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These easy homemade hoagie rolls are soft, chewy, and sturdy enough to hold all your favorite sandwich fillings — yet simple enough for even beginner bakers. With just a handful of pantry staples and straightforward steps, you can skip the store-bought rolls and bake bakery-style hoagies right at home.
Made with just 9 simple ingredients, these easy Hoagie Rolls are the perfect base for French dip sandwiches, meatball sliders, pesto meatball sandwich and more!

Why Make Fresh Hoagie Rolls?
BECAUSE YOU WILL BE A HERO.
We make our own hoagie rolls because it goes so fast, it’s easier for me than to remember to run to the store. The only problem is, I didn’t think everyone else would want to make them too, but boy was I wrong!
We received a comment on our french dip sandwiches post saying they would like the recipe for the hoagies and I had stated I would post it, but I forgot and got busy aka side tracked with the gazillion recipes always floating around in my head. And then that recipe has gotten really popular and I not only started getting more comments, but emails too!
One night, we were eating french dip for dinner when, BAM! I remembered that I was going to photograph them. I had hardly any light left and we were literally eating them so I quickly threw the hoagies on a board, snapped a few shots and now here we are.
What’s Needed for Hoagie Rolls?
To make this hoagie bread recipe, you need 9 simple ingredients:
- Warm Water: Activates the yeast and hydrates the flour, helping the dough come together smoothly.
- Instant Yeast: Leavens the dough, allowing the rolls to rise and develop a light, airy texture.
- Granulated Sugar: Feeds the yeast to encourage rising and adds a subtle sweetness to the rolls.
- Honey: Enhances flavor, adds gentle sweetness, and helps create a softer crumb and lightly golden crust.
- Flour: Provides structure and strength while keeping the rolls soft and tender.
- Salt: Balances sweetness and enhances flavor while strengthening the dough’s structure.
- Butter: Adds richness and tenderness, creating soft, fluffy hoagie rolls.
- Egg: Used for brushing the rolls before baking to promote a shiny, golden finish.
- Milk: Combined with the egg white to thin the wash and help create an evenly browned crust.
The measurements for all the ingredients are listed in the recipe card at the end of the post.

How to Make Hoagie Buns
This sub roll recipe is incredibly easy, but it does require some patience as the dough goes through two separate rises.
- Make the Dough: Using a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment, make the dough (**see section below for tips on making the dough).
- First Rise: Transfer the dough to an oiled bowl, cover with a towel, and let rise until doubled.
- Shape the Dough: Line a baking sheet with a silpat or parchment paper and shape the dough into 4-8 hoagies.
- Second Rise: Cover lightly with a towel and allow to rise another 1 to 2 hours.
- Slash: Slash the top of each roll with a really sharp knife or blade and brush with egg and milk mixture.
- Bake: Bake until golden and sound hard when you gently tap the outside. Brush with butter.
The complete instructions are listed in the recipe card. You can also print or save the recipe there.
Tips for Finishing Hoagie Rolls

- I highly recommend brushing the hoagie bread with butter before serving it.
- If you like a little crunch and an added flavor, sprinkle some sesame seeds on the top right after brushing with butter.
- The bread is hard upon removal but quickly softens, so don’t worry that you over baked.
- Let the sub rolls cool for 15 or so minutes before cutting them.

Hoagie Roll FAQs
A hoagie roll is a type of long flat roll used to prepare hoagie sandwiches. A Hoagie is the same thing as a Sub sandwich, hero sandwich, or grinder.
There is no difference. They are the same thing, but they just are called a variety of names depending on where you are from.
In all my research, it’s a little hard to say where the word “hoagie” comes from. There’s a consensus that it comes from the Philadelphia area in the mid 1900s, but where it exactly originates is debatable.
Wrap the rolls well, or place in a zip lock bag. Hoagie rolls will keep for 5-7 days at room temperature.
Yes! To freeze hoagie rolls and buns, place them inside a freezer bag and seal tightly. Hoagie rolls will keep 3 months in the freezer.
Tips for Making the Dough
- Since posting this recipe, we have received several comments about the recipe being wrong, the dough is too wet, the ratios are off, etc. I started to wonder if somehow the recipe had been changed without my knowing it. So I made the recipe again exactly how it is written, and they came out perfectly!
- In fact, they were so good, I re-photographed them and those pictures are the ones you see now.
- The dough will seem a little wet and shaggy at first (known as slack dough which is like a blog and will not hold a shape), but you just have to keep mixing it. As you work the gluten, the dough become so smooth and silky. Patience is key and trust the process!

