough out into a rectangle approximately 11 x 14 inches in size. This may take some patience as the dough will be quite elastic. Just keep stretching it and sprinkling with flour to keep it from sticking to the work surface.

STEP 4: Melt the butter in the microwave. Stir in the white sugar and cinnamon. Spread this mixture over the entire surface of the stretched dough. Roll the dough up as tightly as possible, stretching as you go so that you get as much "swirl" as possible. Using a sharp knife, cut the rolled log into 10-12 equal sized slices (about 1.5-2 inches wide).

STEP 5: Coat a baking dish with non-stick spray and arrange the cut cinnamon rolls in the dish. Allow the cinnamon rolls to rise for one hour or until doubled in size. Near the end of the hour, begin to preheat the oven to 425 degrees.

STEP 6: Bake the cinnamon rolls in the fully preheated oven for 30 minutes or until they are golden brown on top. Meanwhile, make the icing by combining the powdered sugar, vanilla extract, and milk. Stir until smooth. Allow the baked cinnamon rolls to cool for at least 10 minutes before adding the icing or else it will melt completely into the rolls and disappear. Serve warm!

no-knead cinnamon rolls


Step By Step Photos


dry ingredients
The night before, combine the flour, yeast, salt, cinnamon, and brown sugar in a bowl. I used one cup of whole wheat flour and the rest all-purpose. I wouldn't suggest using more than 50% whole wheat or else your rolls will be quite dense. Cinnamon and sugar get baked right into the dough - Mmmmmm!

dry ingredients mixed
Make sure the dry ingredients are well mixed before adding the water.

add water
You'll probably need a different amount of water every time you make this, so start with one cup and add a little more at a time until you get one cohesive ball of dough. It's okay if you add a little too much because you can work in a little flour the next day (as I did). Just make sure there is no dry flour left on the bottom of the bowl. I used about 1.5 cups of water.

ferment
Cover and refrigerate over night. In the morning it will be all nice and fluffy, like this.

flour
Flour your work surface well and sprinkle a little bit on the dough as well. Work in just enough flour to keep it from sticking to your hands. You don't need to knead it or work in a bunch of flour, just a tad. It's okay if the dough is still quite wet.

stretch the dough
Stretch the dough into an 11 x 14 inch rectangle. This might be the most difficult part because the dough will be very elastic. Just keep slowly stretching till it gets there. I tried to use a rolling pin but that didn't really work. I just included it in the photo so you could gauge the size of the rectangle (it's a small rolling pin).

melt butter
Melt the butter in the microwave and then stir in the white sugar and cinnamon. This is where the magic is at.

spread over dough
Spread that magical butter cinnamon sugar mix over the dough. Try to get as close to the edges as possible.

roll and cut
Roll the rectangle up as tightly as possible (kind of stretch it as you roll so you get more swirls). Using a sharp knife, cut the rolled log into 10-12 equal sized slices. If your dough is very wet and sticky, you may need to clean and dry your knife periodically.

arrange in dish
Coat a baking dish (9x9 inches or so) with non-stick spray and arrange the slices inside. Allow the rolls to rise for about an hour or until they are double in size.

risen rolls
See how nice and fluffy they got? Preheat the oven to 425 degrees.

baked rolls
Make sure the oven is fully preheated before you bake, then bake the rolls for about 30 minutes or until the tops are nice and brown. Allow the baked rolls to cool for a minute while you make the icing.

baked rolls side
See how much more they fluffed up in the oven? That's why the oven needs to be nice and hot before the rolls go in.

make icing
Make the icing by combining the powdered sugar, vanilla extract, and milk. Stir until smooth. I know 2 Tbsp of milk doesn't seem like enough milk for one cup of powdered sugar, but powdered sugar is kinda crazy like that. Just trust me and keep stirring.

apply icing
Once the rolls have cooled for about 10-15 minutes, it's safe to add the icing. Adding icing to hot cinnamon rolls will melt the icing completely and it will just absorb right in and disappear. Not good.

my favorite part
My favorite part of a cinnamon roll is in between the layers... it's all gooey and delicious... especially when the icing drips down in. Mmmm. Dangerous.

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42 Comments:

  • At November 21, 2011 at 7:34 PM , Blogger Stephanie said...

    I will try these this weekend! They look delicious. Thanks for posting.

     
  • At November 21, 2011 at 8:10 PM , Blogger Unknown said...

    These look awesome. This reminds me a bit of the technique in "Artisan Bread in 5 Minutes a Day" by preparing the dough ahead of time. I recommend the book for sure, if you haven't looked at it yet. I've been baking bread since reading it, and my husband estimates that we spent about 20 cents a loaf!

     
  • At November 21, 2011 at 8:38 PM , Blogger Nicole said...

