Sourdough cinnamon rolls

Sourdough Cinnamon Rolls

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Sourdough cinnamon rolls: the new every-weekend tradition? I began work on this recipe with the intention that these would be a wonderful Christmas morning indulgence, the birth of a new holiday baking custom. But after making them several times for testing, I’m convinced they should perilously be a weekend indulgence. Why limit ourselves and declare these only for special events and holidays? Seriously, let’s make them every weekend.

Cinnamon rolls fit so perfectly with the cold weather. They’re like that warm blanket you left on the radiator, that puffy wool sweater you wear around the house, or that cup of hot chocolate that breaks through the cold. Layers of tender dough segregated by ribbons of gooey cinnamon sugar and topped with a creamy, white sugar glaze—it’s enough to make you completely forget it’s cold outside or perhaps stop caring about winter altogether.

Sourdough Cinnamon Buns with glaze
Sourdough cinnamon rolls with glaze.

Brioche dough is the base for these sourdough cinnamon rolls, which is dough enriched with butter, sugar, and eggs. These ingredients make for an incredibly tender and mouth-melting crumb when added to a deep yellow dough. When pulled, these rolls shred apart almost like cotton candy, the only resistance provided by the melted brown sugar cinnamon near the bottom—they’re like a warm, gooey cloud of pure enjoyment. When presented with the opportunity, there’s nary a chance anyone will decline one of these on a plate.

These sourdough cinnamon rolls require a little extra effort, but once you get the hang of the process, it’s pretty straightforward—and, of course, totally worth it. The dough is also very versatile: you can adjust the mixing and baking schedule so they’re finished in a single day or spread out over three. The dough can be retarded in the refrigerator after bulk fermentation, shaping, and cutting, or both. I prefer a two-day process where I place the dough in the fridge after bulk fermentation. The next day I wake and get to work on the rolls, and I bake them fresh for breakfast (or brunch if late to rise).

Brown Sugar Cinnamon Spread

Cinnamon brown sugar spread

This spread has the right level of delicate sweetness and a comforting bite from the cinnamon. The mixture is more crunchy and thick than it is spreadable, which is my preference. When baked, swaths of the spread caramelize and other smaller areas stay crunchy, providing a subtle contrast of textures.

  • 215g light brown sugar
  • 40g all-purpose flour
  • 2 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted
  • 2 teaspoons cinnamon
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt

Mix or whisk everything together in a bowl, so there are only a few clumps remaining. Keep covered until used (brown sugar dries out very fast).

Cream Cheese Glaze

cream cheese glaze

The cream cheese added not only makes this glaze extremely velvety, but it also pairs wonderfully with vanilla. I’ve also tested various iterations, swapping out the cream cheese for maple syrup, adding orange blossom water, a dash or two of Angostura bitters… The options are endless.

  • 114g cream cheese softened to room temp (4 oz, half a standard block)
  • 62g (1/2 cup) powdered sugar
  • 37g (3 tablespoons) whole milk
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract

Add everything to a mixer fitted with the whisk attachment and whisk until creamy and soft. It’s best and easiest to use a mixer or handheld beater for this, but a handheld whisk will work if you want a workout. The mixer will ensure there are no stray clumps of cream cheese lingering about.

Sourdough Cinnamon Roll Recipe

It’s best to make this brioche-style dough in a stand mixer (like the one I have) due to the dough’s soft nature and relatively long mix time required. Most of the strength in this dough will be developed upfront at mix time with just a few more stretch and folds during the bulk to finish it off.

sourdough cinnamon rolls rolling and pan

This recipe yields 12 sourdough cinnamon rolls but you can halve all the ingredients to make half a dozen (in this case, you’ll want to use a smaller pan). I’m using a USA Pan 9” x 13” rectangular pan to hold these 12 buns and because the pan is coated in silicone there’s no need for any parchment paper (it’s magic, really). If you don’t have this pan I’d recommend using parchment under the buns for easy removal.

You will need a rolling pin for this recipe (in a pinch, you could use an empty wine bottle). I am very partial to my rolling pin: it’s a non-tapered solid block of maple wood that’s functional, used in countless tasks around my kitchen, and just a beautiful tool (and made in the U.S.A.).

