Thursday, June 18, 2009

Bride's No-Fail Rolls

I found this recipe for Bride's No-Fail Rolls in an old cookbook titled Blue Ribbon Recipes County Fair Winners. I was looking through old books & came across this one. I kept hesitating before I put it into the "donate" pile. I finally set it aside because I knew I had to go through every recipe before I could let this book go, or I should say IF I could let this book go.
I'm just over half way through this cook book, & it's looking like it won't get donated. LOL I have personalized it by writing in the front cover the page numbers with the names of recipes that I want to try.

This cookbook was published in 1968, & each recipe has a lady's name with it & which county fair she won ribbons for it. For example, Bride's No-Fail Rolls was submitted by Mrs. Joan Deakins, Craig, Colorado, Moffat County Fair. Pretty neat, huh? I thought so too.

So yesterday I had smoothered chicken in the crockpot & I thought rolls would be good to go with our supper. I've been making breads for a while, but I haven't made rolls in ions. I'm no new bride (our 24th anniversary is in a few months), but since I haven't made rolls in years, I thought this recipe sounded like a good one to start with. And it was! My family loved them.
I wish I would have shaped them a little differently, but they were still really good. I didn't put them in muffin tins, or make cloverleaf rolls with them, I just made balls about the size of golf balls. They came out kind of looking like small buns, but they were so good.

Bride's No-Fail Rolls
1 pkg. yeast (2 1/2 t.)
1 C. warm water
2 eggs, beaten

1/3 C. sugar
1 t. salt
1/3 C. oil
3 1/2 C. flour

Dissolve yeast in water. In large bowl mix eggs & sugar. Add salt. Add oil. Stir in water & yeast. Mix in flour, 1 cup at a time, & stir well. Cover bowl with cloth; let rise until double in size. Punch center to let air out. Make into rolls, & place on lightly greased cookie sheets. Cover & let rise until double in size. Bake at 350 for 10-15 minutes. Yield: 2-3 dozen.

This recipe didn't call for any kneading, so I let the dough rise right in the mixing bowl. The dough is stickier than bread dough, so I put some flour on the table to dust my hands with while I was making the dough shapes.
The size I made (golf ball sized) yielded exactly 2 dozen. I served 1 dozen with our supper & under cooked the other dozen by just 2 or 3 minutes. When they cooled I put them in a large freezer bag & put them in the freezer. When I use them, I'll defrost them & bake them at 350 for maybe 5 minutes, & they'll hopefully be the same as just fresh baked rolls.
I didn't take a picture of my plate, because we were all so hungry we just dug right in.
These rolls are a definite KEEPER.

8 comments:

Unknown said...

Thanks
My Mom used to cook these all the time :-)
Thru time I lost the recipe.
Now I will have Brides'No Fail anytime I Like!
Great Rolls easy & delicious
Thanks for Sharing this

Unknown said...

Thanks
My Mom used to cook these all the time :-)
Thru time I lost the recipe.
Now I will have Brides'No Fail anytime I Like!
Great Rolls easy & delicious
Thanks for Sharing this

Unknown said...

Thanks for finding this recipe. I've been looking for it for a long time. It was one given to my mother years ago and it's been lost for years too. Made this often back then (I was a teenager and early 20's, now in my 60's). It makes the Best Cinnamon Rolls. I loved it cause I hate to kneed bread and biscuits so this was and is perfect.

Sunshine18 said...

I have been making these since I purchased the Blue Ribbon Cookbook back in the late 60’s. I find that I have to add additional flour or they are way to sticky. But they are delicious.

Unknown said...

My mom had a copy of this book. I was entering the county fair and used several recipes from this book. Guess what? I got blue ribbons!! This particular recipe is my favorite roll recipe. I even made it as a bread. A male friend said after eating a slice, "this is what bread has always aspired to be but couldn't" 😂😂😂😂😂

I own three copies of this book just in case one gets lost.

Unknown said...

P.S. my cookbook says to bake at 400° about 10 to 15 minutes. Not 350°

Anonymous said...

I have been looking for this recipe forever. I use to bake these in the 60’s. I was 2nd oldest if 9 and did most of the cooking. I loved these and am so glad to have the recipe again. Does that book also have a mayonnaise cake recipe in it? If so I win grand prize at the Douglas County fair as a teenager with that cake recipe . ❤️

Anonymous said...

I realize this is an older post, but how long does it take these rolls to rise? (Approx)