    Looks yummy. My mom makes the best cinnamon rolls, but I can't seem to get it right. Want to know a trick she uses when cutting her cinnamon rolls? Use dental floss. Get a long piece of non flavored dental floss. Hold and end in each hand. Slide the floss under the rolled up dough till you get to how think you want the roll, cross the floss and pull. Cuts the piece right off without having to clean a knife over and over again. Hope that made sense. It is the only way we cut them. Way easy. I look forward to trying this no knead recipe! Love your site! Hope you give the floss a try, (assuming I explained it so you can understand). :)

     
  • At November 21, 2011 at 8:39 PM , Blogger Beth M said...

    Yes, that made sense! :D Actually, I remembered my mom using string once but I didn't have any and didn't even think about dental floss! Great tip!

     
  • At November 21, 2011 at 8:42 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

    Looks delicious! I might try it with a simple cream cheese frosting recipe :)

     
  • At November 21, 2011 at 10:31 PM , Blogger Tiffany the Dietitian said...

    Mmmmm. These look SO SO delicious! Keep the good stuff coming!

     
  • At November 21, 2011 at 10:55 PM , Blogger Heather Scott Partington said...

    Ooh... making these SOON!

     
  • At November 21, 2011 at 11:36 PM , Anonymous Olivia said...

    To help prevent snap back when rolling out the dough, when it starts to resist you, just walk away for 5-10minutes and come back to it. By then the gluten will have relaxed and you can continue stretching!

    I make cinnamon rolls no knead all the time using the Artisan Bread in 5 minutes a day recipe for brioche dough. Really delicious!

     
  • At November 22, 2011 at 5:40 PM , Anonymous Sarah said...

    I made homemade cinnamon rolls all of one time...and you're right, they took SUCH a long time. But these? They look so good for a holiday breakfast or a lazy Saturday.

     
  • At November 22, 2011 at 5:49 PM , Blogger Dolly said...

    Question! Do you think you could prepare these the night before - like, put them in the baking pan and everything - and instead of letting them rise 1 hr before baking, let them rise in the fridge? I'd love to make these for Thanksgiving morning but it would be awesome to just pop em in the oven instead of waiting for the final rise... Any thoughts??

     
  • At November 22, 2011 at 5:52 PM , Blogger Beth M said...

    Well, the dough needs to ferment for at least 2 hours before you go through the shaping/rolling/slicing step. So, you could start it the afternoon before, let it sit (at room temp) for two hours instead of in the fridge over night, and then shape/roll it, place it in the dish and then refrigerate it over night and bake in the morning. I'm pretty sure that would work! I hope that made sense!

     
  • At November 23, 2011 at 9:25 PM , Anonymous Erin said...

    Holiday breakfast indeed. They're resting in my fridge and I'll be up early tomorrow to bake them!!!

     
  • At November 24, 2011 at 6:59 AM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

    Thanks for this recipe—it's super easy (and rising as I type!). I took a cue from your apple hand pies, made some filling, and slathered it on half of the dough—so we get plain cinnamon and apple cinnamon rolls this morning! Huzzah! Had to cook the apples way down and reduce the pan sauce so nothing would get soggy as it baked, but I think they will turn out beautifully. Thank you, thank you, thank you!

     
  • At November 25, 2011 at 7:32 PM , Anonymous Jo said...

    This looks absolutely delicious. Would love for you to share this with us over at foodepix.com.

     
  • At November 25, 2011 at 8:26 PM , Blogger mackenzie said...

    I'm starting a batch of these tonight! I always seem to have the wrong type of yeast on hand, so I'm attempting to use a packet of active dry yeast. I proofed it in 1/4 cup of warm water with 1 tsp of sugar, and then subtracted that 1/4 from the cup the recipe calls for. We'll see how they turn out!
    Thanks for all the fun recipes, Beth!

     
  • At November 26, 2011 at 11:10 AM , Blogger mackenzie said...

    here's my results! http://www.flickr.com/photos/28534206@N06/6405997065/in/photostream
    The outer rolls in the pan got a little over-cooked, but the ones in the center were good. And the dental-floss trick was a lifesaver! I would never have been able to make such neat cuts with a knife in my gooey dough.

     
  • At November 26, 2011 at 11:34 AM , Blogger Beth M said...

    Nice!!

     
  • At November 27, 2011 at 3:09 PM , Anonymous Alex said...

    I was extremely disappointed...mine burned almost black in the oven :( I followed the recipe exactly, but after checking on them around the 20 min mark, I saw that they were ruined. It's my own fault, I should have been keeping a closer eye on them while baking....but any ideas on what could have caused this?

     
  • At November 27, 2011 at 3:19 PM , Blogger Beth M said...

    Hmm, did they rise well before they went in the oven? What type of dish did you use - metal or glass? Glass works a bit better because it transfers heat much more evenly. Also, there is a good chance that our ovens just run very differently (I have a sneaking suspicion that my oven runs a lot colder than what it's set at... I need to get a thermometer). If you try it again, try lowering your oven temperature by 25 or 50 degrees so that the outside will cook slower and allow the inside a chance to cook.

     
  • At December 2, 2011 at 2:38 PM , Blogger Cari said...