Sourdough Starter Notes

I know when some read this recipe title and see the word “sourdough,” thoughts of sharp sourdough cinnamon rolls might enter the mind, but this is definitely not the case. I maintain my sourdough starter with frequent refreshments to ensure acidity is kept low. Additionally, when I call for a mature starter in the ingredient list, “mature” means when my starter is just about to its peak height and has not yet fallen. If the starter is used at a state that is overly ripe (perhaps it’s fallen and has been that way for an hour or more) then the resulting rolls might be a touch sourer.

If you’re interested in how I maintain my sourdough starter head over to my Sourdough Starter Maintenance Routine post for in-depth details.

Dough Formula

The target final dough temperature (FDT) for this dough is 70-73°F (21-22°C).

Total Dough Weight1,250 grams
Pre-fermented Flour42.00%
YieldOne dozen rolls
WeightIngredientBaker’s Percentage
477gAll-purpose or bread flour (King Arthur All-Purpose Flour)100.00%
133gWhole milk, cold from the fridge28.00%
191gUnsalted butter (Kerrygold)40.00%
191gWhole eggs (about 4 large)40.00%
48gFine white sugar (caster sugar)10.00%
11gSalt2.3%
200gRipe, 100% hydration liquid sourdough starter42.00%
Brioche dough
Sourdough cinnamon roll at the start of bulk fermentation. Silky smooth.

Method

1. Mix – 9:00 a.m.

First, take out the butter and cut it into 1/4” to 1/2” squares; let them sit in a bowl to warm to room temperature while gathering and mixing other ingredients.

Stages of dough mixing
Sourdough cinnamon roll dough in mixing.

Mixing will occur in three stages (clockwise starting in the upper-left in the image above, the last image is the final dough). The first stage involves the initial incorporation of all the ingredients, followed by a 10-minute rest. The second stage will be strengthening the gluten in the dough before adding butter. The third and final stage will be adding the room-temperature butter blocks to the strengthened dough.

Initial Incorporation

In a medium bowl, add the cold eggs, cold whole milk, sugar, and mature sourdough starter. Whisk together until incorporated.

Add the flour and salt to the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the hook attachment. Set the mixer to low (level “1” on my machine, one notch above “STIR”), and slowly start to pour the liquid into the mixer bowl. Add a little at a time over the course of 3 minutes. Once finished the dough will look very wet and have clumps, let it rest for 10 minutes before further strengthening.

Strengthen Dough

After the 10-minute rest, turn the mixer to medium speed (number “4” on my machine) and mix for about 5-6 minutes until the dough starts to come together and all clumps have disappeared. The dough should start to pull away from the sides of the bowl, but it will not completely detach from the bottom. If the dough doesn’t want to come together and it’s overly wet, add a little flour, a tablespoon at a time, until it comes together.

Incorporate Butter

Butter temperature is important. It should be slightly cold to the touch but easily pliable. If the butter is too cold, it won’t incorporate easily into the dough; if it’s too warm (almost melted), it will result in a greasy dough. Don’t fret if the temperature is off. Pop the bowl with butter in the microwave for 10 seconds to warm slowly, or place it into the freezer for a minute or two to firm up. Adjust as necessary.

Add the butter to the dough one square at a time, waiting until the previous block is absorbed before adding the next. It is easiest to place it right where the hook meets the dough. Continue until all the butter is added and there are no visible butter patches; this may take 8-10 minutes at a low to medium mix speed.

2. Bulk Fermentation – 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.

Transfer the mixed dough to a bulk container and let it ferment for 2 hours at 75ºF (23°C). Just as when baking sourdough bread, perform 3 to 4 sets of stretch and folds during the bulk fermentation stage, spaced 30 minutes apart. To perform a set, grab one side of the dough, stretch it upward, and fold it over to the other side. Fold once at each side, North, South, East, and West. If the dough is firm after the third set, skip the last set but let the dough rest for a full 2 hours.

3. Chill Dough – 11:30 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.

Place the covered bulk container into the fridge for at least 2 hours (I like 3-4 hours).

Overnight option: The timing is very flexible at this point. Once the dough is covered and refrigerated, it can rest overnight, and the rest of the process can be completed in the morning for fresh rolls early in the day or for brunch.

