Whiskey Salted Caramel Cinnamon Rolls Recipe on Food52 (2024)

Bake

by: Posie (Harwood) Brien

March7,2021

4.4

5 Ratings

  • Makes one 9-inch round or square pan

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Author Notes

Using a wonderful basic recipe from the back of the Domino brown sugar box as my foundation, I've taken classic cinnamon rolls up a notch with a filling of whiskey salted caramel. Ice them or not, depending on how decadent you want to get! —Posie (Harwood) Brien

  • Test Kitchen-Approved

What You'll Need

Ingredients
  • For the dough:
  • 2 eggs
  • 3/4 cupwarm water
  • 1 package active dry yeast
  • 1 teaspoonsalt
  • 3 1/2 cupsall-purpose flour
  • 2 tablespoonsgranulated sugar
  • 1/2 cupcold unsalted butter
  • For making the filling and assembling the rolls:
  • 1 cupgranulated sugar, divided, plus more for sprinkling
  • 1/4 cupmilk or cream
  • 1 teaspoonkosher salt
  • 1/4 cupwhiskey
  • 4 tablespoonsbutter, softened, divided
  • 2 tablespoonscinnamon
  • 1/3 cupbrown sugar
Directions
  1. For the dough:
  2. Beat the eggs in a small bowl. Add the warm water and yeast. Stir to combine and then refrigerate the mixture for 10 minutes.
  3. In a large bowl, whisk together the salt, flour, and sugar. Using a fork or pastry cutter, cut the butter until it's in coarse lumps.
  4. Pour the egg and yeast mixture into the flour mixture and stir to combine. Once the dough comes together, turn it out onto a lightly floured surface and knead until smooth (about 2 minutes).
  5. Place the dough in a greased bowl, cover with plastic wrap or a damp tea towel, and let rise until doubled.
  1. For making the filling and assembling the rolls:
  2. In a heavy-bottomed saucepan over medium heat, cook 2 tablespoons of sugar until the edges turn amber. Add the rest of the sugar and stir until it all turns amber and melts but doesn't burn.
  3. Take the pan off of the heat and carefully pour in the milk or cream. It will bubble furiously! Just let the bubbles die down, then add the salt whiskey, and 2 tablespoons of the butter and stir until smooth. Set aside to cool and thicken.
  4. Take the risen dough and roll it out on a lightly floured surface to a large rectangle, about 1/4-inch thick. Spread the remaining 2 tablespoons of softened butter over the dough and sprinkle with the cinnamon and brown sugar. Spoon and spread the thickened caramel sauce over the dough.
  5. Starting with the edge nearest you, roll the rectangle lengthwise into a long log. Using a serrated knife or a piece of dental floss, cut the roll into 2 inch-wide slices.
  6. Place the slices carefully into a greased 9-inch round cake pan or a square baking dish. Let rise in a warm place for 30 minutes.
  7. Sprinkle the tops of the rolls with granulated sugar (optional) and bake in a preheated 350° F oven for about 24 minutes.
  8. Remove from the oven and let cool. If you want to frost them, mix together 1 cup confectioners' sugar and 2 tablespoons milk in a bowl (adding more sugar or more milk to get the consistency you want) and spread it over the rolls.

Tags:

  • Pastry
  • Bread
  • American
  • Whiskey/Whisky
  • Milk/Cream
  • Grains
  • Bake
  • Breakfast
  • Brunch
  • Dessert

See what other Food52ers are saying.

  • Anna Rushton Olatunbosun

  • Gibson2011

  • Threemoons

  • Hanna Hussey

  • Vesna Dalbelo

Popular on Food52

31 Reviews

Practically E. August 8, 2021

Very messy to make but worth the cleanup.

TWoo February 4, 2019

Should have known better to read the comments first! Read the recipe multiple times but should have spent some time down here! Yup, the caramel seized immediately and not being much of a caramel fan, I didn't have enough experience to foresee that...20 minutes of on/off heat and stirring coaxed it back and wow is it tasty. But I do confess to taking left at "whiskey" and substituting my own flavor. :-)

Also inexperienced with yeast doughs and always fear adding too much additional flour so I tend to leave it a little sticky (hurry hurry, get it in the bowl!) and it looks like it came out fine. Need to work on distributing my innards a bit better, got a little oozy and messy.....Used the bit of remaining caramel to anoint the finished rolls.

I vote for skipping dinner and going right to dessert....Hope they taste as good as they look!

A January 28, 2018

The same happened to me with the caramel! Made it according to the recipe and it solidified immediately and irretrievably. On the second go, put all the ingredients in a pot and cooked on medium low until reduced and thickened, which worked fine.

