The BEST Overnight Brioche Cinnamon Buns
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These brioche cinnamon buns can be made the day before serving, stuck in the fridge, and baked the following morning or made entirely the same day. It’s a simple no-knead dough, but the result is outstanding: a light but rich cinnamon bun blanketed with the most delicious cream cheese frosting. Kids and adults alike go wild!
When someone messaged me on Instagram telling me she had used the brioche recipe from Bread Toast Crumbs to make cinnamon buns, I was intrigued. Inspired by this Washington Post article, she she assembled the pans of buns the night before and baked them in the morning.
It worked like a charm, she told me, which inspired me to try it immediately. The method worked beautifully for me as well, and now these buns have become a holiday morning staple.
Overnight Brioche Cinnamon Buns: An Overview
- Make the simple no-knead brioche dough: whisk together the dry ingredients; mix together the wet ingredients, combine the two, and let rise — no kneading, no fuss!
- After 2 hours, turn the dough out onto a floured work surface and divide it into two equal portions. Roll out each portion into a large rectangle.
- Spread a cinnamon-brown sugar-butter mixture evenly over top.
- Roll each rectangle into a tight coil. Cut each into 9 equal portions. Space each coiled bun equally in an 8- or 9-inch pan.
- Transfer the pans to the fridge to rise overnight; then bake in the morning. Or let the buns rise at room temperature for another hour (or so) and bake immediately.
Brioche Cinnamon Rolls, Step by Step
Gather your ingredients: flour, salt, sugar, instant yeast, water, milk, melted butter, eggs.
Stir together dry ingredients. Stir together wet ingredients. Mix to form a sticky dough ball.
Let rise in a warm spot for about 2 hours or until doubled.
Turn dough out onto a floured surface and divide into two portions. Shape each into a ball.
Roll each round into a large rectangle.
Spread with a brown sugar-butter mixture.
Roll into a coil.
Cut coil into 9 pieces.
Transfer to 9-inch square baking dish. At this point, you can let it rise for about 30-40 minutes, then bake. Or you can transfer the pan to the fridge and bake the following morning.
Bake buns for 25 minutes.
Remove from the oven and frost with cream cheese icing.
The BEST Overnight Brioche Cinnamon Buns
- Total Time: 12 hours 20 minutes
- Yield: 9-18
Description
Yield = 9 or 18 buns
This dough recipe is the light brioche recipe from Bread Toast Crumbs.
The assembled pans of buns can rise in the fridge overnight and baked directly from the fridge (no additional rising on the counter top) in the morning.
The assembled pans can also be frozen. Thaw at room temperature about 6 hours before you plan to bake. Then bake as directed in recipe.
*For lukewarm water: Mix 1.5 cups cold water with .5 cups boiling water. Or, simply, use 2 cups warmish tap water.
Ingredients
for the dough for 18 rolls:
- 6 cups (768 g) all-purpose flour
- 1 tablespoon kosher salt
- 1/3 cup (77 g) sugar
- 2.5 teaspoons instant yeast
- 2 eggs
- 2 cups (454 g) lukewarm water* (see notes above)
- 1/2 cup (125 g) milk, 2% or whole
- 6 tablespoons melted butter
for the dough for 9 rolls:
- 3 cups (384 g) all-purpose flour
- 1.5 teaspoons kosher salt
- 3 tablespoons sugar
- 1.5 teaspoons instant yeast
- 1 egg
- 1 cup (227 g) lukewarm water
- 1/4 cup (62 g) milk
- 3 tablespoons melted butter
for the filling (halve these quantities if making 9 rolls):
- 1.5 cups packed brown sugar
- 1/4 cup cinnamon
- pinch salt
- 12 tablespoons melted butter
for the glaze (halve these quantities if making 9 rolls):
- 8 oz cream cheese, softened
- 2 cups confectioners’ sugar
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- pinch salt
- milk or cream to thin
Instructions
- In a large bowl, whisk together the flour, salt, sugar and yeast.
- In a separate large bowl, beat the eggs. Add the water, milk and melted butter. Whisk to combine. Pour the liquid ingredients into the dry and mix with a rubber spatula until combined; the mixture will be wet and sticky. Cover the bowl with a bowl cover or tea towel and let rise until doubled, 2 hours.