Roll the dough out to a rectangle only when it’s completely chilled.

The dough needs to be completely cold and firm to the touch before rolling out; do not skip this step.

4. Shape Rolls – 2:00 p.m.

Before rolling out the dough, make the Brown Sugar Cinnamon mixture (see recipe, above).

Flour your work surface. Then, remove the chilled dough from the fridge and turn it out onto the floured surface. Flour the top of the dough and the rolling pin, and begin rolling the dough. Roll it out to an 11” x 21” rectangle that is oriented so one of the long sides is near your body and the squat ends are to the sides. Use a bench knife and dust the surface with flour wherever the dough sticks.

Try to keep your warm hands off the dough as much as possible to avoid heating it. Sprinkle the dry Brown Sugar Cinnamon mixture evenly over the dough, but leave a small margin at the very top bare. When the dough is rolled up, that small margin will help seal the roll.

Starting at the long end nearest you, fold up a small portion of the dough all the way across. Then, roll the dough one revolution at a time, starting at the left side and moving to the right. During the first few rolls, it’s important to roll things up sufficiently tight to make cutting and transferring easier later.

Continue rolling from left to right, one revolution at a time, until the dough is completely rolled up into a “log.” Lay a ruler and using a sharp knife or bench scraper, cut the dough every 1 3/4” inches. You can go smaller if you want squatter rolls or up to 2” for taller rolls (if you cut smaller, you’ll have more rolls and taller you’ll have fewer).

Transfer the cut discs to a baking pan with some space around each one.

A few tips to help with this step:

  • Place the rolling pin in the freezer while the dough is chilling to help keep it cold
  • If the dough warms up excessively while rolling out, transfer to a baking sheet and place in the fridge for 15 minutes to cool
  • If the dough is very pliable and warm after it’s completely rolled up, place the entire rolled “log” into the fridge on a baking sheet before cutting

7. Proof – 2:30 p.m.

Fully proofed cinnamon rolls

Place the baking pan with cut dough somewhere warm, around 77°F (25°C), to let proof for 2 hours. During proof, the rolls will relax out and start to puff up, eventually, they may touch each other but it depends on how much space you have between rolls.

Don’t be alarmed if you see any sugary liquid leaking out of the rolls, it’s totally normal. Additionally, if any of the layers develop gaps between them it only means when they rise in the oven they’ll be a little more interesting with pieces jutting up and out—beautiful.

8. Bake – Preheat oven at 4:00 p.m., Bake at 4:40 p.m.

Preheat oven to 400°F (200°C) during the last 30 minutes of proof. Place the baking pan in the oven and bake for 20-25 minutes until the rolls are well colored.

Baked sourdough cinnamon rolls

Spread the glaze over the rolls once cooled. These sourdough cinnamon rolls stay great for a few days in the fridge, and I always reheat them (without glaze) in the oven or microwave to warm back up before eating. They fill the kitchen with that intoxicating aroma once again and always seem to come out as if they were freshly baked.

Conclusion

Whatever the distraction, whatever the work being done—even if a bath is drawn—the kitchen’s aroma when these are baked is sure to draw out all. It reminds me of those old cartoons where they put out a piece of cheese, and you see everyone floating toward it in a trance—just like that.

These sourdough cinnamon rolls are addicting. The brioche interior is extremely tender and silky, interrupted only by warm, gooey brown sugar cinnamon. As I alluded to earlier, the cream cheese glaze is tremendous, but the possibilities here are endless, each change bringing on a whole new dimension to these sourdough cinnamon rolls.

Sourdough cinnamon roll crumb
Finished sourdough cinnamon rolls.

Well, I know I’ll be making these sourdough cinnamon rolls for Christmas morning! But now that the word is out and everyone knows what I’m baking every other weekend after that I might be expecting a few more surprise visits from friends and family. I’m completely fine with it, though, because I’m happy to share with any and all who stop by—it may just mean I sneak off with one or two before they do. Buon appetito!

Now that you have experience working with enriched dough, the next step is my naturally leavened bomboloni (doughnut) recipe! They’re based on a similar dough with just a few changes—they’re absolutely incredible. Or, if you’re looking for more rolls, have a look at my ultra-tender sourdough cardamom rolls for a different take.

