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These potato rolls don’t require any kneading, and honestly, they’re hands down the best rolls we’ve ever had. Soft, buttery, and melt-in-your-mouth delicious, they’re our #1 most requested roll recipe.
These rolls are ridiculously easy to make — no fancy equipment, no complicated techniques — and perfect for any meal, holiday dinner, or special occasion. Once you try them, you’ll see why everyone keeps asking for this recipe.
These are seriously the best potato dinner rolls ever. They are so soft and seriously melt in your mouth. They are ridiculously buttery.

Table of Contents
- Suggested Products
- Ingredients You’ll Need
- How to Make Potato Rolls
- Can You Make Potato Rolls Ahead of Time?
- How Long Do Potato Rolls Last?
- Can You Freeze Potato Rolls?
- How to Form into Knots
- How to Shape Like Crescent Rolls
- Why are Potato Rolls Lighter Than Other Rolls?
- More BREAD SIDES You’ll Love:
- Watch This Video to See How They are Made…
- Potato Rolls Recipe
Suggested Products
These are all affiliate links for amazon but you can go to a store to find a lot too. Amazon is just easiest.
- Potato Gems or Pearls – We use these dehydrated potatoes as they seem to give the best flavor and texture.
- Dough Scraper – Any ol’ scraper will do but we prefer a plastic scraper to scrape the dough and flour off our counter and out of bowls for 10x faster clean up.
- Silpat Baking Mat – We bake everything on a silpat; cookies, rolls and even loaf breads cook evenly and without sticking! No spray needed!
- Nordic Ware Cookie Sheet – The cookie sheet you use absolutely can make or break your recipe. If it’s too dark it will cause your food to look dark and over-bake. You want a cookie sheet that bakes evenly and won’t affect color.
- Stainless Mixing Bowls – I love glass mixing bowls, but the truth is, everyone should have good stainless bowls in all sizes and these are great ones.
Ingredients You’ll Need
- Sugar: Feeds the yeast to help the dough rise and adds a touch of sweetness that enhances flavor. It also promotes browning, giving your rolls that beautiful golden color.
- Unsalted Butter: Butter adds richness, tenderness, and flavor to the rolls. The fat coats the flour proteins, which limits gluten development — that’s why your potato rolls turn out so soft and melt-in-your-mouth.
- Milk: Milk makes the dough tender and adds subtle sweetness and flavor. The natural sugars in milk also help with browning, while the proteins contribute to a soft, rich crumb.
- Potato Flakes: This is your secret weapon! Potato flakes (or mashed potatoes) make the rolls extra soft and moist by attracting and holding onto moisture.
- Salt: Balances the sweetness, enhances flavor, and strengthens the gluten structure so your rolls rise evenly and hold their shape.
- PRO TIP: Always add salt after the yeast has been mixed in with other ingredients to avoid slowing yeast activity.
- Instant Yeast: The leavening agent that makes your rolls rise. Instant yeast works quickly and doesn’t require proofing in water first — just mix it right in with the dry ingredients.
- Eggs: Eggs add richness, flavor, and beautiful golden color. They also help bind the dough and contribute to a soft, tender texture.
- Flour: The backbone of the recipe! Flour provides structure and gluten formation — the framework that traps air and gives your rolls their shape and lightness.

How to Make Potato Rolls
- Scald the Milk: Heat a saucepan over medium heat and add the milk. Cook until the edges begin to foam but don’t let it come to a boil. Remove from heat.
- Add: Stir in the sugar, butter, potato flakes and salt until combined and then let it cool to luke warm.
- Stir: Add the yeast and stir them in followed by the eggs.
- Combine: Place the flour in a large bowl then add the wet ingredients and stir until the dough comes together. The dough will be sticky.
- Rise: Cover the bowl with a towel or plastic wrap and let it rise for an hour.
- Divide: Punch the dough down and divide into 4 equal parts.
- Roll: Roll out each of the portions into a circle that is 1/2″ thick and butter 2 of the 4 circles. Place the unbuttered circles on top of the buttered circles so that the butter is between the two circles and press around the edges to seal.
- Form: Cut each circle either into 1″ wide strips or 16 wedges depending on how you want to form the rolls. Tie the strips into knots or roll the wedges into a crescent shape (see section below).
- Rise: Place formed rolls on a baking sheet lined with parchment and cover with a towel. Let them rise for 1.2 hours or until doubled in size.
- Bake: Once they have risen, bake in a preheated oven at 350℉ until golden brown, (14-20 min).
- PRO TIP: Make sure you eat one straight out of the oven. Oh my goodness, it’s like heaven. The best potato rolls literally melt in your mouth.

