Basic Yeast Dough
Submitted by dks
Basic yeast dough is an enriched egg-and-shortening dough that’s the foundation for cloverleaf rolls, cheese crescents, sesame buns, or cinnamon loaf. Make ahead and refrigerate up to 5 days.
YIELD
12 servingsPREP
15 minCOOK
20 minREADY
75 minEvery home baker needs a workhorse yeast dough recipe. This one is the kind of multi-purpose enriched dough that bakeries used to keep on hand to bake fresh rolls of every shape on demand. The egg and shortening tenderize the crumb and the touch of sugar feeds the yeast for an active rise, giving you something that bakes up soft and slightly sweet.
The most important step is the yeast bloom. Stir the active dry yeast into water that’s between 105F (40C) and 115F (45C). Cooler than that and the yeast won’t activate. Hotter and you’ll kill it. Let it sit 5 minutes until you see foam on the surface, which confirms the yeast is alive and ready to work.
The make-ahead refrigerator option is the secret weapon. Mix the dough today, refrigerate, and bake any time over the next 5 days. Cold dough rises slowly in the fridge, developing more flavor than a quick-rise dough. Pull it out an hour before shaping to take the chill off.
Kneading just 4 or 5 times after punching down is intentional. This is an enriched dough, not a French baguette. Heavy kneading would develop too much gluten and make the rolls chewy rather than tender. A few folds are enough.
The “warm place free from drafts” matters. The inside of a turned-off oven with the light on is a perfect 80-85F (27-29C) proofing spot. Cold drafts slow the rise and produce dense rolls.
Pro Tips
- Test water temperature with a thermometer if you’re new to bread baking. Warm tap water is usually too hot.
- Stir down once or twice during the long cold rise if you’re refrigerating. This keeps the dough from over-fermenting.
- Brush shaped rolls with melted butter or egg wash before baking for a glossy golden finish.
- Use this dough for dinner rolls, cinnamon rolls, sticky buns, or even pizza dough.
Variations
- Substitute butter for the shortening for a richer flavor (the texture will be slightly less tender).
- Add 1 teaspoon vanilla extract for sweet roll applications.
- Replace ½ cup of the flour with whole wheat for added fiber and a heartier crumb.
Ingredients
Directions
Dissolve yeast in warm water in a large mixing bowl; let stand 5 minutes.
Add sugar, shortening, egg, salt, and half of flour; beat at low speed of an electric mixer until smooth.
Gradually stir in enough remaining flour to make a soft dough.
Place dough in a well-greased bowl, turning to grease top.
Cover and let rise in a warm place (85 degrees), free from drafts, 1 hour or until doubled in bulk, or cover and refrigerate up to 5 days.
(If refrigerated, let return to room temperature before proceeding.)
Punch dough down; turn out onto a lightly floured surface, and knead 4 or 5 times.
Shape and bake as directed for Cloverleaf Rolls, Cheese Crescents, Sesame Buns or Cinnamon Loaf.
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