100% plain wheat flour
© 2026 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
with 20% light rye flour | with 40% wholewheat flour |
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100% plain wheat flour
© 2026 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
with 20% light rye flour
© 2026 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
Traditional German Brötchen, or bread rolls, are renowned for having a crackly and crisp crust with a soft and fluffy interior. Great to enjoy them smothered with homemade jam or cheese for breakfast, with a slice of cold cut or liver pate for lunch, or even serve them as a dinner roll for mopping up sauces.
Baking rolls with overnight proving is easy and stress-free. The dough is kneaded and shaped the evening before. It is then left to rest in the fridge and proves slowly overnight. In the morning, the rolls can be taken straight out of the fridge and baked. If they ain’t puffy enough, simply leave them to prove a little longer outside the fridge. You can take some of the Brötchen out of the oven after 10 minutes of baking, leave them to cool completely and then freeze them. When needed, thaw the frozen rolls on a baking tray for 10 minutes and bake them at 200C400F degrees for about 15 minutes. This way you can easily have your fresh homemade Brötchen anytime you like! If you want to give your bread rolls the professional bakery look, then brush them with a cornstarch glaze. Cook 2-3 grams of cornstarch, roughtly 1 teaspoon, with 100 ml of water and brush the Brötchen before baking and after 10-minutes again.
I have baked 3 batches of these Brötchen with different kinds of flour. The first batch I used 100% plain wheat flour, 2nd batch with 80% plain wheat flour+20% light rye flour, and the 3rd, I used 60% white wheat flour+40% wholewheat flour. Personally I prefer the one baked with rye.
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- 300 ml Water at 20C/68F (330 ml if using wholemeal flour)
- 6 g Fresh yeast
- 10 g Sugar
- 500 g Plain flour (or replacing 200 grams with wholemeal flour)
- 20 g Olive oil
- 10 g Sea salt
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- Pour water into a mixing bowl and dissolve the yeast and sugar in it. Add the flour and olive oil and mix for 3 minutes on speed 1. Then switch to speed 2 and knead for another 7 minutes. After 5 minutes, add the salt and finish kneading.
- Shape the dough into a ball, cover and leave to rise at room temperature for two hours.
- Divide the dough into 8 even pieces, each weighing about 105 grams. Flatten the dough portions and roll them up tightly into long rolls. Dust the rolls with flour and place them on a baking tray lined with baking paper. Pull up the edges of the paper so that the rolls support each other.

©angiesrecipes Cover with a clean kitchen cloth and additionally cover with an upside-down baking tray.
- Leave to rise in the fridge at 5C/41F for at least 10 hours. If they have not risen enough in the morning, simply leave them to rise a little longer at room temperature.
- Preheat the oven with a pizza stone to 240C/470F. Use a sharp knife or razor to score the dough rolls in the middle. Transfer the bread rolls on the pizza stone and turn the temperature down to 220C/430F. Bake for 20-25 minutes until they are golden brown.
100% plain wheat flour
© 2026 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
with 20% light rye flour
© 2026 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
100% plain wheat flour
with 40% wholewheat flour
© 2026 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
with 20% light rye flour
...Angie, this sure looks like a hardy roll!
ReplyDeleteYesterday I bought Rosemary Ham and Havarti cheese. Perfect for this roll.
ReplyDeleteCrisp crust, fluffy inside--these Brötchen look bakery-perfect! 😋
ReplyDeleteQue maravilla de panes, como me gustaría probarlos, son preciosos y deben estar buenísimos.
ReplyDeleteThe burnt ones look like you baked them in a pizza oven. I bet the hubby was happy to smell the aroma of them baking around the house.
ReplyDeleteYum! -Christine cmlk79.blogspot.com
ReplyDeleteThey look so good Angie. Perfect :-D
ReplyDeleteYour bread always turns out gorgeous!!!!
ReplyDeleteLooks perfect and delicious! Take care, enjoy your day!
ReplyDeleteAngie, this looks delicious! It reminds me of crusty bread that was sold for many years in grocery stores...it was freshly baked on the premises, and you could smell the beautiful aroma of this bread in the store!
ReplyDeleteSadly, I no longer see crusty bread. I don't make bread myself, so I alway enjoyed the crusty bread. The closest one is the baguette, which is hard and small, not delicious and crusty like the old ones.
Gracias por la receta. Te mando un beso.
ReplyDeleteI so miss the Brötchen from when I lived in Germany. I cannot wait to make these. And a big thank you for the freezing instructions -- that is brilliant. I do have a question -- we cannot find fresh yeast here. Would these work if I were to substitute dry active yeast? Please let me know.
ReplyDeleteDavid, you can use 3-4 grams of active dry yeast. If the weather is really warm there, then 3 grams might be already enough.
DeleteIt's been forever since I baked any bread, I might have to give that one a try, it looks great and I can almost smell it baking.
ReplyDeleteThese look tasty. I made some bread today too. It's lots of fun to make it on a cold day, isn't it?
ReplyDeleteI'm a fan of bread right out of the oven.
ReplyDeleteI'm going to adapt these to make with sourdough as they look amazing.
ReplyDeleteTandy (Lavender and Lime) https://tandysinclair.com
They look very nice and would be to eat as well, Angie.
ReplyDeleteThese look perfect Angie, I think I would like rye ones as well, but would like to try them using sourdough. You are an amazing baker.
ReplyDeleteThat looks fantastic
ReplyDeleteThese German Brötchen look amazing - indeed perfect to soup up any leftover soup. The texture is fantastic, Angie!
ReplyDeleteI bet it's great toasted too! Awesome bread!
ReplyDeleteHow lovely! So wonderful to see this recipe!
ReplyDeleteI drool when I see your baked goods- everything looks so delicious and professional. Of course I wouldn't be able to eat them since I'm gluten-free but I enjoy seeing them and dreaming.
ReplyDeletewow bellissimo pane!
ReplyDeleteSuch a beautiful bake, Angie — the bread looks perfectly crusty, soft inside, and incredibly delicious!
ReplyDeleteLovely photographs, the rolls look great.
ReplyDeleteAll the best Jan
What a nice bread, the crust looks terrific!
ReplyDeleteOh yes i love making overnight bread. So easy and delicious. These look fabulous angie.
ReplyDeleteThese look delicious with all the different types of flour!
ReplyDeleteJulia x
https://www.thevelvetrunway.com/
Beautiful loaves of bread Angie, they could be on display in a bakery window. Great recipe, I wish I could have a slice :)
ReplyDeleteI love German breads....these roll are fantastic!!......Abrazotes, Marcela
ReplyDelete