Fluffy, sourdough biscuit dough smothered with herbed butter, cheese, and caramelized onions, rolled up and baked until golden. These sourdough herb and cheese rolls are a delicious side to your favorite soup, or serve them as an appetizer. Itโs hard to stop at one.
There have been a lot of surprises around the homestead lately. First, the surprise calf born three months โearly.โ You can read that story here.
Then, a great storm rolled through, knocking down trees and leaving limbs strewn everywhere; it also took away our power and water for a few days.
It was certainly not something we were totally prepared for, but Iโm thankful that we all stayed safe. We also received willing help from many family and friends, for which we are so grateful.
It was a little taste of living like the original owners of our 1890โs farmhouse. No electricity, no showers, having to haul our water – by truck, rather than horse and wagon, of course. Yet, it still gave us that taste, and goodness, it make me thankful for modern amenities.
The charm of the idea may be slightly there still, thanks to Ma Ingalls. I like that we get to do some things that our ancestors got to experience, such as raising dairy animals for milk, and making things from scratch in our cast iron skillets.
Some things are now very convenient, though (hello, indoor plumbing), and I am thankful.
Sourdough is one of those things that takes me back to the pioneers. They didnโt have instant yeast packets that they could just pick up at the store.
Rather, they relied on the natural yeasts in the air to acquire their delicious, leavened bread. Kneading the dough by hand, developing the gluten so it creates the perfect crumb, was a reality for them.
While Iโm fairly positive they didn’t have a recipe like this sourdough herb and cheese roll, Iโm sure they wished they did. Melted cheese between layers of herbed butter with caramelized onions and tasty sourdough is so yummy.
Tips For Making Sourdough Cheese Rolls:
- The longer the herbs sit in the butter mixture, the more the flavor will deepen and develop. I recommend doing this early on in the baking process.
- These would be amazing on the side of a creamy bowl of soup, or they would pair nicely with a fig jam.
- Brush the buns lightly with an egg or cream wash to give the buns a shiny, crusty glaze.
- Since youโre going to all the effort, caramelize extra onions for toppings on other things like burgers, stir fry, sandwiches, etc.! If you donโt have fresh herbs, you can substitute with dried herbs. Use 1 tsp sage, 1โ2 tsp dried rosemary, and 1 tsp dried thyme.
- Sprinkle the tops of the buns with some finely chopped thyme leaves.
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Ingredients:
Sourdough Roll Dough
Fed sourdough starter
Water
All-purpose flour
Coconut oil
Honey
Eggs
Baking soda
Baking powder
Salt
Filling:
Butter
Fresh sage
Fresh rosemary
Thyme
Caramelized onion (5-6 medium onions raw)
Cheddar cheese
Tools you may need:
Stand mixer (optional; hands will also work just fine)
Measuring cups and spoons
Grain mill (optional)
Sourdough Herb And Cheese Rolls
In a bowl, combine fed sourdough starter, flour, honey, water, and melted coconut oil. Mix together, then form into a ball.
Place the dough in a greased bowl and cover with beeswax wraps or plastic wrap.
Allow to rest in a warm place overnight or up to 24 hours.
Add eggs, baking soda, baking powder, and salt to the bowl, and combine well with your hands.
Cover it with a tea towel and put it in a warm place for about an hour.
While the dough is rising, thinly slice and caramelize the onions; this process takes about 45 mins (stir the onions occasionally.)
In a small bowl, combine room temperature butter and chopped fresh herbs, stirring well.
Lightly dust the counter with flour, then roll out the dough to about 1/4 inch thickness.
Add herbed butter to the dough and spread evenly.
Evenly distribute caramelized onions over the dough, then sprinkle over the 2 1/2 cups of grated cheese.
Roll the dough up as tightly as you can. When you get to the end, pull it up as tightly as you can and pinch the ends into the main roll.
Slice to make 12-14 sourdough savory rolls.
Place the rolls into a well-seasoned 14โณ cast iron skillet. Sprinkle with some extra chopped thyme.
Allow them to rise in a warm spot for about 1/2 hour to 1 hour while your oven preheats.
Bake them in a 375 degree oven for 20-25 minutes. The cheese will be melted and the rolls will be slightly golden around the edges.
Allow them to cool a bit, then enjoy!
How To Caramelize Onions:
Slice 5-6 medium sized onions (900g raw onion) thinly.
Warm oil and butter in pan on medium high.
Stir to coat onions in the oil. Cook, stirring every few minutes.
After 15 minutes, sprinkle some salt over the onions (also 1 tsp sugar, if you desire).
Cook for 30 mins to an hour, stirring them every 1-2 minutes. Let the onions stick to the pan a little bit, then stir them before they burn, but leave them alone long enough to brown.
After the first 20-30 minutes, you may want to lower the stove top temperature.
Allow to sit and then scrape, let them sit, and then scrape… until the onions are a rich brown color.
Add balsamic vinegar at the end, if you enjoy the extra flavor.
Store refrigerated for several days in an airtight container.
Find More Of My Sourdough Recipes:
- Sourdough Cherry Cobbler
- Sourdough Cheddar Waffles
- Chocolate And Coconut Sourdough Scones
- Fluffy Sourdough Biscuits
- No-Knead Sourdough Bread
If you try this recipe and love it, I would love if you could come back and give it 5 stars!
