RECIPE! The AMAZING Disney World Main Street Bakery Cinnamon Rolls (With Step by Step Pics AND SECRET TIPS!) | the disney food blog (2024)

It’s officially the holidays! That means time with friends, family, and (our fav!) FOOD!

Main Street Bakery Cinnamon Roll with Extra Icing!

And one recipe we constantly hear about from you, our dear readers, is the long lost Main Street Bakery Cinnamon Roll (it was SO GOOD!). Well, we’re going to show you how to bake like a BOSS this holiday and whip these up for your family on Christmas morning! We PROMISE…it’s not that hard! (Seriously!!)

For those unfamiliar, before Starbucks took over the Main Street Bakery in the Magic Kingdom in 2013, one of the star attractions was the warm, gooey, sweet, practically-perfect cinnamon roll the size of your head served there! We loved it so much we practically wrote love sonnets about it. It was THAT GOOD. And while a great version of it can still be found at Gaston’s Tavern, it was just never quite the same for us.

Read more about the OG Main Street Cinnamon Roll vs Gaston’s version HERE!

We’ve shared the recipe for the original Main Street Bakery Cinnamon Roll but what if you’re NOT Betty Crocker in the kitchen? We got yo’ backs! Some of our DFB Team know their way around a kitchen pretty well, and we’re going to walk you step by step through making these beauties. We’ll even share some BOMB tips to make your foray into baking a surefire hit. Brace yourself for the adoring compliments from your family when they’re wowed by your sweet skillz — and let’s get baking!

TIP: if you’re looking to have this for breakfast in the morning, you’re going to want to do the first steps the DAY BEFORE. Yup, you can do the hard work the day or night before, then wake up, pull these out the fridge to bake, and look like you just effortlessly dominated breakfast.

Ain’t nobody got time to be waking up at the crack of dawn to proof cinnamon rolls. Sleep is our friend.

Cinnamon Rolls Recipe:

Walt Disney World’sMain Street Bakery

Yield: 8 or so MEGA Disney World sized rolls

Ingredients:

Cinnamon Rolls

1/2 cup warm water
2 standard 1/4oz packages of yeast (4.5 tsp)
2 tablespoons sugar
1 standard-sized package instant vanilla pudding
2 cups milk
1/2 cup unsalted butter, melted
2 large eggs, beaten
1 teaspoon salt
8 cups all-purpose flour

Filling:
1 cup unsalted butter, softened
2 cups brown sugar
2 tablespoons cinnamon

Cream Cheese Frosting
1 8-ounce package cream cheese, softened (room temperature)
1/2 cup unsalted butter, softened
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
3 cups powdered sugar
2 tablespoons milk

Process:

First up, let’s gather all our ingredients…

Ingredients

First, in a small bowl mix your warm water, sugar, and yeast. (We only had rapid-rise/bread machine yeast, which works the same here with one tiny exception we’ll share later.)

Yeast Mixture (yum?)

In a big bowl or a stand mixer, make the pudding according to the instructions of the box. (2 cups cold milk and the pudding mix. Mix til it thickens up.) We used French Vanilla pudding because pro tip: French Vanilla in pudding=more vanilla-y flavor! Regular vanilla works just fine too. 😉

Mixin Up Dat Pudding

In goes the melted unsalted butter (YES unsalted. It matters. Use the right butter, guys.)

Melted Butter

Then 2 beaten eggs and salt. Whip that all up until well mixed.

Eggs

It’s gonna look a little thick and lumpyish now. That’s ok!

Lumpy Pudding

Now, dump in your oh-so-appetizing yeast mixture and give it a good mix.

Add Yeast

Now you’re going to want to add all 8 cups of flour into the wet stuff gradually. This is easiest in a stand mixer but if you’re doing it by hand, we recommend a sturdy spoon to stir. With our mixer we started with the paddle attachment. We’re going to add the flour in 4 batches, mixing well each time. Round 1…

Round 1 of Flour

Not too bad. Little lumpy. Round 2…

Ok, getting a little thick here. Round 3.

Round 3 of Flour

At this point do as we say, not as we do — if using a mixer, switch to your dough hook. If you’re rockin’ and rollin’ by hand, you’re good to keep going. Get the rest of the flour in there.

THIKK Dough

We gave in and switched to our dough hook. Note, this makes a LOT of dough, so even in a mixer, it’s a lot for it to handle. Ours kept creeping up over the top of the dough hook. Baking is messy guys…but worth it!

Shaggy Dough

Your dough is going to be a hot mess right now. Shaggy and lumpy. Hang in there! If using a mixer, keep going! It’ll get silkier as it mixes. If using a spoon, go ahead and dump your dough onto a floured surface and start kneading it with your hands til it gets smoother (it’ll take 5 or so minutes).

Way Smoother

At this point, using a mixer or your hands, you’re going to want to knead the dough by hand the last step of the way. Flour is your friend here, but don’t go crazy.

On a Floured Surface

If you’re new to kneading, just get the hardest part of the palm of your hand and smush into the dough, pushing away from you. Fold it over itself and repeat until it feels nice and soft.

Kneading

When it’s ready it will look roughly like this.