Christina November 4, 2016

Wow my caramel turned out an absolute disaster! I have made caramel many times before but never this way adding the sugar to the pan with no liquid at first... Like other commenters, my sugar just started clumping up from the beginning, crystallizing into small clumps no matter what I did to break them up. When I finally got a mostly smooth liquid with a small amount of clumps I took it off the heat to add the milk and the entire thing seized up into a rock-solid, completely unusable gooey mess. Tried adding it back on the heat like others suggested and that made it worse. Kind of bummed that this doesn't seem to be working for most of us out here! I will continue using my old standby recipe for caramel and just substitute it into this recipe.

Anna R. March 9, 2016

Tried the caramel three times before I got something usable :( The third time, I finally figured out I could put it all back on the heat and stir until it liquefied again - but taking it off the heat to add the milk, etc. was the kiss of death every time.

Danielle Z. November 10, 2015

Is there a specific type of Whiskey you used?

Gibson2011 November 9, 2015

No idea what happened, but my caramel didn't turn out at all. It completely hardened in the pan and I ended up having to toss it. We had to improvise filling so that the recipe wasn't a total waste. :(

Posie (. November 10, 2015

Ugh, sorry to hear that! Caramel sauce can be a bit finicky -- I will say that I've made this sauce and had it seize up on me, but if you add some liquid and continue to gently heat it, it will usually smooth out so don't lose hope if it hardens at first! Keep at it!

Threemoons November 9, 2015

How many rolls does this make? Trying to gauge which pan to use...

Posie (. November 10, 2015

I'd suggest using a 9-inch round pan -- the recipe makes about 12 rolls, depending on how thickly you slice them.

Threemoons November 10, 2015

Thanks so much! Can't wait to make these!!

Jennifer November 4, 2015

Posie, I make breads many different ways, but I've never seen a recipe call for 'proofing' the active dry yeast in the fridge. What's up with that? Heading to the store Now for my cream. Yummy. These might also rock sans icing, but with a few walnuts or pecans sprinkled on the rolls before baking. The nuts get toasty and beautiful. Thanks, Jen.

Posie (. November 4, 2015

Yeah, that threw me too at first! I think it's because the water with the yeast is warm, but in the next step you use cold butter, so it helps prevent your butter from warming up too much when you mix it all together. It doesn't affect the actual proofing of the yeast. Enjoy! Toasted pecans are such a good idea (also, making some extra salted caramel sauce and drizzling it over the top before the nuts instead of icing would NOT be a bad idea!).

Jennifer November 4, 2015

Thanks. I Didn't read carefully enough. Definitely to keep from messing up the cold butter mixture. Kinda like using ice water when moistening flaky pastry dough. I'll definitely make spare caramel. I use a disgraceful amount of butter and cinnamon sugar when I do traditional cinnamon rolls and man, are they nice. I never tell folks how much. Ignorance is bliss.

Meghan November 4, 2015

About how long does it take to make these, from start to finish?

Posie (. November 4, 2015

Hm, I'd say a minimum of 2 1/2 hours (could take closer to 3 or 3 1/2 depending on how long your dough takes to rise!).

Meghan November 4, 2015

Good to know. Thank you!

Justine November 4, 2015

Please would you advise on actual quantity of yeast? Where I live it comes in 250gram bags, not individual packets. Thank you!

Vesna D. November 4, 2015

1 packet contains 7 g of yeast.

Hanna H. November 3, 2015

These looks awesome! My husband is 3 years sober, can I just omit the whiskey or should I substitute more milk? - Lame duck

Posie (. November 3, 2015

You can just omit the whiskey! It won't affect the texture of the salted caramel sauce (taste the sauce, you could even add more salt if you want a more pronounced flavor).

Vesna D. November 3, 2015

Can the first rise be overnight, in the fridge?

Posie (. November 3, 2015

Yes it could be, but if you do that, I'd recommend giving them a slightly longer second rise as they will need it.

Shaar November 3, 2015

I think these would be great to serve on New Years morning, please can you advise if they can be frozen at any stage to bake or reheat when time or head aren't on your side?

Cody November 3, 2015

Refrigerate or freeze the dough after shaping it into a log would be your best bet. I've done the same with a different cinnamon roll recipe (freezing after rolling into a log) and it let me cut off just enough for one or two at a time and bake them in buttered and sugared ramekins. Just be sure to give it time to defrost and then rise a bit first!

Lisa G. November 2, 2015

Do you dissolve yeast in warm water first or just mix in dry with eggs and water?

