I love cinnamon rolls.
I always have. Ever since I was a kid and my great grandmother would make great big batches of them. The smell of them baking is one of life’s simple pleasures. There is just something so amazing about a good cinnamon roll.
A few years ago, in an attempt to conquer my fear of working with yeast, I started making cinnamon rolls. My recipe of choice was The Pioneer Woman’s Cinnamon Rolls. I’ve made hundreds of them. Heck, possibly hundreds of pans of them. They are GOOD. But I was kind of longing for a change – something that was a bit simpler to make (not that Ree’s are hard, because they are not, I’m just looking for saving a step or two) and something that I could easily do in a smaller batch. I think I found just that…
These are AMAZING. Three out of four people in our household voted these to be the best cinnamon rolls they’ve had. The fourth member of the household was too busy throwing a tantrum to try her cinnamon roll, so we won’t really worry about her take on them. I mean who cries when instead they could have a cinnamon roll??? My two year old, that’s who. Anyways…
The secret ingredient in these…. Cake mix! Who knew? Well, clearly many people did, but I’m just now showing up to the cake mix party. These are very simple to make and require very few basic ingredients. And in place of the cup of oil and quart of whole milk that the other recipe I use calls for, this one calls for water. That lightens up the fat, calories and cost quite a bit. They are flavorful, chewy and delicious.
I used the Frosting Creations Cinnamon Roll Frosting Flavor Mix to frost these. For years I was a pretty die hard cream cheese frosting fan, but after trying the amazing maple frosting that The Pioneer Woman uses, I started to branch out in my frosting flavors. Cinnamon roll frosting on cinnamon rolls is divine.
This recipe makes two 9×13″ pans of rolls (so 24 cinnamon rolls) but you can easily half the recipe to make a single pan. What a great Mother’s Day breakfast this would be! And it’s easy enough that I’m fairly confident that my nine year old daughter and my husband could make them. 🙂 Even if it means Mom makes them the night before, the kids, Dad, the dog – someone could warm one up in a microwave and there you have it – breakfast!
Complete recipe and step by step directions can be found below, as well as a printable version of the recipe. FYI – I actually made a half batch of this recipe, so that is why you may see smaller amounts than the recipe calls for.
Start by dissolving your yeast into your warm water.
Then add the yeast and water mixture to your flour, cake mix and salt. Add in vanilla.
Mix well. I did have to use my hands to work all of the ingredients together.
Once combined, cover and let sit for an hour.
After an hour punch down and let rise again. Now it’s time to roll out your dough.
Roll dough into a rectangular shape (mine is usually more of an oblong blob type shape, but it still works). Top with your softened butter.
Brush butter over dough.
Sprinkle on your brown sugar and cinnamon.
Time to roll up that dough. I found this dough very easy to work with – no sticking or tearing.
Cut into even size rolls.
Place into a greased 9×13 pan.
I cover my rolls and let them sit on the stovetop while my oven preheats. This gives them time to rise and a bit of warmth from the oven.
Bake in a 350 degree oven for 15-25 minutes, or until golden brown. Golden brown in my oven was about 22 minutes in. I am a bit burn phobic, so I tend to bake on the lighter side of golden brown.
Allow to cool a bit and then frost. I did a very thin layer of frosting when they were still quite warm. This melts into the rolls and helps keep them moist.
Once cool I added a bit more frosting.
And now you get to enjoy.
Heavenly.
I think this would make an awesome Mother’s Day Breakfast.
If you are a cinnamon roll fan, you must check out the Cinnamon Roll Bites From Other Blogs recipe collection – from cinnamon rolls to cinnamon roll pancakes to cinnamon roll cupcakes to cinnamon roll ice cream – it’s a cinnamon roll party.
Cake Mix Cinnamon Rolls With Frosting Creations Cinnamon Roll Frosting
adapted from Cinnamon Rolls at Duncan Hines
CLICK HERE FOR A PRINTABLE VERSION OF THIS RECIPE
Ingredients
Cinnamon Rolls
1 box of Duncan Hines white or yellow cake mix (this would be great with a spice mix as well)
2 packages of dry yeast
2 1/2 cups of warm water
1 tsp vanilla
1 tsp salt
5 cups flour
Filling
2 cups brown sugar
Cinnamon
1/2-1 cup butter, softened
Frosting
1 can Duncan Hines Frosting Creations Frosting Starter
1 packet Duncan Hines Frosting Creations Cinnamon Roll Flavor Mix
Directions
1. Mix yeast and warm water until dissolved.
2. Combine cake mix, salt and flour in a large bowl.
3. Add warm water/yeast mixture and vanilla to cake mix, salt and flour mixture. Mix well. This may require kneading with your hands a bit to completely combine ingredients.