Can You Make Potato Rolls Ahead of Time?
Yes! You can make potato rolls ahead of time!
- Method 1 is making the dough, covering it in a bowl with plastic wrap and allowing it to sit in the fridge overnight. The next day, set the bowl until no longer chilly and proceed as normal.
- Method 2 is to allow the dough to rise, roll out the dough on a cookie sheet and then cover in plastic wrap and rest in the fridge overnight. Place on the counter to take the chill off for an hour or two and then bake.
How Long Do Potato Rolls Last?
Potato rolls will stay soft for days thanks to the potato starch molecules’ ability to keep wheat starches from getting stale.
Let the rolls cool completely before storing and place in a plastic storage bag, or wrap in foil and store at room temperature.
Properly stored, rolls will last for about 5 to 7 days at normal room temperature. But, let’s be honest here-the BEST Potato Rolls are so darn good, you won’t have any left-overs to store!

Can You Freeze Potato Rolls?
Bake the rolls as usual — as if you were going to serve them right away. Let them cool completely, then wrap them tightly in aluminum foil.
Place the foil-wrapped package in a freezer bag or storage container and freeze for up to a month
OR
Freeze the rolled out dough on a cookie sheet then store in freezer bags in the freezer for up to 1 month.
How to Form into Knots
The really long pieces I generally cut in half, but I also love huge rolls (not on my body), so it’s up to you.
Create a knot by crossing the ends of the strip and pull one end through the hole. Just like when you are tying your shoe.
How to Shape Like Crescent Rolls
Cut in pizza slices and roll, starting at the fat end into crescent rolls.

Why are Potato Rolls Lighter Than Other Rolls?
When you boil potatoes, it enlarges the starch molecules. This makes it difficult for the proteins in the flour to form gluten (the enemy of light, airy bread and pastry).
Potatoes contain potassium which causes yeast to rise faster than it would with breads that contain only wheat. Potato starches absorb more water than wheat starches, leading to a moist texture.

And that’s it — the secret to the softest, most buttery potato rolls you’ll ever eat! No kneading, no stress, just fluffy, melt-in-your-mouth rolls that are perfect for any meal or holiday.
If you loved these rolls, don’t forget to try them with our Buttery Mashed Potatoes, Roasted Turkey, or with other Thanksgiving Side Dishes for the ultimate comfort-food feast. Once you make these potato rolls, they’ll become your go-to recipe too!
More BREAD SIDES You’ll Love:
- Herbed Focaccia Bread
- Homemade Baguette
- French Bread
- Buttermilk Biscuits
- Homemade Naan
- Easy No Knead Artisan Bread
- One Hour Rolls
- All our BREAD RECIPES here!
Watch This Video to See How They are Made…








