These pull apart no-knead sourdough dinner rolls are soft and fluffy with great flavour. The perfect side for any meal, served warm with butter.

Photography by Alexandra Daum.
This no-knead recipe for sourdough dinner rolls makes delightfully soft, pull-apart rolls with amazing flavour. Serve warm with a smear of butter for a perfect side for any meal.
We love everything about these rolls. And with sourdough getting more and more popular, this recipe is a great alternative to traditional dinner rolls. With their golden crust, fluffy crumb, and great sourdough flavour, who wouldn’t love one of these to accompany a hot soup or stew, or stuffed with charcuterie for a quick bite.
These use a no-knead method so the active time needed is really short! There are a couple things to keep in mind about the ingredients, so be sure to read through everything here before starting.
Ingredients
- Flour: a mix of all-purpose and bread flour make the best rolls.
- Salt: fine grain sea salt adds the best overall flavour.
- Milk: whole milk is best, but lower fat types can be used in a pinch.
- Starter: active sourdough starter, fed and at the peak rising point. It can be made with any type of wheat flour (rye, plain, etc.)
- Butter: soft butter is best, at room temperature or slightly warmer.
- Eggs: again, at room temperature (see more on this below). We always use large eggs.
- Sugar: plain white sugar for that old-school dinner roll taste!
Method
Tips and Notes
You can store any leftover rolls in an airtight container, bread bag, or tightly wrap and freeze them up to 3 months. defrost them in the fridge and simply reheat before serving. If you have any leftovers that aren’t at peak freshness, don’t toss them out – cut them up and make sourdough croutons for soups or salads.
No egg wash needed! You don’t need an egg wash to get a beautiful golden crust on these rolls. And, we actually recommended not using one- it can prevent the rolls from rising fully during baking.
If you live in a very warm climate, the rising time will be reduced. Keep an eye on the dough and the buns after shaping, but you’ll typically need only about half the time listed in the baker’s schedule. Make the dough in the morning rather than evening so that you can see how it’s doing (it can be refrigerated overnight before shaping).
Related: How to Make Sourdough Starter
We use a blend of bread flour and all-purpose flour. Bread flour contains slightly more gluten than all-purpose flour and will help in shaping your rolls and enhance their final texture. However, if you don’t have bread flour, all-purpose will be just fine.
If the terms used are unfamiliar, please see this post on how to stretch and fold sourdough.
Room Temperature Ingredients
It is absolutely vital that all of the ingredients are at room temperature before starting. Any cold ingredients, including milk or eggs, will slow down the proving time so much that it will seem that the dough isn’t rising at all.
Make sure to move any refrigerated ingredients to the counter to warm up before beginning. If you forget, you can heat the milk slightly (no warmer than skin temperature) and soften the butter in the microwave. Eggs can be warmed by placing them into a dish of warm water for 10 minutes.
Shaping the Rolls
When shaping the rolls, a good dusting of flour on a clean work surface is essential. We share photos above of how to fold and shape the dough before their final proof.
Basically, you need to lightly coat one side of each dough ball in a dusting of flour. Then, fold from the floured side in, stretching slightly, to bring the dough around and in to form a tight ball.
Next, turn each ball over onto a lightly floured surface and using both hands, rotate and pull the dough ball counterclockwise to create surface tension on the top of the ball. This will form a taut ‘skin’ on the outside of the dough which will help the rolls keep their shape during the final proofing and baking stages.
This is much easier if the dough has been chilled after doubling in size. You can skip that step but it’s not recommended unless you’re a sourdough expert.
Baker’s Schedule
This recipe makes a great weekend bake, assuming you have two consecutive days off. If time is an issue, you have the option to leave the dough in the refrigerator for a longer bulk fermentation of up to 24 hours. Below, we break down the baking schedule for ease of reference:
DAY ONE
8:00PM: Mix the dough. Over the next hour, stretch and fold the dough several times, with 20 minutes between each round. A minimum of three stretch and folds is needed to help develop the gluten.