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cream cheese glaze

Sourdough Cinnamon Rolls Recipe

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  • Author: Maurizio Leo
  • Prep Time: 7 hours 30 minutes
  • Cook Time: 25 minutes
  • Total Time: 7 hours 55 minutes
  • Yield: 12 cinnamon rolls
  • Cuisine: American
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Description

These sourdough cinnamon rolls are addicting. The brioche dough is extremely tender and silky, interrupted only by warm, gooey brown sugar cinnamon. If you’re looking for the perfect weekend treat, these cinnamon rolls are the ticket.


Ingredients

Dough

  • 477g all-purpose or bread flour
  • 133g milk, whole
  • 191g butter, unsalted
  • 191g eggs (about 4 large)
  • 48g sugar, caster
  • 11g salt
  • 200g sourdough starter

Filling

  • 215g light brown sugar
  • 40g all-purpose flour
  • 2 tablespoons butter, unsalted and melted
  • 2 teaspoons cinnamon, ground
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt

Cream Cheese Glaze

  • 114g (4oz, half a block) cream cheese softened to room temperature
  • 62g powdered sugar
  • 37g milk, whole
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract

Instructions

  1. Mix (9:00 a.m.)
    Cut the butter into 1/4″ pats and let warm to room temperature while mixing the rest of the ingredients. In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the dough hook attachment, add the eggs, milk, sugar, and sourdough starter. Whisk together until incorporated. Add the flour and salt and mix on speed 1 for 3 minutes until incorporated. Let the dough rest for 10 minutes. After the 10-minute rest turn the mixer to speed 2 and mix for about 5-6 minutes until the dough starts to come together and all clumps have disappeared. The dough should start to pull from the sides of the bowl but it will not completely remove from the bottom. If the dough just doesn’t want to come together and it’s overly wet add a little flour, a tablespoon at a time until it comes together. With the mixer set to speed 1, add the butter one pat at a time, waiting to add each until the previous is absorbed. Continue until all the butter is added and the dough is shiny and smooth, this could take around 8-10 minutes.
  2. Bulk fermentation (9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.)
    Transfer the mixed dough to a bulk container and let ferment for 2 hours at 75ºF (23°C). Perform 3 to 4 sets of stretch and folds at 30-minute intervals.
  3.  Chill dough (11:30 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.)
    Place the covered bulk fermentation container into the fridge for at least 2 hours to thoroughly chill.
  4. Shape rolls (2:00 p.m.)
    First, make the filling. In a bowl mix together the filling ingredients and set aside. Next, take out your dough from the fridge, lightly flour your work surface and the dough, and roll out to an 11×21″ rectangle with a long side closest to your body. Spread the filling evenly over the dough. roll the dough up away from you into a tight log. Cut the log into pieces every 1 3/4″. Transfer the cut pieces to a baking pan with space around each one.
  5. Proof (2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.)
    Cover the pan and proof somewhere warm, around 77°F (25°C), for 2 to 3 hours. The dough will relax and puff up during this time. They’re ready to bake when the dough feels very soft and light—give the dough additional time to proof if necessary.
  6. Bake (4:30 p.m.)
    Preheat your oven to 400°F (200°C). Slide the rolls into the oven once preheated and bake for 20-25 minutes. Spread the glaze over the rolls once cooled.

Notes

These sourdough cinnamon rolls are best the day they’re made, but can be reheated the next day (without glaze) and then topped with freshly mixed glaze.

If you use this recipe, tag @maurizio on Instagram and use the hashtag #theperfectloaf so I can take a look! Thanks so much to USA Pan for sponsoring this sourdough post! As always, all opinions and thoughts here are my own.

Picture of Maurizio Leo
Maurizio Leo
Maurizio Leo is the creator of the independent sourdough baking website The Perfect Loaf. His cookbook, The Perfect Loaf — The Craft and Science of Sourdough Breads, Sweets, and More, is a James Beard Award-winner and a New York Times bestseller. He lives in Albuquerque, NM, with his wife and two sons, where he's been baking sourdough for over a decade. He's been labeled "Bob Ross but for bread."

