Cream Cheese Cinnamon Rolls

If you have a big soft spot in your heart for ooey gooey breakfast pastries, then you will no doubt fall in love with these at first bite. And if you don’t have that big soft spot, take one bite of these and I guarantee you will be a convert. Cream cheese is rolled into the pastry dough (much like laminated dough) and creates a soft and flaky dough. That, combined with the incredible filling, makes for the most flavorful cinnamon rolls that I have ever tasted. While these require you to set aside some time and involve multiple steps, they are not difficult and without a doubt absolutely worth it. If you have overnight guests and they wake up to these fresh from the oven, you will score some serious points and may have to start turning house guests away. Everyone will want to stay over!

I saw these a couple of weeks ago and immediately couldn’t wait to make them. They sounded fabulous and looked even better. I have made cinnamon rolls before, but they were a pretty “standard” recipe. These rolls really caught my eye for two reasons: (1) there is cream cheese rolled right into the dough, and (2) the filling was much more complex and sounded infinitely more flavorful than the standard cinnamon and sugar filling. These are, hands down, the best cinnamon rolls I have ever had. They put the ultra-popular mall types to shame.
Need more evidence? My 89-year old grandma adores cinnamon rolls – they might be her most favorite thing in the world. Sadly, she doesn’t eat much anymore – she just really picks at her food when someone fixes her a plate. I went to visit her and brought these cinnamon rolls figuring she would enjoy them. She polished one off within 15 minutes. And these are HUGE. What more proof do you need that something is fabulous?

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Notes on the recipe:
♦ Rolling the cream cheese into the dough is much like laminating pastry dough with butter, except that all of the refrigerating and re-rolling steps aren’t needed here. The result, however, is much the same – a light and flaky pastry dough that melts in your mouth.
♦ When rolling up the dough, try to keep it as tight as possible. I had some trouble doing this, and as you can tell, mine don’t “swirl” as much as I would have liked. Still tasted fabulous though, of course!
♦ Use the quantities for the icing as a guide – some people like it thinner, some thicker. And drizzle on as much as you want – again, totally up to you!

Want more breakfast sweets? Take a look at these recipes:
Croissants
Danish
Brioche Raisin Snails
Blueberry Crumb Cake
Sour Cream Coffee Cake

Cream Cheese Cinnamon Rolls
Ingredients
For the Dough
- 1 package instant yeast, (2¼ teaspoons)
- ¼ cup (50 g) plus 1/2 teaspoon sugar, divided
- ½ cup (122 ml) whole milk, at room temperature
- 2 tablespoons light brown sugar
- ½ teaspoon (0.5 teaspoon) vanilla extract
- 1 egg
- 1 egg yolk
- 2¾ cups (343.75 g) all-purpose flour, plus more for kneading
- ¾ teaspoon (0.75 teaspoon) salt
- 8 tablespoons unsalted butter, at room temperature, (1 stick )
For the Filling
- ½ cup (100 g) sugar
- ¼ cup (0.25) dark brown sugar, packed
- ¼ cup (24.75 g) finely chopped pecans
- ¼ cup (29.25 g) finely chopped walnuts
- 1 tablespoon ground cinnamon
- ½ teaspoon (0.5 teaspoon) salt
- ⅛ teaspoon (0.13 teaspoon) ground cloves
- 2 tablespoons maple syrup
- ¼ cup (56.75 g) unsalted butter, melted
For Laminating the Dough
- 4 ounces (113.4 g) cream cheese, at room temperature
For Brushing the Cinnamon Rolls
- ¼ cup (56.75 g) unsalted butter, melted
For the Icing
- 1½ cups (180 g) powdered sugar
- 3 tablespoons whole milk
Instructions
- To Make the Dough: In the bowl of a stand mixer combine yeast, 1/2 teaspoon sugar and 1/4 cup water heated to 115°F. Stir to combine and let sit until frothy and foamy, about 10 minutes.
