This month, the Bread Bakers are celebrating the humble potato. I love adding potatoes to my dough. It makes the resulting bread so tender and soft. I have had some King Arthur cinnamon rolls that use potatoes on my to-bake list for years at this point. I fully planned on making them for this event but I ended up going the savoury route. No regrets. These crescent rolls were easy to make and tasted great.
Be sure to scroll down to see what the other bakers whipped up!
Potato Crescent Rolls
Ingredients
Dough
420 grams (3 1/2 cups) flour
1/2 cup potato flakes
1 tablespoon sugar
2 teaspoons instant yeast
1 1/2 teaspoons salt
2 eggs
1/2 cup milk
1/2 cup water*
1/4 cup oil
Topping
4 tablespoons butter, melted
Directions
Mix all the dough ingredients together. You want the dough to be soft and tacky (not sticky) so when adding the water, add just enough to form a tacky dough. You might need less or more depending on your flour and climate. I needed a bit less.
When the dough is smooth and cohesive, place it in an oiled bowl, cover and bulk ferment in the refrigerator overnight or at room temperature until doubled.
Line a half-sheet pan with parchment paper.
When the dough is ready, divide it into two halves. Roll each piece into a 9" to 10" circle. Lightly brush with some of the melted butter.
Divide each circle into 9 equal pieces. I found the easiest way to do this equally was to first divide the circle into 3 equal pieces and then divide each of those pieces into 3.
Take each triangle and flatten it some more, stretching the triangle out. I preferred the crescent rolls that I made from these flatter, stretched-out triangles to the triangles left as is. I got more turns and a more defined roll. I stretched the triangles to be about 6 to 7 inches long with the shortest side being about 4 inches or so long.
Starting with the shortest side of each triangle, roll up the dough. Place your rolls on your prepared baking sheet with the tips tucked under the roll. Curve the rolls to form a crescent shape.
Allow all your rolls to proof for about 25 to 35 minutes or until puffy.
Before the rolls are ready, preheat the oven to 350 F.
Bake the risen rolls for 15 minutes, remove them from the oven and brush with melted butter. Bake for another 5 minutes or until golden.
- Bacon Potato Silver Dollar Pancakes from Food Lust People Love
- Baked Potato Biscuits from Palatable Pastime
- Baked Vada Pav from Cook with Renu
- Feather Rolls from A Messy Kitchen
- Loaded Baked Potato Pizza from Karen’s Kitchen Stories
- Okinawa Sweet Potato Pani Popo from Magical Ingredients
- Potato Bread with Roasted Apples from What Smells So Good?
- Potato Crescent Rolls from Passion Kneaded
- Potato Dinner Rolls from A Day in the Life on the Farm
- Sweet Potato Biscuits from The Wimpy Vegetarian
- Turkish Stuffed Pogaca with Cheese & Potato from Sneha’s Recipe
We take turns hosting each month and choosing the theme/ingredient.
Your crescent rolls are gorgeous, Kelly! As far as I'm concerned, going savory is always a good decision.
ReplyDeleteLook how soft and puffy your crescent rolls are!! They're gorgeous!
ReplyDeleteCrescent perfection! Those look bakery ready.
ReplyDeleteThose crescent rolls look perfect. I wish I could reach into the screen and grab one.
ReplyDeleteThese look soooo good. I can just imagine them slathered in melty butter.
ReplyDeleteI love this idea, it looks perfect for kids too
ReplyDeleteThese look gorgeous! This recipe is now on the top my list to do. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your post. We appreciate your useful content. I hope to have more articles of yours.
ReplyDeleteAbogado Tráfico Henrico VA