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672 Comments

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  1. Hi Maurizio,
    I hope you're doing well! I recently bought your book and just made the Weekend Cinnamon Rolls. They turned out delicious, thank you for the recipe!
    I noticed that the filling recipe in the book is quite different from the one on your website. For reference:
    Book filling:

    175g dark brown sugar
    28g melted butter
    12g flour
    6g cinnamon
    pinch of salt

    Website filling:

    215g light brown sugar
    40g flour
    2 Tbsp melted butter
    2 tsp cinnamon
    ¼ tsp salt

    The dough in the book uses 508g flour (compared to 477g on the website), so the filling feels a bit light by comparison. Do you think the book version of the filling should be roughly doubled to match the larger dough quantity?
    I'd really appreciate any clarification — I want to get it just right next time!
    Thank you so much,
    Flora

  2. Thank You Maurizio for sharing this recipe! I tried it and it was really good. I had a mistake not mixing the levain together with other wet ingredients but I thought it would be a failure. Thank goodness it came out very delicious.

  3. Hi Maurizio,

    Any adjustments you would recommend if I were to try this with Jovials all purpose Einkorn Flour?

    Thank you!

  4. Turned out very nicely. I used all purpose flour and standard unsalted butter. Had my doubts a few points. When doing stretch and folds, I thought the dough was almost too soft but managed to complete 4 sets. Refrigerated for 4 hours which was magic! Dough was beautiful although some bits stuck to my proofing bowl which had me concerned. In the end no problems rolling out the dough on a flour dusted silicone mat using my chilled steel rolling pin. Lifted the dough a couple times in center and dusted with more flour to be safe. My roll up skills need improvement (not that tight) but ended up with 13 rolls. Proofing: I know my levain was plenty active (I had refreshed the starter 2 times before creating the final levain) so I’m not sure what the issue was with mediocre rise in pan. After 4.5 hours in proofer at 80 degrees, the rolls didn’t look as puffed up as I’d hoped but I had to move forward. They came out of the oven very very nice. Pretty sure I’ll make them again.

    1. Hi Mary, thanks for the detailed feedback! Your dough handling sounds spot-on—that soft feeling during stretch and folds is exactly right, and the fridge time definitely helps firm things up. The slower final proof isn't unusual even with an active levain. Enriched doughs (like this one with butter) naturally ferment more slowly than lean doughs. At 4.5 hours in your proofer, you were right to move forward—better to bake slightly underproofed than risk overproofing. The fact that they came out very nice tells me you made the right call.
      For next time, if you want more rise, you could try pushing the proof another 30-60 minutes, but honestly, it sounds like you nailed it. Keep at it!

      1. Great flavor, maybe a wee bit dense. Definitely reheated them for better taste experience. Made your super soft dinner rolls at Thanksgiving. Turned out great. I think they took a little longer proofing time too.

  5. What is the dough supposed to look like when bulk fermentation is done and before it goes in the fridge? It would be helpful to know if it should rise by a certain percent and other visual cues like poke test, etc.

  6. Hi Maurizio, I love this recipe. I’ve made it 3 times now. I have found the butter incorporation takes much longer than 8 minutes for me. Closer to 20 each time I’ve made it. Id this an indicator of an error?

    1. That's totally fine, Justin. Just keep mixing and take as long as needed. This is a heavily enriched dough so it will take a while, depending on your mixer. If your dough is strengthened a little more at the start (all the way to pass the windowpane), you can add the butter faster, too.

  7. I just made these, but used an adapted version of the fruit from this panettone recipe ( https://www.ojihouse.com/recipes/worldcup-panettone-recipe ) for the filling, and also added 40 g of orange paste (equal parts orange and sugar by weight, blended) to the dough after the butter, reducing the milk by 20 g to make up for the liquid in the orange. Would recommend, especially for people who can't have cinnamon!

  8. These are soooooo good! I don’t normally like cinnamon rolls, but wowza, these were so good I almost didn’t even ice them! I know he mentions use the Kerrygold butter, but let me reiterate for him… you realllly do need to use a European style butter. It has a higher fat content, and if you’re using just unsalted American butter, it’s a STICKY MESS. Still doable if you refrigerate before rolling, but man that butter makes a difference!

  9. Hi Mauricio! Could I use tangzhong in this recipe? And also, can I cut the rolls, let them raise and refrigerate them overnight to bake them in the morning.