Finished Dough

Now, grab a bowl and oil it up (cooking spray or olive oil are great choices). Plop your dough it and cover it with plastic wrap. This baby is ready to rise!

Ready to Rise!

Now here’s where your yeast matters — if using regular, active dry yeast, you want to let this rest in a barely warm spot (if your oven has a Proof setting, that will be your new BFF) until the dough doubles in size (roughly. Ain’t gonna be perfect here!).

The dough will rise. You’ll deflate it by punching it down with your hands, then let it rise again. You’re letting the yeast do its thing and get the dough all puffy. If you cheated like we did and used Rapid Rise/bread machine yeast, you skip this first rise and just do one rise. (So no rise, punch it down, rise again. Just rise and done. We’re all ’bout them shortcuts. Also — it was late and we didn’t want to go to the grocery store. 😉 )

While you’ve got some time to kill, let’s make the cinnamon filling…

TIP: The original recipe says to melt butter, brush it on the dough, then sprinkle cinnamon and sugar on top. MESS CITY. We’re talkin’ sloppy rolls. You want to bake these like a pro. Mix the filling into a paste.

First dump your brown sugar, cinnamon, and room temperature butter in a bowl (if you forgot to get your butter room temp…it happens…pop it in the microwave for NO MORE than 10 seconds).

Filling Ingredients

Give it a good stir. It’ll be thick, but that’s OK.

Mixed Filling

Set this aside until you need it. Back to our dough… .

Oh Hai There Puffy Dough

It’s hard to see from the pictures, but after a couple of hours (it took about 2 for us) that dough is about doubled. Regular yeast users, smash the dough down, re-cover it, and wait again. It’ll rise faster the second time. Yeast cheaters like us move on to the next step — rolling out the dough.

Puffy Dough Ready to Roll

Flour your surface and grab your rolling pin. Roll the dough roughly into a 34×21 inch rectangle. This doesn’t have to be perfect; you can eyeball it.

Rolled Dough

Grab your filling mix and plop it around the rectangle as evenly as you can.

Filling Mix on Dough

Grab a spatula or knife (or your hands) and spread the mix as best you can. It’ll work its magic while it bakes so it doesn’t have to be perfect.

Spread Out Filling

Now we roll! Grab a short side and roll this baby up!

Rolled Up

TIP: You weren’t going to cut these with a knife were you? Go to your bathroom and grab that floss you pretend you use instead! 😉 Trust us…

Floss Time

Slip the floss under the roll and cross the ends over the top and pull. Voila! Perfectly sliced, no smushed rolls here!

Floss Cutting

Look how pretty!

Cinnamon Roll

Keep going until the roll is all sliced. You’ll want to space out the cuts about every 2 inches.

Cutting the Rolls

Spray a 9×13 inch baking pan (metal, ceramic, glass…it all works fine here!) with cooking spray or rub down with oil. Place your rolls evenly around. (We had 2 that didn’t fit, so we cut them in quarters. Nothing wrong with that! Smaller nibbles! 😉 )

Rolls in Pan

At this point, you’re done for the night! Cover the rolls with plastic wrap and pop the tray in the fridge. Get some sleep! If you’re looking to keep going, just skip the trip to the fridge.

Note — if you’re looking to freeze these to save for baking far later, we wouldn’t recommend it. Many other baked goods like cookies can handle a freeze really well, but yeast doesn’t like the arctic temps so much. You can keep these in a fridge for around 24 hours if need be, but we’d skip the deep freeze!

Covered Rolls

TIP: Grab a stick of unsalted butter and leave it out on your counter overnight for the frosting. You want perfect frosting, don’t you?

Leave This Out. You’ll Thank Yourself in the Morning.

If you let them hang out in the fridge overnight, don’t be shocked when you wake up if they’ve puffed a little since you last saw them — that’s normal.

Next Morning

It’s time to let your rolls warm up and rise before you bake them! If you have that Proof setting on your oven, use it! If not, leave these out at room temp to warm up. We popped ours in our oven on Proof and about an hour later were met with puffed, ready to bake rolls. They should all be touching.

Ready to Bake

Preheat your oven to 350 degrees. When hot, pop the rolls in! Depending on your oven, they can take anywhere from 15-30 mins. Ours were perfect at 25 minutes.

Baked Rolls

YUM. But what’s missing? Oh…yeah: FROSTING!

Since you left your butter out like we told you to (you did, didn’t you?!) dump the stick of unsalted butter, a package of cream cheese, 3 cups of powdered sugar, and vanilla extract in your mixer or a bowl.

Frosting Ingredients

Whip this up with your mixer or by hand with a spoon or whisk.

What Dreams are Made of

DON’T EAT IT YET. Stop! Put the spoon down!

Yummmmmmmm

Only thing left to do: frost the warm cinnamon rolls!

Off to a Good Start…

Use. It. All.

Need More Frosting!

Perfect.

Oh My.

Now, show your family what a pro-pastry chef you are and enjoy the adoration. You. Are. The. BOMB!

YESSSSS

The result? SO moist and deliciously fluffy. The frosting is just cream-cheesy enough and oozes down evverrrywhere in the rolls!

