Parker House Rolls
Ok. I’ve come to terms with the fact that I have housewife tendencies. It’s true. Don’t judge me… that would be rude.
I’ve tried to ignore these urges. I’ve tried to pass it off as a phase… but really? This can’t go on. I’m going to have to own my housewife tendencies. Now seems like as good a time as ever to fess up.
See… yesterday afternoon I put on my frilly 1950′s apron, pulled my hair back, put on my giant fake pearl earrings and made homemade dinner rolls. The apron and pearls are essential, so is a cigarette and a stiff cocktail if I’m to believe what I see on Mad Men.
So there I am in my kitchen, proudly clad in my housewife gear, hand kneading some pretty sexy roll dough, thinking I’ve got it pretty kush when I realize that my housewife fantasy is missing two things… a… um… er… husband… and mud covered children that I have to chase around the house to get into the bath.
So. Ok. Fine. My housewife tendencies are really just an excuse for me to play dress up for an afternoon. And rolls and butter? Just the awesome perk of my extended dress up games.
Pretty pretty dinner rolls. This luscious dough comes together with just ten minutes of hand kneading. They’re buttery and sweet, and have some thickness and weight without being dry and boring. They’re so lovely. You’ll feel all sorts of impressed with your abilities.
This recipe is a classic. Parker House Rolls are said to have originated in the 1870′s (whaaaat!?) at the Parker House Hotel in Boston. Old school.
keepin’ it real.
Parker House Rolls
recipe from The Gourmet Cookbook
makes 20 rolls
3 tablespoons warm water (105 to 115 degrees F)
3 tablespoons sugar
1 (1/4-ounce) package (2 1/2 teaspoons) active dry yeast
1 stick (8 tablespoons) unsalted butter
1 cup whole milk
2 cups bread flour
1 1/2 teaspoons salt
3/4 – 1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
Stir together warm water, 1 tablespoons sugar and yeast in a small bowl until yeast in dissolved. Let stand until foamy, about five minutes. If the mixture does not foam up, throw it out and start over with different yeast. Foam means that the yeast is livin’.
Melt 3/4 stick (6 tablespoons) butter in a small saucepan. Add the milk and heat until lukewarm. Pour into a large bowl and add yeast mixture, remaining 2 tablespoons of sugar, bread flour, and salt. Stir with a wooden spoon until just combined.
Stir in 3/4 cup all-purpose flour, dump out onto a clean work surface and begin to bring the dough together into a ball. If your dough is too sticky to handle, add up to 1/2 cup of all-purpose flour a tablespoon at a time until the dough is just slightly sticky.
Knead dough until a smooth and elastic dough begins to form, adding more all-purpose flour as needed. The dough will be smooth, satiny and just slightly sticky after 10 minutes. Good job! Form dough into a ball and place in a large, buttered bowl, turning the dough so that the entire ball is covered. Cover with plastic wrap and a towel and let rest n a warm, draft free place until doubled in size, about 1 hour.
Butter a 9×13-inch baking pan. Divide dough into 20 equal pieces. Roll each one into a ball and arrange evenly in 4 rows of 5 in a baking pan. Cover loosely with plastic wrap and let rise in a warm, draft free place until almost doubled in size, about 45 minutes.
Using a floured chopstick or the edge of a ruler, make a deep crease down the center of each row of rolls. Let rolls rise, loosely covered for 15 minutes.
Preheat oven to 375 degrees F and place a rack in the center of the oven.
Melt the remaining 2 tablespoons of butter and cool slightly. Brush the tops of the rolls with butter and place in the oven for 20-25 minutes, until golden brown. Cool rolls in the pan for 5 minutes then remove and serve warm. Reheat rolls wrapped in foil in a 375 degree oven if you’d like to eat them the next day with butter and jam. Serious yum.













153 Comments Add A Comment
These rolls look absolutely perfect!! I’m bookmarking this recipe. Thanks for another great recipe, Joy!