- Add the remaining sugar, milk, light brown sugar, vanilla, egg, and egg yolk. Beat with a wire whisk until well combined. Fit the bowl onto the mixer, fitting with the dough hook attachment. Add the flour and salt and mix on medium speed until the dough just begins to come together. Turn the machine on medium-high and knead the dough for 4 minutes.
- Add the butter and continue to knead for about 6 minutes. The dough will be wet and sticky. Place the dough on a well floured work surface, and knead about 1/3 cup all-purpose flour into the dough. The dough still might be a little sticky, which is ok. Set the dough to rest in a large greased bowl. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and allow to rise in a warm place for 1 1/2 to 2 hours, or until doubled in size.
- Make the Filling: While the dough rises, combine the sugar, dark brown sugar, pecans, walnuts, cinnamon, salt and cloves in a large bowl. Stir to combine. Stir in the maple syrup. Set aside.
- When the dough has doubled in size, dump it from the bowl onto a heavily floured work surface. Gently knead the dough until it is no longer sticky, adding more flour as needed. Work the dough for about 1 or 2 minutes. Once it’s no longer sticky, place a kitchen towel over the dough and let rest for 5 minutes before you roll it out.
- Laminate the Dough: Using a floured rolling pin, roll the dough into a 10 x 10-inch square.
- In a small bowl, mix the cream cheese with a knife until it’s smooth and spreadable.
- Spread the cream cheese evenly over the dough square. Fold the square into thirds like you would fold a letter to fit into an envelope. Take the open ends of the rectangle and fold into thirds again, to make a smaller dough square.
- Invert the dough so that the seam is face down and, using the rolling pin, gently roll it into a 10 x 20-inch rectangle. You may find that some cream cheese sneaks through. Be as gentle as possible with the dough, but continue to work it until you reach the size you need.
- Turn the dough so that the short sides are parallel to you.
- Assemble the Cinnamon Rolls: Brush the top of the dough with the melted butter.
- Pour all of the filling onto the dough. Spread evenly, leaving a 1-inch boarder at one of the short edges of the dough so the roll can be properly sealed. Lightly press the filling into the dough.
- Using your hands, lift up the bottom edge of the dough and roll it forward into a tight cylinder. Place dough cylinder seam side down on a cutting board. Using a sharp, thin knife, trim off the uneven edges.
- Cut the cylinder into 8 equal slices. Nestle the slices, cut side up and evenly spaced in a butter 9 x 13-inch baking dish. Cover the pan with plastic wrap and set aside in a warm place to let rise for 2 hours. You may also refrigerate rolls overnight.
- Bake the Cinnamon Rolls: Heat the oven to 375 degrees F. Uncover the rolls. If you refrigerated the rolls, let them sit at room temperature for 15 minutes before baking. Bake until golden brown, about 30 minutes.
- Transfer the pan of cinnamon rolls to a cooling rack. Brush with melted butter. Let cool for 5 minutes.
- Make the Icing: Whisk together the sugar and milk in a small bowl until smooth, adding more sugar or milk to reach your desired consistency. Dip the tines of a fork into the icing and drizzle over the rolls. Serve warm or at room temperature.
Did you make this recipe?
Leave a review below, then snap a picture and tag @thebrowneyedbaker on Instagram so I can see it!



About how many rolls does the recipe make? BTW, the pictures look SOOOOO good. drool…….
Hi Esther, This recipe makes 8 rolls.
These are amazing! I made them on a family vacation and we have more family staying with us for Thanksgiving and they have been requested again! Last time I did all of the kneading by hand, but this time I’ll have the kitchen-aid stand mixer… whew! Even easier :-) Thanks so much for the recipe!
My husband just made these and the smell coming from the kitchen is torturing me…I am following weight watchers and do not have anywhere near the points needed to consume one tonight. I cannot wait to try one tomorrow morning. Even if the taste half as good as they smell I am in for quite a treat!
i have to thank you from the bottom of my heart for this cinnamon roll recipe. lol i know this sounds cheesy as all get out, but i seriously can’t believe i baked these myself… and i’m a very good baker! usually my cinnamon rolls turn out like your *before* rolls– good, but not great. these are great! you have a new fan!! oh, and the pop tart recipe is next. thanks a bunch for this recipe.. these are dangerous!