9:00PM: Cover well and set aside at room temperature (about 20°C or 68°F) to rise until doubled, or about eight hours.
DAY TWO
7:00AM (or when you get up): refrigerate the dough, still well covered, to chill it before shaping. This is semi-optional but recommended.
9:00AM: Separate the dough into balls and form the individual rolls (see images and notes above for a visual reference). Place the rolls into the baking dish and cover with a slightly damp tea towel. Allow the rolls to rise at room temperature.
12:00PM: The rolls should be about doubled in size and ready to bake. After baking, brush with additional butter while still hot, and serve.
Substitutions
If you prefer not to use butter for this recipe, simply use a 1:1 ratio of plant-based milk and vegan butter to make these dairy-free. We like Miyoko’s and Naturli.
No bread flour, no problem. Simply use all plain flour instead. To make the rolls a bit more wholesome, use up to 40% whole wheat flour.
You can use oil rather than butter in the buns, but it’s not as nice. The texture is a bit denser and the crumb is tighter with oil.
Honey can be subbed for sugar. Add it to the liquid ingredients rather than with the flour and salt.
More Sourdough
New York Style Sourdough Bagels
Cinnamon Raisin Sourdough Bread
Everyday No-Knead Sourdough Bread
Sourdough Crackers with homemade za’atar
Recipe
Sourdough Dinner Rolls
Description
Equipment
- Measuring cups and spoons or a digital kitchen scale
- Wooden spoon or spatula
- Mixing bowl
- Whisk
- Tea towel
- Plate
- Baking dish
- pastry brush
Ingredients
- ¾ cup whole milk, room temperature
- 1 cup active sourdough starter, active
- 2 large eggs, room temperature
- 2 ½ cups bread flour
- 1 cup all-purpose white flour
- ¼ cup sugar
- 1 teaspoon sea salt
- ⅓ cup softened butter, plus more for brushing
Instructions
Day One: Making the Dough
- Add the milk to a large bowl. Add the starter and whisk to combine, then whisk in the eggs until well mixed. Place the butter into the bowl and stir to combine. The butter will be in small pieces.
- Add the bread flour and all purpose flour, sugar, and salt to the bowl. Use a wooden spoon or spatula to mix, making sure to incorporate all of the flour, until a shaggy dough has formed.
- Cover the dough with a tea towel, and, every 20 minutes for the next hour, do three rounds of stretches and folds.
Day One: Bulk Fermentation
- Place a lightly damp tea towel and a large plate over your bowl, then set aside to rise at room temperature overnight or for about 8 hours. The dough should double in size during this time.
- If your home temperature is quite warm, this will likely take less than 8 hours. See notes below.
Day Two: Shaping the Rolls
- Refrigerate the risen dough for at least 2 hours before shaping if possible. The cold dough is much easier to shape.
- Lightly flour a clean surface and turn the proofed dough out onto it.
- Separate the dough into 16 equal pieces.
- Grease a large baking dish with butter and set aside.
- Take each piece of dough and repeat the stretching and folding motion from earlier.
- Lightly coat one side of the piece in flour, then gently stretch one edge and fold it in to the middle of the piece. Rotate, repeating the motion, until a ball has formed.
- Place the ball onto a clean surface and use your hand to rotate the ball counterclockwise. This will help the roll to form a skin on the outer layer so that it keeps a nice shape when rising and baking.
- Repeat this until all of the rolls are shaped, placing each roll into the baking dish as you go.
Day Two: Second Proof
- Cover the rolls with a tea towel and set them aside to rise at room temperature for 2-3 hours, or until almost doubled in size. If you want to extend the fermentation time even longer, you could refrigerate the shaped rolls overnight again.
- If refrigerating, the buns must prove at room temperature first. Refrigerate after they have risen. The cold buns can then be baked directly from the refrigerator.