I am hugely in favour of dress-up. Especially if you have Mad Men visions :) Add to that the fact that I love dinner rolls and you’ve got a winning combination.
i have serious housewife tendencies as well! why work a normal job when you can bake delicious rolls all day long? yum.
These are too cute, I’ve got to try them!!!
Yummy indeed! May I ask, due to my aching wrists, would it be too wrong to knead the dough in a bread machine?
thanks
Pass me the rolls!! YUM…. this post really has me hungry for some bread and butter.
These look so pretty,bet it would take a large tub of “Honey butter”,to sit with them!! Rolls seem to be a weakness in my family,may have to tripple recipe.Enjoy the site.The statement,” I’ve come to terms with the fact that I have housewife tendencies “,is funny!! I am a man,and since I had to take over cooking 4 years ago(terminally ill wife),I get so many jokes about,where’s the mini skirt,high heels,etc!!I get calls all the time,about recipes,how to do this and that,in the kitchen.My girls always are always asking questions,and they are 40 and down,grandkids love holidays!! All because of you “Ladies”,Thanks!!!
So cute! Like little bums.
I do mean that in the nicest possible way ;P
My hubby would be THRILLED if I dressed up while cooking. :)
Looks great! I need to get myself a cute apron :)
These look absolutely lovely. Your housewife tendencies have paid off!
Joy, You crack me up! You’ve really got nice buns there! I do believe I’ll give these a whirl tonight or tomorrow-
I am having strong urges to copy those rolls today. They look fabulous!
Kathleenssugarandspice.wordpress.com
These are rather PERFECT!!! Golden and perfectly round!!!
gorgeous!! i will try these for sure ~ apron and all ;)
Mmmm. I love dinner rolls. And dress up.
I, too, have housewife tendencies. However, I think that the absence of a husband and muddy kids WHO WILL EAT ALL THE ROLLS is the bonus part. We don’t have to wait until everyone else takes their portion to get what’s left; we don’t have to answer the “can I have more?” or “i don’t like this!” squeals that interrupt our savoring our amazing mom-ish creations, and we don’t have to share.
=) I think we win!
and your rolls look lovely. Love them.
Don’t be ashamed of housewifery, Joy! There is absolutely nothing wrong with putting on a nice dress, some heels, a cute apron, and making food. I’ve done it alone and with my boyfriend hanging around. I’ve also cleaned in this manner. It just makes you feel good, y’know?
So nobody’s judging. I say, psuedo-housewives unite! :)
I could finish up those rolls with a good butter..
embrace it! if homemaker tendencies give you the excuse you need to look cute and perfect these awesome dinner rolls, I think you should just go for it :-D
These look like such perfect little rolls! It’s fun to play 1950′s housewife sometimes :)
These look delectable! I love playing dress up when I’m cooking too, sometimes 50s housewife, sometimes I’m in Thailand, sometimes I’m on an Irish country farm. Plus, a frilly apron always makes food taste better =)
I love Parker House Rolls! And yours look even more beautiful than the ones they actually serve at the Omni Parker House! Seriously, anything that comes out of that place is amazingly, wonderfully old school. Parker House Rolls and Boston Cream Pie… yeah, I work down the street but only let myself in the door like once a year! But if I started making them at home, well, that would be truly dangerous (although I am a huge fan of cooking in frilly aprons and pearl earings).
oooo! These look great I’m totally going to give them a try.
Lucille Ball didn’t have children for the longest and was looking quite the cute little housewife! So no rush on the children. Trust me, it’s best when you’ve had plenty of time to get all the selfish goals out of the way. THEN you can enjoy then without distraction.
Now the husband thing, well that’s never a rush either. Unlike Ricky Ricardo, most don’t come in looking so suave and handsome, announce they are home, and sit and laugh and enjoy our housewife antics with both eyes rolling and a belly laugh.
Sorry to be a cynical suzie this morning. Maybe a girls’ night of 50s dressup and cocktails is a good idea? Am I talking to myself now? Hrm.
LOVE rolls! They should be a food group!
