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Challah Cinnamon Rolls

Pillowy challah dough rolled with cinnamon sugar into irresistible kosher cinnamon rolls.

Pareve

Yield
12 rolls
Difficulty
Intermediate
Active Time
45 minutes
Total Time
3½–4 hours
Bracha
Mezonot

Take the most beloved enriched dough in Jewish baking and turn it into the most beloved breakfast pastry in the world. These challah cinnamon rolls use a slightly enriched challah dough as the base — softer and richer than standard cinnamon roll dough, with the familiar eggy sweetness that makes challah special. Rolled with a generous layer of cinnamon sugar, they emerge from the oven puffy, fragrant, and impossible to resist.

Unlike the mile-high bakery rolls drenched in cream cheese frosting, these stay true to their Jewish roots: pareve, not too sweet, and designed to be eaten at any meal. A simple glaze of powdered sugar and water lets the cinnamon and challah flavors shine. They are stunning for a Shabbat morning brunch, a Chanukah breakfast, or any morning you want the kitchen to smell like a Jewish bakery.

The secret is in the roll — tight enough to create distinct layers, but not so tight that the filling bursts out during baking. Cut them with a sharp knife or dental floss, nestle them close together in the pan so they rise into each other, and bake until just golden. The result is a pull-apart texture that is soft, swirled, and absolutely addictive.

What Makes This Special

  • Challah dough base — Richer and softer than standard cinnamon roll dough.
  • Pareve — No dairy, suitable for any meal.
  • Pull-apart bake — Rolls baked touching create soft, steamy sides.
  • Simple glaze — Powdered sugar and water for clean, pareve sweetness.

Halachic Notes

  • Kosher Classification: Pareve
  • Hafrashat Challah: Uses ~500g flour. Separate challah without a bracha at this quantity.
  • Checking Eggs: Each egg must be checked individually for blood spots before adding.
  • Pas Yisroel: Homemade baked goods fulfill Pas Yisroel when a Jewish person is involved in baking.
  • Brachot: Before eating: Mezonot (if eaten as a snack). HaMotzi if eaten as a meal bread. After: Al HaMichya or Birkat HaMazon accordingly.

Ingredients

Dough

Ingredient Grams Volume Baker’s %
Bread flour 400 g 3¼ cups 100%
Granulated sugar 50 g ¼ cup 12.5%
Fine sea salt 7 g 1¼ tsp 1.75%
Instant yeast 7 g 2¼ tsp 1.75%
Eggs 100 g (2 large) 2 large 25%
Vegetable oil 50 g 3½ tbsp 12.5%
Warm water 120 g ½ cup 30%

Filling

Ingredient Grams Volume Baker’s %
Brown sugar 150 g ¾ cup packed
Ground cinnamon 12 g 2 tbsp
Vegetable oil or margarine, melted 40 g 3 tbsp

Glaze

Ingredient Grams Volume Baker’s %
Powdered sugar 120 g 1 cup
Water or non-dairy milk 20 g 1½ tbsp
Vanilla extract 3 g ½ tsp
Desired Dough Temperature: 26°C / 78°F

Step-by-Step Instructions

Step 1: Make the Dough

Mix flour, sugar, salt, and yeast. Add eggs, oil, and water. Knead 8–10 minutes until smooth. Cover and let rise 1–1½ hours until doubled.

Step 2: Roll and Fill

On a floured surface, roll the dough into a rectangle about 40 × 30 cm (16 × 12 in). Brush with melted oil. Mix brown sugar and cinnamon and spread evenly over the dough, leaving a 1 cm border on one long edge. Roll up tightly from the long side, seam-side down.

Step 3: Cut and Arrange

Using a sharp knife or dental floss, cut into 12 equal pieces. Place in a greased 23 × 33 cm (9 × 13 in) baking pan, cut-side up, spacing evenly. Cover and proof 30–40 minutes until puffy.

Step 4: Bake

Preheat oven to 180°C / 355°F. Bake 22–26 minutes until golden on top and the center rolls are cooked through. Let cool 10 minutes.

Step 5: Glaze

Whisk powdered sugar, water, and vanilla until smooth. Drizzle over warm rolls. Serve warm.

Storage & Make-Ahead

  • Room temperature: Best day-of. Store covered 1–2 days.
  • Freezing: Freeze un-glazed rolls up to 2 months. Thaw and glaze before serving.
  • Overnight method: After cutting, refrigerate overnight. Let warm 1 hour, then bake.

Troubleshooting

Problem Cause Solution
Filling leaking out Roll too tight or too loose Roll firmly but not crushing; seal seam well
Raw in center Pan too crowded, oven too hot Space rolls evenly; lower temp to 175°C if browning too fast
Dry rolls Over-baked Pull at 22 minutes; they firm up as they cool

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I make these dairy with butter and cream cheese frosting?

Absolutely. Replace oil with melted butter in both dough and filling, and make a cream cheese frosting. Just remember to designate these as dairy.

Can I add raisins or nuts to the filling?

Yes. Sprinkle raisins, chopped pecans, or walnuts over the cinnamon sugar before rolling. Add about 60–80 g for a generous filling.

Why Mezonot instead of HaMotzi?

The higher sugar content and sweet filling classify these as mezonot (pas haba b’kisnin). If eaten as the basis of a meal, say HaMotzi and Birkat HaMazon.

Can I use this for babka instead?

Same dough, different shape. Roll, fill, twist into a babka shape, and bake in a loaf pan for 35–40 minutes.

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