These rolls are a family tradition. Outsiders don’t necessarily adore them the
way my brother and I do. My Grandma Kelly would make these before we’d visit,
freeze them, and then serve them to us each morning piping hot from the oven. I kind of think she probably made other breakfast
foods to go with the rolls, but I don’t recall eating anything else but these
as I sat in her cozy kitchen in the Santa Cruz mountains, watching game shows
with Grandpa Kelly as he sat in his EZ chair next to the kitchen table.
These rolls have a nice thin crust on the outside, and are light,
moist, and tender on the inside. Because you butter the dough and fold it over, they're easy to open up to butter the middle again once they're baked. Yeah, these aren't low fat. Piping hot with melty butter. So good. Mmmm…I could eat half a pan by myself. They’re also delicious eaten with leftover turkey and gravy.
Ingredients:
- 3 cups milk
- 1 stick butter
- 1/2 cup mashed potatoes
- 3 tablespoons sugar
- 1 1/2 teaspoons salt
- 4 teaspoons dry yeast
- 1/3 cup warm water
- 3 eggs, well beaten
- 8 cups King Arthur Unbleached All-Purpose Flour, plus more for dusting
- 1 stick butter (maybe more)
Instructions:
In a large saucepan over medium-high heat, scald the milk
(bring just to a boil). Pour into a very
large heat-proof mixing bowl. Add 1
stick butter. Allow to sit for about 30
minutes to melt butter and then cool slightly.
In a small bowl, mix the yeast and 1/3 cup warm water. Sprinkle with a little sugar so that when it
activates, you’ll be able to see it’s alive by the bubbling action.
When the milk/butter mixture is just warm (105°-115°F),
whisk in mashed potatoes, sugar, salt, and yeast mixture. Whisk in 4 cups of flour. Then whisk in beaten eggs. Switch to a sturdy spoon and stir in the
remaining 4 cups of flour. Stir until
well mixed. Dough will seem more like a
thick batter than a bread dough.
Place in a very large greased bowl (I use my Tupperware “That’s
a Bowl”), sprinkle with a little flour, cover with plastic wrap and a clean wet
dish towel. Set in a warm place to
rise. Let rise for 1- 1 1/2 hours, or
until doubled.
While dough rises, butter 5 cake pans (I use disposable
aluminum) and preheat oven to 400°F. Soften second stick of butter on a
microwavable plate in the microwave.
Flour a sheet pan to hold the cut rolls before they go into the pan.
Once dough is doubled, punch down and then turn out onto a
well-floured surface. Generously
sprinkle with more flour. Flatten to
about one-inch thickness. Cut into
circles with a 2” biscuit cutter. Set circles aside on the floured sheet pan.
Gently knead scraps and cut more circles until you can cut
no more.
Take one circle at a time and dip half of one side in the
softened butter. Fold circle in half and
press deeply along the rounded edge with your fingertips. Place shaped rolls into pan around the
outside first, and then make an inner circle.
Fill each pan up.
Cover pans with plastic wrap and let rise for about 1 hour,
or until doubled.
Bake at 400°F
for about 15 minutes, or until deep golden brown on top. Remove from oven and allow to cool, or get
one out quickly and put some butter in the middle and enjoy.
Serve hot or allow to cool completely, wrap in heavy-duty
aluminum foil, and freeze. Reheat by
placing in a 350°F
oven for 15-20 minutes. That’s how I
would enjoy them for breakfast at Grandma’s house.
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