- Flour a work surface generously and have more flour nearby — use as much flour as you need to prevent sticking to your hands and work surface. I can’t emphasize this enough: this is a sticky dough, and if you don’t use enough flour, it will stick. (Watch the video if you’re looking for visual guidance.)
- Turn dough out onto work surface. Divide into two equal portions. At this point, you could transfer one half to a buttered loaf pan and simply bake a brioche loaf. Or, you can make two pans of cinnamon buns.
- Form each half into a rough ball, using flour as needed for the board and your hands. Let rest while you make the filling.
- Make the filling: Place the brown sugar, cinnamon and salt in a medium bowl. Pour the melted butter over top. Mix with a fork or spoon to combine. Set aside.
- Butter or grease with nonstick spray a 9×9- or 8×8-inch baking pan.
- Working with one round at a time, pat or roll out dough into a rectangle about 15×11 inches — it doesn’t have to be exact, but don’t go larger than that. Spread the filling over top, using your hands to spread if necessary. Starting at the short end, roll the rectangle into a tight coil. Cut into 9 equal pieces. Transfer to prepared pan. Repeat with remaining dough and filling. Cover each pan with plastic wrap or a bowl cover or tea towel and transfer to the fridge.
- The following morning, heat the oven to 375ºF.
- Transfer pans to the oven and bake for 25 to 30 minutes or until golden. Meanwhile, beat the cream cheese with the sugar, vanilla, and salt until light. Thin with milk if desired.
- Remove pan from the oven. Let buns cool briefly. Spread frosting over top or turn buns out onto a serving platter, and spread the frosting over top. Serve warm with more frosting on the side.
- Prep Time: 12 hours
- Cook Time: 20 minutes
- Category: Breakfast
- Method: bake
- Cuisine: American
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474 Comments on “The BEST Overnight Brioche Cinnamon Buns”
I had to make two batches because my siblings ate all of them before I could try one! I will definitely be making these from now on!!! These are the best cinnamon rolls I’ve ever had!
Great to hear, Anna! Thanks so much for writing 🙂 🙂 🙂 Love reading this.
Oh. My. Goodness. These are the best cinnamon buns I’ve ever made!!! Thank you for this delicious recipe.
Great to hear, Stephanie!
Can I make these Guten and dairy? If so, would you know the measurement?
These were amazing! I made 1 tweak. When I pulled them out of the fridge I placed them in the oven with a pan of very hot water and let them rest for about 30 minutes. I then baked them with the pan of water in the oven. This made them super fluffy and Moist!
Hi! Are you asking if you can make them gluten and dairy free?
I’m very curious about this. I have a friend who is gluten free with celeriac’s disease and is like to make them for her.
Is this possible to make gluten-free??
Gluten-free baking is so tricky… I would google gluten-free cinnamon rolls rather try to adapt this one to being gluten free.
Hi there!
I’ve made these 3 or 4 times now, love the taste but I have a quick question though – why is my dough always so soft and difficult to work with? It definitely doesn’t form a lovely roll like yours, its a floppy mess. It still tastes great but they come out looking terrible.
I’m wondering, because I’m not in the US, if it’s a problem with the cups and tablespoons? You give a gram measurement for the flour but the liquid and all other dry goods measurements are only in cups/spoons and the butter measurements are in tablespoons. The cup measurements are slightly different in other countries, could this be the issue? I’m normally working with the 9-roll recipe and would consider myself a fairly experienced baker.
Hi Sha and thanks so much for writing. I can’t believe I don’t have gram measurements for the liquid ingredients! I will try to update this recipe very soon. In the meantime, it does sound as though you simply need to reduce the amount of water or milk. For the 9 cup recipe, you could try 3/4 cup water until I update the recipe with gram weights. So sorry about this!
I’m in New Zealand and have the same problem. A gram measurement would be super helpful. Mines a sloppy mess (though delicious)
A simple and delicious recipe. The rolls are pillowy soft and sweet enough to skip the frosting. I didn’t bother waiting overnight and they turned out beautifully.
Really love that you provide the smaller quantity option too. Will definitely make again when the craving strikes me.