I made these last night and finished baking this morning. They were wonderful. The recipe was very friendly. It is so nice to try a recipe that looks good and turns out like the pictures. Thank you browneyedbaker…they were a hit!
I just pulled a batch of these out of the oven…wanted to do something different for Sunday night’s dessert. Although I did a funky job rolling them out and the two end pieces got very little of the filling, the other six are looking quite delicious. I do have one question though…are they suppose to be this big?
Hi Tykisha, Although I can’t see how large your rolls turned out to be, yes they are supposed to be fairly large.
If I want to refrigerate the rolls overnight, do I let them rise for 2 hours before putting them in the fridge or do I skip the rise? I can’t wait to make these this weekend!!!
Hi Laurel, You would put them in the fridge and skip the rise. Enjoy the rolls!
this was my question! I decided to scroll down to see if it had already been answered :) As soon as my challot is finished and my bread bowl is free, I’m going to be making these for christmas tomorrow, for everyone to have after opening presents. I was so excited to see that they can be refrigerated overnight. I’m going to do that, then all i have to do is bake them in the morning. That’s a lot less work than getting up at 2 or 3 am!
These are Ah-mazing. Saw a variation of these in Saveur magazine and made… Making again for a brunch tomorrow and have a question: Can you cut them the other direction for smaller rolls? As much as I love them, they are a bit big for a single serving at brunch with all of the other food, but I am not sure if I have to adjust oven temp/baking time if I decrease the size… (roll the dough horizontally and slice into 16, rather than vertically and into 8)
Hi Bmarc, I have not made these smaller, but I don’t see why you couldn’t give that a try and reduce the baking time.
i just wanted to let you know that this recipe ruined cinnamon rolls for me. since i first made these, nothing else compares! they’re a huge hit with my husband and brothers, too-they say nothing from seattle to montana to wisconsin can compare :)
I am making these for the second time! They were delicious, and I want to take them to my grandparents house and bake them fresh this weekend, so I was wondering should I let them rise and then freeze them or freeze them and then let them rise….
thanks again for the great recipe!
Hi Kirsten, I’ve never frozen the dough before baking, but I would try rising and then freezing. Enjoy!
There is a way to freeze these… they recommend baking for 10 minutes, then freezing, then baking again on the day you would like to consume. Not sure what the specific guidelines are but just goole something like “how to freeze cinnamon buns” it’ll show up. Haven’t tried yet.
Hi Michelle,
Your recipes never seem to fail! This one was OMG heavenly. If you’d like you can check them out on my blog.
http://lisasnumnum.blogspot.com/2010/12/cream-cheese-cinnamon-rolls.html
I made these two days ago! They were delicious! and tasted even better the second day! Nice and flaky dough, perfect sweetness. I would maybe double the cinnamon next time! Loved them! They are allll gone, so I better make more! haha
Oooh yes, more definitely! Send me one while you’re at it, I haven’t had them in awhile :)
I would love to make these for Christmas morning (Sat) … but I am not sure I have time to make them the night before … can I make them Thursday and have them refidgerate for 2 days?
Thanks … your cinnamon swirl bread is in the oven as I type!
Hi Erin, If it’s going to be 2 days, I’d probably pop them in the freezer, then the night before you want to bake them, put it in the fridge, then let them sit out 15-30 minutes Christmas morning before baking. I’m thinking of making these for Christmas morning too! :)
I was wondering if you’ve ever tried this recipe using a breadmaker to mix and knead the dough? Other than switching to instant/rapid rise yeast, can you think of any other modification that might need to be made to use this method? My current favorite cinnamon roll recipe uses a breadmaker and I really enjoy the time savings. That being said, I’m always up for a great cinnamon roll recipe and I’m planning to try this one – heck if it has the approval of you and Joy, it’s got to be good.
