Cinnamon Roll Calculator | Dough, Filling & Yield

🥞 Cinnamon Roll Calculator

Calculate dough weight, filling amount, and yield for any batch size

Quick Presets
Roll Details
Total Dough0grams
Total Filling0grams
Total Rolls0pieces
Dough per Roll0grams
Key Ratios Reference
80gDough / Roll
14gFilling / Roll
5mmDough Thickness
45min2nd Rise Time
Ingredient Breakdown by Batch Size
Component6 Rolls12 Rolls18 Rolls24 Rolls
All-Purpose Flour (g)2505007501000
Butter in Dough (g)4080120160
Sugar in Dough (g)50100150200
Milk (ml)120240360480
Yeast (g)5101418
Filling Butter (g)4080120160
Cinnamon Sugar (g)4590135180
Filling Type Guide
Filling TypeMain IngredientsFilling per RollFlavor Profile
Classic CinnamonButter, cinnamon, white sugar14gWarm, sweet, spiced
Brown SugarButter, brown sugar, cinnamon16gRich, caramel, deep
Cardamom SugarButter, cardamom, sugar13gFloral, Nordic, aromatic
Pecan Brown SugarPecans, butter, brown sugar20gNutty, crunchy, rich
Apple CinnamonApple, cinnamon, sugar, butter22gFruity, warm, autumnal
Chocolate HazelnutHazelnut spread, cocoa18gChocolate, nutty, indulgent
Baker's Tips
Dough temperature matters: Keep dough at 24°C–27°C during both rises for optimal yeast activity and a light, airy texture.
Slice with dental floss: Slide unflavored floss under the rolled dough log and cross over the top to cut clean, perfectly round rolls without squishing.

 

Cinnamon rolls simply are the nicest way to enjoy breakfast at the end of the week. They are made of soft, fluffy dough rolled with sweet cinnamon and brown sugar that is baked until nice golden colour. Many versions cover themselves with cream cheese frosting, that makes them sticky and almost impossible to resist.

The best from them? Here you find baked bits that melt in your mouth and filled right with so much cinnamon sugar as needed.

How to Make Soft Cinnamon Rolls

The idea itself is very easy. You take some raised sweet dough, cover it with butter and spread on it a mix of cinnamon and sugar. Later roll it up, cut in bits and put in the oven.

Some versions add brown sugar, raisins or anything else that pleases you.

White sugar and brown sugar both play a role here, but they act differently. The white kind dries and loosens the dough, while brown, that has molasses, adds extra moisture and creates that sticky, fluffy texture that you find after baking. The stuffing itself comes from a mix of ground cinnamno and sugar, mixed in softened butter, that spreads above the rolled and stretched dough.

Many cinnamon rolls are made from rich brioche-style dough, full of butter, milk, and eggs. Here is the secret for that softness of texture. Also use of breadcrumbs helps to form that baked inside.

Here comes the good part, if you poor warm heavy cream above the rolls just before you put them in the oven, you get something truly moist, soft and fluffy.

Some recipes need only one rise, which is great for beginners in working with dough, who do not want to wait forever. From start to finish it lasts less than two hours. Also, the dough lasts well, so it works for making ahead during holidays or whenever you want a fast weekly treat.

Even so, freezing unbaked rolls truly is the best idea for busy Saturday mornings.

There is a lot of room for play with ideas. Chopped nuts work surprisingly, likewise as dried fruits, raisins, cranberries, apples (that all mix well). Spices like allspice, nutmeg, ginger or cardamom can change the taste entirely.

One fun idea that I saw was apple pie cinnamon rolls with chopped apples and crumbs of graham crackers mixed in the stuffing. Another way is to add bits of butter in the dough, to reach a flaky almost croissant feel.

Cinnabon probably is the most famous brand of cinnamon rolls around. The smell from their mall stores and airport shops almost forces people to buy. They managed to create a uniform product globally and market themselves perfectly as a legend of comfort foods.

Many homemade recipes try to copy that Cinnabon feeling.

When the middle rolls in your tray come out doughy, while the edges are perfect, then move the oven rack higher. Lay an empty baking sheet on the bottom rack to protect them against too much heat from below. Dense rolls commonly show one problem, the dough didnot have enough time to rise.

 

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