4. Cover tightly. Let rise for one hour. Punch down and let rise again for another 30-60 minutes.
5. On a floured surface, roll dough into a rectangle shape, approx 1/4″ thick.
6. Once dough is rolled out, brush with softened butter. I found that one stick was adequate for this recipe, but you could use more (or less) if desired.
7. Sprinkle with brown sugar. Sprinkle with cinnamon – use as little or as much as you like.
8. Starting at end opposite from you, roll the dough towards you until all dough is rolled into one long piece.
9. Slice dough into 24 equal sized pieces.
10. Place rolls in two greased 9×13 pans. Cover and let rise until doubled in size. I usually sit my rolls on my stovetop while my oven preheats to 350 degrees. This allows them time to rise and provides a bit of warmth from the oven warming.
11. Bake at 350 degrees for 15-25 minutes or until golden brown. My rolls took approx 22 minutes. This will depend on your stove and your preference for how brown you like your cinnamon rolls.
12. Remove from oven and let cool slightly.
13. Prepare your Frosting Creations Cinnamon Roll frosting. If you prefer your frosting to melt into your rolls, frost after rolls have cooled for 10-15 minutes. If you prefer your frosting to stay on top of your rolls, wait until rolls have cooled until frosting.
14. Enjoy!
Lisa @ Sweet 2 Eat Baking says
Wow, these look soooo good. I bet they’re heaven in the morning acompanied with a hot cuppa!
Lauren at Keep It Sweet says
These look fantastic… what a great way to use the cake mix!
Meichelle says
I adore you for this post. Sure I may have to bake my own Mother’s Day treats, but of its this easy I don’t care!
I love this so much, I blogged about it.
Have a great Mother’s Day. I’m now positive at least I will.
Katarina says
I love cinnamon rolls! I usually ferment my buns overnight and they get a great taste. Here is the recipe if you are interested 🙂 http://hovkonditorn.blogspot.com/2011/10/kanelbullans-dag-cinnamon-bun-day.html
Angie @ Bigbearswife says
oh those look nice!!! I have some of that flavoring at home! I need to give these a try!
Edith says
Looks amazing! Looking forward to trying this recipe 🙂
Kate H. says
That was suppose to sat amazing** lol
Kate H. says
These look a,axing. Could you make the dough ahead of time and refrigerate it over night, then bake them in the morning? Thanks for sharing! I love your blog!
Christi says
Kate, I’ve done that a number of times with other cinnamon roll recipes, so I don’t see why you couldn’t. I’d probably go ahead and cut them and put them in the pan, cover well and put in the fridge. Just make sure you give ample time in the AM before baking for them to sit out and rise (I’ve rushed that part before and had less than stellar results). I think 30-60 minutes on the counter before baking and you’d be good.
Averie @ Averie Cooks says
I adore cinn rolls and you outdid yourself…they look SO awesome. GREAT work and idea, Christi!
ThisBakerGirlBlogs says
Those look SO GOOD!! I love cinnamon rolls but i’ve never attempted to make my own. Might just give it a shot!
tamara says
I just attempted to make these mind you I have been cooking and baking since I was 10 and professionally baking decorating cakes and making candy since 12 hosting dinner parties with all 8 courses by myself and making thanksgiving and Christmas dinners for forty family members since age 11 I am now 54 and have learned to make virtually every kind of dish cuisine alive and this recipe came out like wallpaper paste! I have no idea what went so horribly wrong but it took me five minutes of hot water and dawn liquid to scrub this thick mess from my hands i was astounded! I cannot for the life of me figure out what turned this to gluey almost silly putty just so strange and I tasted it it was like gum like chewing gum so weird never again sure wish I had even half of my ingredients back deep sigh I hate to waste my baking stuff I love baking so much
Christi says
Tamara, hmmm, not sure. This is one of the recipes on my site that has been made the most by readers and I have four or five different versions of it on here. The only thing that comes to mind is that this recipe is from 2012. Was the yeast fresh and did it activate correctly? Water too hot or too cold for it? The only thing I can think of is that it sounds like there was no rising at all going on.