Posie (. November 2, 2015

Just mix it in with the eggs and water!

Michael R. November 2, 2015

Wow this looks awesome! Will have to try it. Sorry but being the complete novice that i am, can I assume that in step two of the dough, the butter goes into the the sifted mixture and not saved for later?

thanks.

Posie (. November 2, 2015

Yep, exactly! You'll add it in the way you would in a biscuit dough (cutting it in into small lumps).

Hollyanne November 2, 2015

About how long is the first rise expected to take? (in step 4 of making the dough)

Posie (. November 2, 2015

It should take about 1 to 2 hours -- it will vary a bit depending on the temperature, so keep an eye on the dough. It should be nearly doubled in size.

Whiskey Salted Caramel Cinnamon Rolls Recipe on Food52 (2024)

FAQs

How to make pre made cinnamon rolls better? ›

This hack has gained a lot of traction on TikTok and is so simple: Just pour heavy cream in a baking dish to cover the bottom of the pan. Arrange the premade buns in the pan, cover with foil and bake according to package directions. The cream adds moisture to the rolls for extra tender and pillowy pastries.

How to make stale cinnamon rolls fresh? ›

Add a little dribble of water (1 teaspoon per roll) over each to rehydrate them as they are reheated. Cover the baking dish with aluminum foil. This will trap steam and rehydrate the rolls as they warm up. This will make sure they are soft and delicious.

What can I use instead of heavy cream for cinnamon rolls? ›

This article reviews 10 of the best substitutes for heavy cream.
  • Milk and butter. ...
  • Soy milk and olive oil. ...
  • Milk and cornstarch. ...
  • Half-and-half and butter plus butter. ...
  • Silken tofu and soy milk. ...
  • Greek yogurt and milk. ...
  • Evaporated milk. ...
  • Cottage cheese and milk.

What happens if you let cinnamon rolls rise too long? ›

Can cinnamon rolls rise for too long? Yes definitely! If you let your cinnamon rolls rise for too long you can over-proof them. This can lead to dense rolls or rolls that collapse after baking.

Why did my homemade cinnamon rolls come out hard? ›

Don't Overmix the Dough

When making cinnamon rolls, mix the dough just until the ingredients are incorporated and the dough is smooth and soft. Overmixed dough leads to tough cinnamon rolls. The dough is ready when it pulls away from the sides of the mixing bowl and feels tacky but doesn't stick to your fingers.

Why do my cinnamon rolls dry out so fast? ›

Most cinnamon rolls use a yeast rasied dough. You may have simply not given them enough time for a second rise after rolling and shaping them. Because you're using a sweet dough, and then rolling it with cinnamon and sugar and butter, the yeast needs to work hard to raise the dough.

How do you upgrade store-bought cinnamon rolls? ›

13 Ways To Take Store-Bought Cinnamon Rolls To The Next Level
  1. Think outside the oven. ...
  2. (Don't) Quit waffling around. ...
  3. Infuse the frosting with extra flavors. ...
  4. Bake your rolls with heavy whipping cream. ...
  5. Brûlée the top with extra sugar. ...
  6. Make a sweet breakfast casserole. ...
  7. Use cinnamon rolls to make a pie crust. ...
  8. Add crispy bacon.
Mar 30, 2024

How do you make Pillsbury cinnamon buns taste better? ›

Add extra butter, brown sugar, and cinnamon.

The cinnamon, sugar, buttery swirls are the BEST part of a cinnamon roll and the canned variety doesn't have nearly enough. Adding extra butter, brown sugar, and cinnamon provides more richness and a stronger cinnamon flavor.

How do you make store-bought rolls better? ›

3 steps to making supermarket dinner rolls taste like homemade
  1. Step 1: Warm the rolls. The most important thing to remember is that warm rolls will almost always taste better than cold rolls. ...
  2. Step 2: Use a brush to coat the rolls in butter. ...
  3. Step 3: Garnish.

What are the best pre made cinnamon rolls? ›

Best Store-Bought Cinnamon Rolls
  • Aldi's Bake House Creations Cinnamon Rolls.
  • Walmart Bakery Cinnamon Rolls. ...
  • Kroger Simple Truth Organic Cinnamon Rolls. ...
  • Grands Cinnamon Rolls with Original Icing. ...
  • Kroger Bakery Fresh Cinnamon Rolls. ...
  • Pillsbury Cinnamon Rolls with Original Icing. ...
  • Annie's Organic Cinnamon Rolls. ...
  • Grands Orange Rolls. ...
Jan 20, 2024

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