Hi Erik, I have never used a breadmaker so I can’t really give you very good advice unfortunately! This recipe does already call for instant yeast though so you won’t have to make any modifications in that department. If you go the breadmaker route I’d love to hear the process you use. And if not, you should totally give it a try anyway, mixing and kneading the dough by hand isn’t too difficult.
These look phantasmagoric!
I just put the rolls in the refrigerator & I have to tell you I’m not satisfied with the result they’re not baked yet but a lot of things went wrong with me & I don’t know why :”(
1st my dough didn’t rise, so I panicked & called mom but she said it’s ok it doesn’t look bad go on working.. I tried my best to be gentle with the dough but the cream cheese kept on sneaking which was really annoying >_>
anyway I’ll bake them tomorrow, hope the result will be satisfying :P
A reply to what I wrote yesterday XD
I baked them & thank god they were edible LOL
no honestly even though I made a lot of mistakes but my family loved the cinnamon rolls & my sister couldn’t stop eating & thanking me ^__^
I’m thinking of making them again ^____^
thank you Michelle,,
I’m so glad they ended up working out for you! Sometimes if a room is too cool or the yeast is old, it can effect dough rising. But so happy that everyone loved them in the end!
Two days ago I made cinnamon rolls with a recipe from another website that had hundreds of 5 star reviews. Long story short… the cinnabons are in the trash!! Well, yesterday I found your recipe and W’O’W! These are delicious. It is exactly what I was looking for. The bread is flaky, soft, moist, not buttery and the filling is just PERFECT! I could not believe my ears when my brother (the critic) said they tasted exactly as the Cinnabons (we all love cinnabons). Thank you sooo much for sharing the recipe and specially for writing the instructions foolproof. The instructions were so easy to follow, specially for a beginner like me. Thank you, thank you!!! They are absolutely delicious! P.S I did use another recipe for the icing… a cream cheese icing.
Goodness!! These look amazing! I hate saying lame common words like that but wowwwwweeee beautiful!
Oh my! These are the best cinnamon rolls ever! My husband said they were even better than the ones you buy at the mall. I definitely will be making these again!!!!
I just made these today and they were terrific – absolutely the best I’ve ever tasted! The only adjustment I made was to roll them along the long side, so that I ended up with 12 smaller rolls – easier to share! Fantastic, thanks for the recipe.
I haven’t had a real cinnamon bun in years I think. I’m due for one. Must make these!
Hi Janene, Thanks so much for coming back and letting everyone know what you thought of the recipe. Thrilled that you enjoyed it!
I just made these cinnamon rolls first of all they look exactly like the pictures! Second, they are delicious and really quite easy to make. You made the directions so easy to follow. Thanks for the recipe.
I cannot wait to try these out – if they look half as good as your photos, I’ll be thrilled! I shall be making them to take to MIL this weekend. It’s a long journey to MIL’s, so we might have to eat some on the way there…
Yum Yucky – Thanks so much for the compliment on my photos!
Your food pics are flawless. I hate to admit it, but I’m salivating.
Hi Laura – I would recommend at least 10 minutes after you add the flour, and then probably another 10 minutes to add in and knead the butter. This dough is a rather sticky one, so keep in mind if you’re kneading by hand you may need to add a bit more flour. I hope that helped! Please let me known if you have any other questions. I hope you enjoy :)
I do not have a stand mixer. I am planning to make these by hand. How long would I knead them?
I saw these on Joy the Baker’s site, too and made them today. I used half-n-half in my glaze instead of buttermilk. I also subtracted out the nuts and kept the raisins. I prepared the rolls and let them rise in the refrigerator overnight and baked them this morning. They were perfect and flaky. Since i live alone, I plan to freeze the other rolls and microwave them whenever I feel like having another one. Thanks for the lovely photos. YUM!
Um, yeah, these pictures are divine. My mouth is literally watering!!