  10. Hi! If I roll and cut and go into the pan and then straight into the fridge overnight (actually afternoon plus overnight), will I still need a two-hour rise outside the fridge the next morning before baking?
    Thanks!!

  11. I frozen some cinnamon roll at Christmas. I took them out to defrost and proof in the fridge on Friday morning at 8am. Not it's Saturday night at 9pm and they haven't risen at all. Would you put them on the counter overnight or take them out in the am and proof for 2 hours?

  12. Hello! I'm wondering if this would be a good dough for pull apart cinnamon monkey bread? or if you had a better suggestion? thank you so much

  13. Hello! I'm wondering if this would be a good dough for pull apart cinnamon monkey bread? or if you had a better suggestion? thank you so much

      1. oh wonderful! We have your cookbook as well, which recipe would you recommend? I'm going to do them for our Easter Brunch! One cinnamon and one cranberry orange! I'll report back with my findings! haha

        1. Well, it was an absolute hit! Best monkey bread I've ever had. We ended up using the dough recipe from your cookbook for the monkey bread, and also did a batch of your chocolate babka!

          Let's say… we won Easter Brunch this year haha
          Thanks for everything!

  14. Great dough, loved the way it came together in my Ankarsrum. The filling though, it's a no for me. It turned into a hard candy like layer at the bottom of the pan. Next time I'll use your recipe for the rolls but I'll do a traditional butter/sugar/cinnamon filling.

    1. Sounds like a good swap to me, Elissa! I havent had the filling turn that way here, I'm wondering if it was too long of a bake time for your location and oven…

  15. Hi Maurizio! I made this recipe for the first time this the weekend. I need to tweak a few things such as I did not develop the gluten well enough. One issue that I'm not sure how to fix though was that they didn't brown very well even when they were more than done on the inside. While looking around at other recipes online both sourdough and yeasted, I saw a recipe by Stella Parks on serious eats and she puts a little bit of baking soda in her dough to help with browning. My question is do you think that I could do this with sourdough or would it have unintended effects? Also, do you think I could increase the sugar just a bit in the dough and if so, how much? One final question, I also was intrigued by Stella's technique of baking at a lower temperature in a pan covered in foil, 350 F for about 20 minutes or so and then taking the foil off for the last 15 minutes. I'm not sure what the benefit is for doing it this way other than maybe steaming the rolls and getting them to puff up more before you brown them? Almost like when we bake sourdough covered in a Dutch oven and then take the lid off? What do you think?

    1. I think you're on the right track with most of your ideas. For better browning, increasing the sugar slightly would be my first suggestion – try adding an extra 10-15g (about 1 tablespoon) to your dough. This should help with browning while also enhancing flavor.
      For the covered baking technique Stella uses, that's essentially creating a mini steam oven environment, very similar to the Dutch oven method we use for sourdough bread! The cover traps moisture, allowing the rolls to expand fully before setting the crust. Then removing the foil lets them brown properly. This approach can help with oven spring and create a more tender roll.

      I wouldn't personally add baking soda to the dough, though a higher pH will help with browning…

      If you try these modifications, I'd love to hear how they turn out for your next batch!

  16. Hi! Just woke up and can’t wait to do the next steps. I did an overnight proof after bulk fermentation.

    Question though… I prefer a gooey cinnamon roll center. How much butter would you add to your recipe for more goo haha? Or would you cancel the flour all together. Thanks in advance!

  17. These cinnamon rolls were delicious, rose beatifully, and so very tender! This is our first effort with sourdough, and the depth of flavor was far superior to yeast risen rolls. I followed your recipe, and altough the dough was sticky, it was very workable when cooled. I will definitely make these again, but I think that this time, I will try a variation on the method for creating the log. I plan on dividing the chilled dough into 2 portions, and working them one at a time while the other is still cold in the fridge. This I think will help the make the rolling up easier, and avoid the dough warming as I work.
    Thank you for this recipe! Although there were some challenges, the result was well worth it.

    1. Right on, Lois! Smart thinking about dividing the dough and keeping half chilled – that's a great way to maintain control when working with enriched dough. The cooler temperature definitely helps with handling. And yes, that sourdough flavor really does make a difference compared to commercial yeast versions. Let me know how your modified process works out!

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