Homemade hoagie rolls might sound intimidating, but this easy recipe proves just how achievable they really are. Soft, chewy, and incredibly versatile, and homemade is always better. Make a batch for dinner, freeze extras for later, and enjoy fresh, bakery-quality bread whenever you need it.
More Easy Bread Recipes to Try:
- No-Knead Artisan Bread
- French Bread
- Herbed Focaccia Bread
- Classic Potato Rolls
- Homemade Naan
- 7 Up Biscuits
- All of our bread recipes!
Watch How Each Step of This Recipe Should Look…






Never had a more beautiful dough. So easy to work with. It was perfect when I got it out of my mixer!
Thank you so much Lacey!!
I came across this recipe for my beef dips that I’m making for supper. I followed the directions EXACTLY and I have never seen a more beautiful dough. The cubed butter threw me for a loop but I added it and forged on. So glad I did. The dough is soo smooth. Mine wasn’t wet at all. Read the recipe and then re-read it and follow the directions. You won’t be disappointed. Well done Oh Sweet Basil!
Thank you so much Crystal!! I appreciate the feedback so much!
The metric measurements for this recipe are COMPLETELY OFF!! A Tbs of yeast is 10g, not 4g and the water to flour ratio is off too. If you don’t measure your ingredients by weight, this might work…otherwise, the metric recipe is wrong.
Hi Kristina! Thank you so much for the feedback! We have an automatic tool that converts everything from imperial to metric so I’m not sure why it is converting the yeast incorrectly. I’ve updated the yeast and double checked all the rest of the measurements. It is a very wet dough to start with but watching the video in the post should help to see what the dough looks like at each step.
Super wet dough. I am also not seeing any video posted here, can someone link?
Hello Paul! The video appears right after the subheading the reads, “What How Each Step of This Recipe Should Look…”. The dough is very wet to begin with but will be come smooth and satiny. I hope this helps!
Wanted to like this. Followed all the directions and after the first rise it was just a sloppy mess. Little thicker than pancake batter. After shaping and letting rise they went flat with slicing down the center due to them being so sloppy
Hi Chels! It sounds like something definitely went wrong. Were you able to watch the video included in the post. That will show you exactly how the dough should look at each step. So sorry for the frustration!
I jut started my second rise and found this dough to be amazing. I make.a lot of pizza dough and wish it was always this nice! I read the entire recipe and comments and an to add that the origin of the name,” Hoagie” most likely came from, as you stated, WW1 1900’s Philadelphia when the Italian Immigrants worked at the shipyard on “Hog Island” and they were really big on sandwiches during work. So I have read. I’ll keep posted on the finished hoagie roll.
Yay! Thanks so much for the feedback Mark and for the great info on the history of the hoagie!
These hoagie rolls turned out perfect, I am beyond thrilled! I will make them again and again, and share this recipe as well.
Love to hear this Jessica!! Thank you so much for taking time to leave a comment.
I feel bad about giving such a low rating, but the dough is way too wet to handle. I tried adding more flour & it didn’t help. I have no idea what went wrong as I thought I followed the directions to a T. I am newer to bread making, so I’m not sure if something obvious just went over my head or what. Gonna bake it as one giant “hoagie” so I don’t waste the dough.
Hi Emily! I’m so sorry for the frustration! Were you able to watch the video in the post? It shows what the dough should look like at each step. It is a very wet dough to start.
Followed this recipe to the T and they still didn’t come out like hers…
What temp is the butter? I put cold in because it seems impossible to cube room temp? And it’s not working well
Hi Megan! I like to cube it and then let it come to room temp before adding it in.