Just made them for the second time….delicious!
Sue,
I’m so glad to hear that!! Have you tried the orange rolls? They are so good too! We have them listed here on the site but let me know if you need a link!
Hands down, my new go to roll. So light and buttery. Initially I was worried about the wetness of the dough. I held back a cup of flour in the recipe so that I could have flour to work with when forming the rolls, but this worked in my favor. My husband loves them,”my new favorite roll!”. I ran some over to the neighbors while they were still hot. They loved them and I got 18 fresh eggs in return. 😉
These rolls are always a huge win! Just a heads for people above 5,000 ft like me both this recipe and the rolls Royce rolls recipe require another 1-2 cups of flour. It’s crazy I know. Feels like a lot of flour but it works! Without it your dough will be a sticky goopy mess!
These rolls just fixed the perfect addition to my Christmas Dinner, cannot wait that long so I may give them a trial run with a stew dinner, a bit fancy for stew but I cannot wait 17 days to try them! I love your site, new to me! I am much older than you and remember8 trac tapes, Texas Instruments etc. LIFE has certainly changed in my 65 years!
Oh I hope you do make them. They are my absolute favorite recipe ever. And thank you, thank you so much for the kind words. I’m so thrilled to have you following along and look forward to hearing from you more. 🙂
I know you already responded to a question about freezing ahead of time but do you form into knots and then freeze? Then take out and put on cookies sheet and then let rise for 1 to 2 hours before baking? I’m trying to get things done before Christmas dinner.
If they are frozen they will need to defrost for about 3 hours and then rise for 1-2 hours. Or you can bake, cook and then freeze for up to three weeks in a sealed bag in the freezer. 🙂
I don’t usually leave comments but I just had to Thank You for your video on the potato rolls and recipe. I made these for our Thanksgiving dinner and they were the best rolls I’ve ever made. So very soft and buttery and you are right they melt in your mouth right out of the oven ( I had to try one but don’t tell the family). I made them Wednesday night since we had to leave early Thursday morning to travel to my sons in Atlanta. They ended up picture perfect (I did the knots) and kept very well till we devoured them all 🙂 I can’t wait to try your other recipes….once again Thank you
Oh I’m just thrilled!!! Carol, that is such a sweet compliment and thank you so much for having taken the time to leave it.
Hell yeah! YES! YES! YES!
I’ve been baking a long time and I feel like I’ve just died and gone to heaven with this recipe. I made them for thanksgiving this year. They were convenient because they were no knead. And they were soft! And they were delicious! Everything they were claiming to be.
They got rave reviews from my family. It will now be my go-to roll recipe.
Thank you for sharing!!!!
YAY!!!!! Best. Comment. Ever. Haha! Thanks for the love! xoxo!
I am hoping to make these for my family for Thanksgiving! However, I have searched high and low for “potato flakes” and can’t find them anywhere! I have heard that instant mashed potatoes come in flakes. Are they the same thing? If not, do you have any suggestions about where in the store I should be looking?
Yes, absolutely! Just make sure you don’t get any garlic ones, haha. The instant potatoes are the same.
Can you freeze these before baking to keep some for another day? I am making these today.
I’m so sorry we missed your comment. You can freeze the dough on a baking pan, place in a zip top bag and place in the freezer, but please allow 3-5 hours (depending on how warm the room is) to thaw the dough, then let them rise before baking.
How long can you keep the freshly made/unbaked rolls in freezer before baking?
Hi Jeanette, we’ve kept them in there for two months and they were fine, but probably not any longer than that.
Do you use all purpose flour or bread flour
Hi Kathleen, We only use all-purpose flour in these rolls. In fact, I’m editing a video for them and hope to have it up on Sunday in case anyone needs it so stay tuned!
Hi,
I plan to make these on Thanksgving and plan to double the recipe. If I prepare the dough the day before do I complete Step 4 before I let it rest in the refrigerator? Meaning I cover the bowl with a towel or saran wrap. Let dough rise for one hour on the counter, then push down and divide dough into 3 parts and wrap each part in Saran Wrap and put in the fridge or let it rise for an hour on the counter then put in the fridge? The next day I need to to bring to room temp (about how long would that take), roll out, shape, let rise again and then bake? We eat around noon so I’m trying to figure out my timing…Thank you!!
Hi Kara,
If we make them a day ahead we do one of two things…
1. Make the dough, lay saran wrap down on the dough as well as wrap the bowl so that the dough doesn’t dry out and then allow to rest in the fridge overnight. First thing in the morning I pull it out, let it come to room temp, about an hour, roll into rolls and allow to rise 30-60 minutes and bake.
or
2. Make the dough and let it rise on the counter. Make into rolls on a sheet pan and cover well with saran wrap. Place the whole thing in the fridge overnight. Pull the rolls out about 1- 1/2 hours early, allow to come to room temp and bake as normal 🙂
Thank you!!! Option Number 2 seems to save the most time on Thanksgiving Day! And my 7 year old will love helping to shape the knots! One option isn’t better than the other is it?
Kara,
I don’t think so. We tend to prepare ours and put the pan in the fridge versus the dough bowl just to have less to do the day of.
Thank you so much!