Sourdough Herb And Cheese Rolls
Ingredients
Sourdough Roll Dough
- 1/2 cup sourdough starter, bubbly and active (113 g)
- 1/2 cup water, 118 g
- 4 cups all-purpose flour, 560 g
- 1/2 cup melted coconut oil, 112 g
- 1 tablespoon honey, 21 g
- 2 large eggs
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- 1/2 teaspoon salt, 2.5 g
Filling:
- 1/2 cup room temperature butter
- 1 tablespoon finely chopped fresh sage
- 1 tablespoon finely chopped fresh rosemary
- 1 tablespoon finely chopped thyme
- 2 cups caramelized onion, 5-6 medium onions raw
- 2 1/2 cups grated cheddar cheese
Instructions
- In a bowl, combine fed sourdough starter, flour, honey, water, and melted coconut oil. Mix together, then form into a ball.
- Place the dough in a greased bowl and cover with beeswax wraps or plastic wrap.
- Allow to rest in a warm place overnight or up to 24 hours.
- Add eggs, baking soda, baking powder, and salt to the bowl, and combine well with your hands.
- Cover it with a tea towel and put it in a warm place for about an hour.
- While the dough is rising, thinly slice and caramelize the onions; this process takes about 45 mins, stirring the onions occasionally.
- In a small bowl, combine room temperature butter and chopped fresh herbs, stirring well.
- Lightly dust the counter with flour, then roll out the dough to about 1/4 inch thickness.
- Add herbed butter to the dough and spread evenly.
- Evenly distribute caramelized onions over the dough, then sprinkle over the 2 1/2 cups of grated cheese.
- Roll the dough up as tightly as you can. Pinch the ends into the main roll.
- Slice to make 12-14 sourdough savory rolls.
- Place the rolls into a well-seasoned 14โณ cast iron skillet. Sprinkle with some extra chopped thyme.
- Allow them to rise in a warm spot for about 1/2 hour to 1 hour while your oven preheats.
- Bake them in a 375 degree oven for 20-25 minutes.
- Allow them to cool a bit and enjoy!
To Carmelize Onions
- Slice 5-6 medium sized onions (900g raw onion) thinly.
- Warm oil and butter in pan on medium high.
- Stir to coat onions in the oil. Cook, stirring every few minutes.
- After 15 minutes, sprinkle some salt over the onions (also 1 tsp sugar, if you desire).
- Cook for 30 mins to an hour, stirring them every 1-2 minutes.
- After the first 20-30 minutes, you may want to lower the stove top temperature.
- Allow to sit and then scrape, let them sit, and then scrape… until the onions are a rich brown color.
- Add balsamic vinegar at the end, if you enjoy the extra flavor.
Notes
- The longer the herbs sit in the butter mixture, the more the flavor will deepen and develop. I recommend doing this early on in the baking process.
- Brush the buns lightly with an egg or cream wash to give the buns a shiny, crusty glaze.
- Since youโre going to all the effort, caramelize extra onions for toppings on other things like burgers, stir fry, sandwiches etc.!
- If you donโt have fresh herbs, you can substitute with dried herbs. Use 1 tsp sage, 1โ2 tsp dried rosemary, and 1 tsp dried thyme.
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
I would love to try these butโtwo issues. I cannot eat onions or honey. Do you think these would be good with maple syrup and bacon and/or ham (or Canadian bacon)?
I’ve never tried that so I can’t say for sure. Let us know if you do!
Hi Lisa! I just wanted to say I love your YouTube channel and all of your recipes on the blog also!
Anyway, Iโm wondering if you think I could make these without adding the two eggs. Unfortunately I canโt eat eggs. They seem similar to some other recipes that I make and donโt use eggs but Iโm just not sure.
Thanks so much!
Any egg alternative should work for this recipe.
Is the dough suppose to be super flaky after mixing the first part of it? Itโs the second time I tried the recipe and the dough is so flaky. Just wondering is thatโs normal?
I accidentally mixed all of the dough ingredients together at once, lol, what’s going to happen?
I messed up and added all the ingredients for the dough, both step 1 and step 4. Seems weird to add step 4 ingredients so late. Any suggestions? should I just pitch it?
I typically recommend adding the eggs and extra ingredients after the bulk ferment since it will be sitting out on the counter for 12+ hours.
Just wondering if I should throw away my dough. I mixed all the ingredients late at night and didnโt fully read that I wasnโt supposed to add the eggs and other stuff until the next day. It sat out all night and is very tough. Should I throw away?
I don’t have a cast-iron pan – can I use a rectangular baking pan? If so, what size?
Yes. A 9 by 13 should work fine.
Do you think they would work out of I assembled in the evening, and then put in fridge to bake thr following day?
These look so delicious and I want to try this Saturday, but I know I wont have time!
I would think that would work.
Hi! I tried making the dough and it just will not stay together. This was the first step of flour, honey, coconut oil, water, and my starter. It was almost flaky. I could not form into anything. Can you tell me what I did wrong? Was it adding all the flour at once instead of a little at a time?
It could be the thickness of your starter is different then mine, the environment, how the ingredients were measure, etc. So many facts. If it is too dry, you can always add a little bit of water (a teaspoon at a time) until it comes together and forms a nice dough.
I just put the 1st step ingredients together and mine is the exact same way you described. lol. Way too dry. Adding water to the dough now and hoping for the best! ๐
Hi Lisa, thanks for everything you share about your life! Following you from Italy: just started my very first sordough according to your recipe- super happy! Thanks thanks
That’s awesome! thanks for sharing!
How would you adapt these for Einkorn AP?
I have not tested einkorn flour with this recipe yet. I’ll add that to my list of things to try! If you experiment with it, let me know how it turns out!