These homemade Hawaiian rolls are soft, fluffy, and slightly sweet. They're perfect to serve with butter at dinner or brunch and can even be used to make sliders.
4¾ to 5cupsbread flourplus more for dusting work surface
Rising and Baking
4tablespoonbutterdivided
1egg
2tablespoonwater
Instructions
Make the Dough
Add yeast to stand mixer bowl. Pour warm milk over the yeast and let sit for 5 to 10 minutes. The yeast should get a bit foamy looking. (See notes for troubleshooting if it did not.)
2¼ teaspoon active dry yeast, ¾ cup milk
Add pineapple juice, melted butter, sugars, kosher salt, eggs, and vanilla. Stir on low using the paddle attachment until ingredients are mixed.
¾ cup canned pineapple juice, ½ cup unsalted butter, ¼ cup granulated sugar, ¼ cup brown sugar, 1½ teaspoon kosher salt, 2 eggs, 1½ teaspoon vanilla
Gradually add about half of the bread flour. I usually add it about 1 cup at a time to prevent flour from flying everywhere.
4¾ to 5 cups bread flour
When about half of the flour has been added, swap the paddle attachment for the dough hook.
Gradually add the remaining flour.
When all flour is fully incorporated, increase mixer speed to 2. Check it about 3 minutes in. At this point, the flour should be bunching up around the dough hook and should not look like a sticky cake batter. If more than half looks more cake-batter-like, it's likely more flour is needed. (See photos in the beginning part of the post for photos with examples.) If more flour is not needed, continue to knead the dough on speed 2 for another 7 minutes andskip to the Let the Dough Rise portion of this recipe.
If more flour is needed, add it 2 tablespoons at a time, allowing it to fully incorporate and process for about a minute after each addition until the dough bunches around the dough hook, looks stretchy, and there isn't a lot sticking to the bottom of the bowl. Once the dough is the right consistency, return the mixer to speed and and allow the dough hook to knead the dough for another 7 minutes.
Let the Dough Rise
Melt butter (1 to 2 tablespoons) and use a pastry brush to grease a large mixing bowl.
4 tablespoon butter
Transfer the dough to the large greased bowl. Cover with a clean kitchen towel and place the bowl in a warm area, free of drafts, and the let the dough rise for 1 hour. Dough should double in size.
Shape Rolls and Rise Again
Grease baking dish(es) with melted butter. Line baking dishes with parchment paper.
Dust a work surface very lightly with flour. Punch down dough. Divide into portions weighing 75 grams each. If you do not have a kitchen scale, portion the dough into about 18 equal-sized pieces.
Shape the rolls by stretching the sides of the dough and attaching it to the bottom. (Or see tutorial video linked in the beginning of the post.)
Place rolls into the baking dish about 1 inch apart.
Place the baking dish(es) in a warm area, free of drafts, to let the dough rise for 1 hour.
Bake and Cool Rolls
Preheat oven to 350℉.
Beat together 1 egg with 2 tablespoons of water.
1 egg, 2 tablespoon water
Brush each roll with the egg wash.
Place baking dishes in the oven. Bake for 18-25 minutes until the tops of the rolls are golden brown. Rotate baking dishes halfway through if your oven has hot spots.
Remove from the oven and place baking dishes on a wire cooling rack. Allow the rolls to cool in the baking dish for 20 to 30 minutes before removing the rolls from the pan by lifting the parchment. Transfer rolls individually to the wire rack to continue cooling if not eating immediately.
Notes
Troubleshooting Yeast: If the yeast does not foam in step 1, it's likely one of three things is the problem: (1) Is your yeast expired or has your jar been open for too long? (2) Is your milk warm enough? (3) Is your milk too hot?