Great to hear, Irene! Thanks for writing 🙂 🙂 🙂
Hi Ali, like your other reader I also had great difficulty with wet dough and once rolled out and filled I couldn’t wait to put them away in the fridge! They look awful and nothing like the rolls in your video. Adding all that flour at a late stage didn’t make much sense to me, but I did as in your video. The dough was way too fluid so will use less water next time. p.s I have to say your oatmeal maple bread recipe is soooo yummy, have made it several times, likewise the peasant bread!…So sorry about the three stars!
Hi Ali….good morning from Broadstairs in Kent, UK. I sent a message yesterday about the wetness of the cinnamon brioche dough but baked it this morning. Wow! How fantastic! We loved every last crumb though we didn’t finish it all as it was too much for us. I take back the 3 stars and give it a definite 5. Love your website and have tried most of your bread recipes, all have been great! So just wanted to say thank you and keep up the good work. All the best, Jackie
Hi! And no worries at all — this brioche dough is very wet and can be tricky to handle. Also, I do think the UK flour absorbs water differently. When I’ve troubleshooted with people in the UK about bread recipes, so often the solution has been to hold back some of the water. So even though those brioche buns turned out well for you — which I’m so happy to hear! — you might still be able to hold back some of the water, which will make the process easier for you and will likely not affect the outcome noticeably. Thank you for your kind words and thanks for reporting back 🙂 🙂 🙂
These are amazing!! Have you ever considered using a sourdough starter in these and if so, how much? I’d love to make these with a little sourdough tang to them.
Hi Sara! And great to hear 🙂
I have not, but someone left this comment on my brioche roll recipe, which is basically the same base dough:
“I wanted to drop you a quick note to tell you that I ‘Frankenstein-ed’ this recipe of yours by adding 100g of sourdough discard (and subtracted 50g of flour and 50g of water from the original recipe). Then I divided the dough into regular loaf pans instead of making buns. It made the perfect little sandwich loaves! So delicious! Thanks again for the recipe!”
Maybe try that? Or use 50 grams starter and subtract 50 grams each flour and water?
OR: simply add 50 grams of starter without making any other adjustments. This dough is on the wet side, so I think subtracting water and keeping flour as is will probably work, too.
Thank you so much for the advice! I will definitely try this! 🙂
I would love to make these, but how many grams of butter is required to result in 3 & 12 tbs of MELTED butter? Thanks so much…
3 tablespoons melted butter = 42 grams
12 tablespoons melted butter = 170 grams (If you’re making 9 rolls, you’ll need 6 tablespoons melted butter = 84 grams)
Wonderful, thank you!
This recipe looks delicious and I plan to make it for Christmas morning. I would love to hear how I can alter the recipe to make it sourdough-risen rather than yeast-risen. We have gluten sensitivity in our family, and making your sourdough breads seems to prevent the discomfort that regular yeast-risen breads cause us. (I saw in the comments below that someone had added sourdough discard to the brioche bun recipe, but I gather that was an add-in rather than a substitution for the yeast.) Thanks! In fact if there is a standard substitution formula for yeast and sourdough starter, that would be very helpful to know!
Hi! I unfortunately do not have a standard substitution for sweet sourdough breads, which I find to be trickier than non-sweet sourdough breads. I wish I could advise you, but I might instead google “sourdough brioche cinnamon bun” which will likely put you on a better path to succes 🙂
Pssstt… you put 1.5 teaspoons of salt in the 9 rolls.
Also can you freeze the dough before cooking.
Hi! 1.5 teaspoons of salt is accurate for 9 rolls.
And yes: After you stick the buns in the pan, transfer it to the freezer immediately (wrapped well of course).
Just made the overnight version— 2 pans of nine…… made the frosting and gave the pan and frosting to our neighbor for baking in the am. We had a big rainstorm today and the cinnamon rolls baking in the oven in the morning, was the prefect jumpstart to a drizzly day. They were fantastic!! and EASY—- will make them again and have them in the freezer to whip out on a whim. Thanks Ali
So nice to read this, Mikki! Thanks so much for writing. What a lucky neighbor you have?! Happy holidays!! xo
Hi Ali! I plan to make these for the 3rd or 4th time. (Since I discovered them a few years ago I’ve been making for my family of 6 every Christmas and Easter and we all LOVE them!) Do you think I could add chopped pecans to the cinnamon mixture for a bit of crunch? Or would you say that just toasting (& maybe even lightly salting) some and dropping on top of the frosted rolls would be better? Hope you and yours have a Merry Christmas!