    OMG THERE ARE DIFFERENT TYPES OF YEAST!?!?!?! That explains so so so much!! I've been reading your blog for a while now and I have learned so much.

     
  • At December 9, 2011 at 7:13 AM , Anonymous Jessica said...

    I've tried this recipe twice now but my dough never looks as thick as yours. When I try to shape it, it just falls flat and won't hold the spiral. I actually only use 1 cup of water because that seems to be enough the night before to get everything mixed well. Do you think I should use less? Or maybe more flour?

     
  • At December 9, 2011 at 7:31 AM , Blogger Beth M said...

    Hmm, I don't know... my dough was rather wet and sticky. What do you mean by it "falls flat"? Does that mean it unrolled? I really stretched it as I rolled and rolled it tight. Also, something that might help is to let it rest for about 5 minutes after you roll/stretch it out into a rectangle so the gluten can relax a bit. That helps make it workable. I hope that helped :P

     
  • At December 9, 2011 at 8:22 PM , Anonymous joanna said...

    We travel on Christmas eve but are home Christmas morning. Is there a way to make this on the 23rd? Would I bake it and then freeze...and once reheated--add the frosting? Love your site by the way!

     
  • At January 19, 2012 at 12:08 PM , Blogger abrown said...

    My god I am making these asap.

     
  • At January 19, 2012 at 12:09 PM , Blogger abrown said...

    P.S. I LOVE your blog, so much. I am actually obsessed with it and have already made several recipes from it, and I only found it last week.

     
  • At January 21, 2012 at 5:42 PM , Blogger abrown said...

    I just made these, I think I had the issue of the oven being a bit too hot too, but I just turned it out down ten minutes in and they turned out great, maybe a bit browner on the edges than I would prefer. Delish!

     
  • At March 22, 2012 at 6:40 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

    Spread the melted butter on the dough and then sprinkle cinnamon / sugar mixture on top.

    Use a string wrapped around the rolls to cut them - cuts without flattening.

    Not tried this recipe yet - just hints from when I used to make cinnamon rolls before.

     
  • At March 23, 2012 at 8:59 AM , Blogger Unknown said...

    What size is the baking dish? I'd like to make some of these for my choir's Easter potluck.

     
  • At March 23, 2012 at 4:44 PM , Blogger Beth M said...

    Leanne - it is an 8x9 inch baking dish :)

     
  • At March 23, 2012 at 5:37 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

    I posted yesterday before I made the rolls. They came out of the oven a few minutes ago. Turned out well although as I suspected, browned too quickly. The oven seemed too hot and I would definitely bake them at 350 for a bit longer instead of at 425. Also it's more like a bread dough. Next time I'll use half milk, add an egg, and add a bit of butter to the dough to enrich it like the cinnamon rolls I used to make. Definitely good the way they are though!

     
  • At April 7, 2012 at 11:36 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

    I notice no eggs are used. How can I add an egg or two into the recipe??

     
  • At April 8, 2012 at 5:27 AM , Blogger Beth M said...

    Anon - These no knead breads don't lend themselves to the addition of eggs. All I can suggest is to eat an egg on the side :P

     
  • At April 10, 2012 at 10:01 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

    Thanka for the quick reply...interesting, no eggs, but they sure look gooood. I'll try it! Thanks again...love your easy instructions and blog!

     
  • At May 4, 2012 at 1:50 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

    Is there a way to freeze these? I don't think that my boyfriend and I can eat 10 of these before they go bad/stale. Would they freeze well with the icing already on top?

     
  • At May 4, 2012 at 3:43 PM , Blogger Beth M said...

    Anon - I don't think these would freeze very well, especially not with the icing. But hey, it's a good excuse to have some friends over for brunch, right? :)

     
  • At September 10, 2012 at 2:31 AM , Blogger Cooking From the Heart of a Doughmestic Goddess said...

    do I have to let these sit over night? or can I let them sit a few hours or something in the fridge?

     
  • At September 10, 2012 at 5:41 AM , Blogger Beth M said...

    A few hours at room temperature may also work (instead of refrigerated over night).

     
  • At September 29, 2012 at 1:37 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

    With Smart Balance/Earth Balance & almond milk these are easily made vegan! Delicious!

     
  • At November 3, 2012 at 10:21 AM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

    These were amazing. Thanks for the recipe!

     
  • At December 25, 2012 at 9:17 AM , Blogger Lindsay said...

    Hi Beth,

    Why can't you use butter or eggs in no knead recipes?

     
  • At December 25, 2012 at 3:54 PM , Blogger Beth M said...

    Lindsay - Butter would probably be alright, but I wouldn't use egg because the dough has to sit out at room temperature for such an extended amount of time. Eggs tend to harbor a lot of bacteria and leaving it at room temperature would give it plenty of time to proliferate throughout the dough.

     
  • At January 21, 2013 at 11:44 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

    These did not turn out well at all.. and I followed the recipe exactly. I'm disappointed!

     

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