Day Two: Baking
- Preheat the oven to 350°F (180°C), then place the rolls into the oven.
- Bake for 25-30 minutes, or until very golden brown.
- Remove from the oven and brush the tops with a generous amount of melted butter. This both softened the rolls and adds even more flavour.
- Cool for at least 10 minutes before serving. The rolls will keep well for a few days in a sealed container at room temperature and freeze well.
Christine says
Just came out of the oven. They were amazing. Im amazed with myself too. So easy to make so easy to eat them all! They were perfect. Will always be my go to dinner bread roll recipes.
Bei says
Hello, how big is the tray you have made these in please? :)
Sophie Mackenzie says
A lasagna pan, or something close to 11×13 inches works well :)
Emilie says
I’m wondering if you have a dairy free substitution for the milk? Can any non-dairy milk work as a substitute or is there one particular kind you would recommend?
Sophie Mackenzie says
Yes, you can totally use dairy free milk here. A creamier milk like oat or soy would probably be best :)
Brenda Hancock says
Can you use honey instead of sugar?
Alexandra Daum says
Definitely! I do, all the time.
Joaquina says
The recipe calls for some Bread Flour. Is that freshly ground Hard Wheat Flour? Or is it purchased White Bread Flour?
Sophie Mackenzie says
It is purchased, but all purpose flour (or home milled) is also fine.
Jeannie Clayton says
Question, if you do the second rise in the fridge one the rolls are shaped do you let come back to room temp or test before baking? Thank you!
Alexandra Daum says
This isn’t quite clear and I’ll be updating this recipe soon – the buns should be shaped and risen before refrigeration if you want to extend that ferment time before baking. Then they can be baked directly from the fridge.
Cliff newel says
Tried to make rolls but they did not rise much and where quite hard left mix over night shaped rolls left to rise but they did not rise much?
Alexandra Daum says
Hi Cliff, this is likely due to a couple reasons: less active starter, too cool a proofing area, or using cold ingredients rather than room temperature as noted. Hope this helps!
Liz says
I’ve made these rolls 3 times now and they’re great! I freeze them and it’s easy to take a couple at a time out of the freezer to go with a bowl of soup. Sourdough rolls and a crock pot of soup – slow cooking at its best. Just my speed.
Martin says
Weird question: how easy is this to double? Is it better to put everything in one bowl, or to split it into separate batches?
Alexandra Daum says
Depends on how big of a bowl you have! I’d probably split into two batches, but that’s because I just have standard sized bowls. If you have enough room, it’s no problem to make it all as one double batch.
Evan says
I loved these! My new go to recipe for sure!
I do have a question for you about altering the schedule. I work all day on Thursday and my in laws are coming that day and we want to have rolls for dinner that night. If I made the dough on Wednesday would I:
A. Shape and immediately fridge. Then Thursday, pull from fridge a few hours before dinner for a rise (and allow dough to return to room temp) then bake? OR
B. Shape, rise as instructed, then fridge. Then Thursday, 1) pull from fridge and bake cold OR 2) pull from fridge and let rest for several hours to return to temp then bake?
I’m hoping to avoid proofing problems(over or under) with this extra fridge time :)
Thanks!
Alexandra Daum says
Hi Evan, I would say B, rise and then refrigerate until you’re ready to bake, and then bake from cold. However, if you have the time, I don’t think it would hurt to let them warm up slightly before baking (an hour or so, but not several). I don’t think you’ll risk over proving by doing this, and I would be concerned about under proving if refrigerating immediately after shaping. Unfortunately there’s not quite enough time for me to test both of the options you described in advance, but I hope this helps.
Karie Jane says
Folding is the same as kneading. I would suggest modifying the title to avoid confusion.
Alexandra Daum says
Hi Karie Janie, it’s not, and this is a no-knead recipe :). Kneading takes several minutes of active work and stretching and folding is a few seconds here and there (it has the same end result, though!). Thanks so much for your input!