So Moist

Close your eyes, take a bite and pretend you’re on Main Street, U.S.A. WORTH IT!

Yeasted rolls can be SCARY for newer bakers but we promise, follow the steps above and you’ll be shocked when you have a HUGE plate of perfect cinnamon rolls in front of you in no time. Ok, not “no time”…they do take a bit of work, but so worth it and your family will love them (if you share!).

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Whether you're a rookie or a seasoned pro, our insider tips and tricks will have you exploring the parks like never before. So come along with us, and get planning your most magical vacation ever!


Have you made the Main Street Bakery Cinnamon Rolls before? What did you think? Let us know in the comments!

RECIPE! The AMAZING Disney World Main Street Bakery Cinnamon Rolls (With Step by Step Pics AND SECRET TIPS!) | the disney food blog (2024)

FAQs

How do you step up canned cinnamon rolls? ›

Pour heavy whipping cream in between the rolls, so that the bottom is completely covered. Melt the stick of butter, and then combine with a good amount of brown sugar, vanilla and cinnamon.

How long do you cook grands cinnamon rolls? ›

Simply heat the oven to 350° F, place the rolls in a greased pan, bake for 23–27 minutes or until golden brown, and spread the delicious icing on top. Nothing wakes up a day like an oven-fresh cinnamon roll.

What does pouring heavy cream over cinnamon rolls do? ›

The heavy cream absorbs the cinnamon, sugar, and butter that leaks from the insides of the rolls as they bake to create a glorious cinnamon sugar syrup for the bottom of your rolls.

Why aren t my cinnamon rolls gooey? ›

Your cinnamon roll dough should be tacky to the touch, but not too sticky so that it's messy. If you add too little flour, the dough will be gluey and eventually result in dense rolls. If you add too much flour, the dough will be tough, resulting in dry rolls.

Why are my cinnamon rolls not fluffy? ›

There are a lot of variables that go into the consistency of dough, even down to the weather and humidity. But the most common reason cinnamon rolls don't turn out fluffy is because the dough didn't have enough time to rise.

Why didn't my cinnamon rolls puff up? ›

The rolls won't have a light and fluffy texture without enough air bubbles. There are a few more reasons your yeasted dough doesn't seem to be rising, including yeast that's too old or expired, a room temperature that's not sufficiently warm, or the liquid you bloomed the yeast in being too hot.

Why pour milk on cinnamon rolls before baking? ›

⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ This ensures to getting ULTRA MOIST rolls. This should be used at room temperature and is poured over the rolls after they have risen for the second time, just before baking.

Why pour milk over cinnamon rolls before baking? ›

TRUST ME. Pouring heavy cream over cinnamon rolls before baking will add richness and moisture to the roll. As the cinnamon rolls bake, the cream will combine with the cinnamon and sugar to create a caramel-like sauce that will coat the rolls, adding a creamy texture with the fluffy roll.

Should I bake cinnamon rolls on the top or bottom rack? ›

Bake the Cinnamon Rolls

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Bake the risen cinnamon rolls in the preheated 350-degree oven on the middle or top rack for 12 minutes, then turn the oven down to 325 degrees. Bake for an additional 6-8 minutes or until the dough bounces back when you tap it lightly with your finger.

Why are my homemade cinnamon rolls tough? ›

Don't Overbake Cinnamon Rolls

Overbaked cinnamon rolls are tough and chewy instead of light and pillowy. Since it can be a bit tricky to know when rolls are fully baked, use a digital thermometer. Bake cinnamon rolls until golden brown and the internal temperature reaches between 190°and 200°F.

How do you know when homemade cinnamon rolls are done? ›

Once proofed, bake the cinnamon rolls for 20-30 minutes. When the cinnamon rolls are lightly golden brown, spot-check their internal temperature with a Thermapen to test their doneness. Their internal temperature should be 190–200°F (88–93°C).

How long can cinnamon rolls sit out before baking? ›

Remove the rolls from the refrigerator and let sit at room temperature 30 minutes before baking. Pick the option that works best for you, but don't chill longer than 2 days total.

How long do you cook Pillsbury cinnamon rolls in the oven? ›

HEAT oven to 400°F (or 375°F for nonstick pan). GREASE round cake pan. PLACE rolls in pan, cinnamon topping up. BAKE 13 to 17 minutes or until golden brown.

How to make Pillsbury cinnamon rolls without burning the bottom? ›

Try baking them on a lower shelf in the oven. I usually bake mine in the lower third of the oven, to help the bottom and top cook evenly. The other trick, to make sure they don't burn on the bottom, is to remove them from the oven and immediately turn the pan over on to a plate.

Should Pillsbury cinnamon rolls touch when baking? ›

Leave space enough between them that there's still space after they rise. If you're making them by hand, don't roll them so they're huge. Bake multiple pans separately, unless they fit side by side on your oven rack. If you're fortunate to have a convection oven, this is a great time to learn to use it.

How long do you cook Pillsbury cinnamon sticks? ›

PLACE ½-inch apart on greased cookie sheet. BAKE 11-13 minutes or until golden brown. SPREAD with icing.

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