Rolls….You are totally speaking my language!! And housewife tendencies — love that!! I’ve got the cooking thing down (well, not quite!!) But the cleaning…ICK! I am missing the hubby & mud splattered kids as well (okay that totally reminded me of a Doris Day movie). If only we could just go shopping for that! Thanks for another great looking recipe – can’t wait to try!
Thanks for the easy way to get the crease in them without folding them (as I’ve seen suggested in other recipes). My rolls looked ridiculous when I made them last Thanksgiving. Although they did taste great!
Joy…You are just ‘practising’ for the real deal of Housewifeness!! I have been blessed to be a for real housewife for 37+ years.. do you mind having such an OLD reader..? I hope not.. because I love love love seeing you and my girls do the baking that I love to do! So bake a way Sweetie!
Amy
These look fantastic! I’ve always wanted to make Parker House Rolls but never have. I think it’s time – yum yum. I love your photographs too btw – you have such a talent.
Haha, don’t worry, Joy!
I’m a lesbian who has no particular love of monogamous relationships or of marriage and I have “housewife tendencies,” too. Feminists can bake! And wear aprons! :-D
Love Bread! All types of bread.. can’t wait to try this recipe
I think I have those same tendencies. I just need to get a new frilly apron.
Your rolls look fantastic! The ones they serve at the Parker House are actually pretty gross – http://cavecibum.blogspot.com/2008/10/ye-olde-boston-food-toure.html
I’ve been anxiously awaiting this post since I saw the photo on Twitter yesterday. And coming from a girl who now has a muddy kid to chase around (really a poopy baby to bounce around), enjoy being able to make the dinner rolls in one stretch instead of interrupted fifteen times by the crying and the diapers. And I just thought about making a joke where the crying and diapers were coming from the husband, but it was a little forced. We’ll just stop there. Can’t wait to make these.
the upside to this: since there are no husbands or kids, you get more rolls to yourself, and you can bake in your PJ’s without anyone complaining about you looking frumpy :). although i must admit, it’s fun to bake and look fancy at the same time. i might do that this weekend and bake up some bread too!
you need an apron from Anthropologie! they have the BEST ONES!!!
My favorite way to eat dinner rolls is the next morning, after they’ve become a little sticky and chewy from being stored overnight, loaded with jam and peanut butter.
Joy – I love reading your blog because you are so relatable, but you have the knack of putting into words (so very well) what we are all thinking. Thank you for sharing your impressive abilities, good humor, and delicious treats!
I too suffer from severe housewife tendencies…so imagine how happy I was when I got married, had a baby and became an actual housewife!!! I have been a housewife for 5 years now and I totally embrace it. Baking, crocheting, apron wearing….it is AWESOME!!!
Joy, I adore your blog! I am half a housewife at heart. I love making homemade bread in frilly aprons, but I despise cleaning. I told my husband I’d continue to bake the homemade bread he loves if he hires a cleaning lady to come periodically. Who has time to do both?! Don’t worry about the husband part… with rolls like that, they will surely start lining up :D
Hi Joy, I was wondering if I delete the ‘remaining 2 tablespoons of sugar’ from the recipe, will they turn out fine, just less sweet?
I just love making breads and rolls. I have to confess I also like playing housewife from time to time as well. Keep up that good work and thanks for sharing another great recipe.
Yummy! Once I muster up the courage to work with yeast I will definitely make these.
I also love to wear pearls in the kitchen, but I lack the 1950′s apron. I’ll have to go shopping.
These look super delicious and I bet I wouldn’t be able to stop myself from eating 7 right out of the oven….
Break out the frilly apron (mine is adorned with cherries and deep pockets) and the pearls – I’m making some dinner rolls! Probably not until next week, though. My decision to help cater a friend’s birthday party? Not the most intelligent I’ve made in recent months.
I’m wiping the drool off of my keyboard. These look delicious!
these look AMAZING. i can’t wait to make them.
Oh these rolls look so great!! I’ll be making these soon! Thanks for sharing!
These do look good. High heals are a must when playing dress up for your housewife tendencies :).