I've been wanting to try my hand at bread baking again and thought these Classic Dinner Rolls from Fleischmann's were a good place to start. Even though I browned them a little too much, I decided to share the recipe with you because it's a fairly easy one, especially if you let your mixer do all the work. Since it makes just enough for your 10 inch oven, if you mess it up like I did, you won't be wasting a half a bag of flour. I used just the two cups of flour and should have added more as the dough was extremely sticky. Even though it's in the fifties today, I placed my oven on the deck in the warm sun for 30 minutes and they rose beautifully. I used too many coals but would suggest 10 in a ring around the bottom of the oven and one ring around the top with 4 briquettes in the center. They were very flaky and good and don't forget to brush them with melted butter when they're done. I ended up eating all the buttery, crispy bottoms and the crows polished off the rest so I guess it wasn't a total loss.
Classic Dinner Rolls
2 cups all-purpose flour, or more if needed
1 envelope Fleishman's RapidRise Yeast
2 Tblsp sugar
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 cup milk
1/4 cup water
2 Tblsp butter
Lightly oil or spray 10 inch dutch oven.
Combine 3/4 cup flour, undissolved yeast, sugar and salt in large bowl.
Heat milk, water and butter until very warm (120 to 130 degrees F).
Add to flour mixture.
Beat 2 minutes at medium speed of electric mixer, scraping bowl occasionally.
Add 1/4 cup flour; beat 2 minutes at high speed.
Stir in remaining flour to make soft dough.
Knead on lightly floured surface until smooth and elastic, about 8-10 minutes.
Cover; let rest 10 minutes.
Shape dough into 10-12 balls.
Place in prepared dutch oven.
Cover; let rise in warm draft-free place until doubled in size, about 30 minutes.
Bake at 375 degrees for 20-25 minutes or until done.
Brush with additional melted butter, if desired.
| Form dough into balls and place in well oiled dutch oven Let rise for 30 minutes or until doubled in size Bake for 20-25 minutes at 375 degrees A little brown on top but still flaky and light |
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mmmmm fabulous
ReplyDeleteThanks Kathy, I know the crows liked them! Liddy
ReplyDeleteLooks awesome! I'm not sure why I always shyed away from anything with yeast, I guess it's for the whole "let rest" part. I don't have time to rest, those kids are hungry now. lol. I may need to step away from my comfort zone of biscuits and give these a try. Seems pretty easy. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteScott
I know what you mean Scott, until I started this blog I had never made yeast bread from scratch. The Rapid Rise Yeast makes this one fairly quick and easy, let us know how they come out, thanks! Liddy
ReplyDelete