I think adding chopped pecans to the cinnamon mixture sounds so good! I’d do that 🙂 But sprinkling them on top would work, too. So nice to read this! Happy holidays to you and your family!
Thank you for your reply! Into the filling the pecans will go 🙂 Can’t wait to enjoy these.
I am going to try to make these without egg, any suggestion on substitutions? I will also be using non dairy butter.
I think it should be fine… no suggestions from me.
We love this recipe!! Do you think it would work to make the 9-roll recipe, cut it into 8 pieces, then bake in 2s in mini loaf pans? I want to share this recipe with a few people who wouldn’t be able to eat a full tray!
I do! That’s a brilliant idea. Apologies for the delay here… I’m likely too late. Did you end up doing it? I’d love to know how it turned out if so.
Hi Ali, I know it’s a crazy time to be posting this late on Christmas Eve, but I just stuck my pan of rolls in the refrigerator to chill overnight and want to write now so I won’t forget to later. The recipe went well for me until I cut the rolled up dough. I did a terrible job estimating where I should slice through the dough to make nine equal-size proportions! Do you have any tips for my next attempt when I reach that step in the process? The size of my slices were hardly uniform, and now I’m concerned they will bake at different rates. Thank you so much, and Merry Christmas!
Hi! And apologies for the delay here. I hope the rolls turned out well for you. My only suggestion would be to pull out the tape measure and make little scores along the dough to mark where you should cut. I do this sometimes and I find it really helpful. Merry Christmas to you and your family!
Merry Christmas to us!! Made the leap this year from the refrigerator tube rolls. I’ve never made anything with yeast – but there was no reason to be intimidated. These came together easily and were ooey gooey perfection on Christmas morning. A new tradition for sure.
So nice to read all of this! Thanks so much for writing and sharing this. Inspiring for others!
Amazing !!!! The dough came together so easily !! It rose beautifully and I did use some flour to form a beautiful rounded dough ball. Not too much as I am used to doing very soft doughs. I doubled the recipe for 18. I rolled it out on a lightly floured counter to 30 X 11 and spread on the filling then rolled it up. That felt like it was going to be a disaster as they were SO BIG !! But I kind of pleated them as I placed them on a parchment lined pan with sides. I used 2 pieces of parchment and that worked very well for turning them out. I ended up with 19 really nice sized beautiful rolls. I used canned cream cheese frosting on only a few because everyone said they were so good without the extra topping. I will definitely be making these again . Thank you l c
Wow, amazing! Thanks so much for writing and sharing all of these notes. I love the idea of jumbo rolls. And I agree: the rolls are so light and flavorful only a little bit of frosting is needed. Happy holidays!
Trust the recipe!!! These are amazing!!
Great to hear, Robin! Thank you for writing 🙂
Thank you for taking the fear out of baking bread and making it fun. Your recipes, videos and tips are precise and excellent. My family loved these brioche cinnamon buns for Christmas morning(I did add toasted, chopped pecans to my filling). Could you make them sticky pecan by putting a layer of butter, brown sugar, cream and pecans in the pan prior to putting in the cut buns? Resting in fridge or freezer and baking as per your instructions. Many thanks and Happy New Year!
YES!! That sounds fantastic. Absolutely do that. And please report back when you do 🙂 🙂 🙂 Happy New Year! Thank you for your kind words… means a lot.
I’m always on the lookout for a perfect cinnamon roll. I’m always disappointed. They are either too dry or too sweet or something. THESE rolls are absolutely perfect! Soft, fluffy, perfect sweetness….. I will never try another recipe! Honestly, every recipe of yours that I try is amazing! You are my go-to for something yummy! Thanks for all the goodness you share!
I do have a question. Can I bake all 18 of these in a 13×18 pan, or another large sheet pan? How much increased baking time would they need?
So nice to read this, Vicki 🙂 🙂 🙂 Thank you for writing and thank you for your kind words. I use a 9×13-inch pan when I double it. I think 13×18 might be too large for the 18 rolls?
I’ve made various cinnamon roll recipes in the past and am always disappointed with the density and lack of moisture. these brioche cinnamon rolls are the recipe I’ve been searching for! thank you for sharing – I can’t wait to make these again.
Great to hear, Jing! Thanks so much for writing 🙂
I have not made these. I worry about the sugar. Do you have nutritional information for this recipe?
I do not, but here is a tool you can use: https://www.verywellfit.com/recipe-nutrition-analyzer-4157076
I made these, with a cocoa filling instead of cinnamon. SO GOOD! The video was very helpful as was the tip to use a bench scraper. I have two questions-
1. How would I adjust to use Active dry yeast instead of Instant
2. Is there a way to make these buns smaller? I made a 10 buns out of the 9 bun batch but it was too large for my 2 year old to eat in one sitting.
Thank you!
Great to hear, Sam!
1. Sprinkle the ADY over the lukewarm water, let it stand for 10 minutes; then proceed.
2. I think if you were to roll the dough into a longer, narrower rectangle, that would give you the ability to cut the log into more pieces — you may need two pans if you make the rectangle really long… but you’ll get smaller, shorter rolls that might work for your 2-year old.
Are you willing to share your cocoa-filled recipe? That sounds yummy!
I had a craving for cinnamon rolls last night – too late for me to make the dough overnight. This morning, I made the full recipe and split the dough between a brioche loaf (8.5″x4.5″) and the cinnamon rolls. I didn’t want to go to the store in a thunderstorm, so I used evaporated milk and a simple glaze without cream cheese.
They are delicious! Added to my very small list of go-to bread recipes. I asked my husband if he wanted to share what was left with the neighbors – nope, he wants them all!
I will say I am completely spoiled with using the weight instead of measuring, so I had to ask Alexa what the grams would be of some of the ingredients.
I am looking forward to trying the brioche bread as well. We are still searching for a regular white bread recipe that is as good as your overnight focaccia bread, which is also on my short list of great breads.
Thanks for helping us start out our Sunday on a sweet note!
Awww it’s so nice to read all of this 🙂 🙂 🙂 Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes. I need to update the recipe to include all gram measurements — I can’t bake with volume measurements anymore either!
Wow! So so delicious. I am already an avid fan of a couple of your pizza and foccacia recipes and this is another winner! I veered from the recipe a bit and let the dough rise in the bowl overnight and then shaped in the morning rather than having them formed first and these still were so perfect!
Great to read all of this! Thanks for writing, Liz 🙂 🙂 🙂
Excellent recipe! I don’t have much experience baking but this wasn’t difficult to follow. Whole family loved the rolls. Thanks so much!
Great to hear, Elle! Thanks for writing 🙂
This recipe looks so good! Are you able to refrigerate the dough more than overnight?
You run the risk of them overproofing in the fridge with more than one night. I don’t recommend much more than 1 night if you can avoid it.
I made these for Easter and shared one pan with neighbors, who gave another neighbor a taste. Now, they are offering to pay me to make them for them!
This is inspite of the fact that I added way too much butter and had to add more flour to compensate. Oops!
Great to hear, Marie! It’s forgiving for sure 🙂 🙂 🙂
I wanted to love this recipe, but after following it exactly and refrigerating the buns over night, pulling them out and directly going into the oven… the middle didn’t cook at all. I love your other bread recipes, but this one seemed to not work for some reason. The outside that got crisp and cooked was good, but the whole middle bun + the insides of the others were complete dough. Not sure how to create an even cook on this one, as the outside was a pretty crisp and dark brown. Maybe it needs to warm to room temperature first?
You could definitely try letting the buns sit at room temperature for longer before baking them. What kind of pan are you using? Metal or glass?
A metal 8×8 pan.
Metal is great. It’s possible you need to reduce the amount of water. Are you using a scale to measure?
The rolls tasted awesome but the dough was so difficult to work with! It was way too soft to be shaped and my rolls did not look anything like yours. Maybe I need to reduce the water next time.
You can definitely reduce the water next time. Did you use a scale to measure? And do you live in a humid environment?
Yes, I used a scale, maybe my cup measures differ from yours. I guess it would more helpful if we had those in grams too. I’ve tried many of your bread recipes and loved all of them. Thanks.
I can’t believe I didn’t have weights for the liquids in this recipe! I just added them.
For clarification, does it matter if the All Purpose Flour is Bleached or Unbleached? Should the egg be large? Also, should the butter be salted or unsalted? Thanks so much!
Hi! Great questions:
Unbleached flour
large egg is preferred though any size would probably be fine
I always use salted butter… but that’s me. Unsalted will work.