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Jul 2 2012

Best Super Soft and Chewy Hoagie Rolls

Find the recipe card at the end of the post. Make sure to read the content as it contains chef tips, substitution options, and answers to FAQs to help you succeed the first time around!

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The BEST soft and chewy bread roll for hoagies/submarine/grinders. Pillowy soft rolls that are begging to be filled with deliciousness! rolls, bread rolls, hoagies, sub sandwiches, pizzeria shop, bread,best hoagie rolls recipe, soft hoagie buns, soft and chewy hoagie rolls, hoagie roll sandwich recipes, #hoagie #breadrolls #hoagieroll
The Best Soft & Chewy Hoagie Bread Roll

The BEST soft and chewy bread roll for hoagies/submarines/grinders. Pillowy soft rolls that are begging to be filled with deliciousness!

Truly The Best Hoagie Roll Recipe

As a Chef and Pizzaiola with over 35 years of professional experience, I know hoagie rolls. This recipe has been in my family for generations. It is versatile (think dinner rolls or bread bowls for soup) and also makes the absolute best hoagie roll. We’re talking pizzeria/sub-shop-style hoagies.

The inside is super fluffy and chewy with a slight crust out the outside. Whether you eat them as a cold sub or as a toasted Italian hoagie, you will never need to step into a sub shop again!

TKW Family Love

2nd time I’m making this recipe. It comes out perfect each time!! I made Philly Cheesesteaks with them and honestly can’t get enough!!! Thank you for sharing this beautiful recipe!

Alessandra Abate


This is a VERY detailed post with a ton of tips, techniques, and tutorials. I strongly advise you to read the post BEFORE you make the rolls. Yes, it’s a VERY easy recipe, but I tried to address many of your FAQs. For ease of reading, I’ve sectioned it as follows:

  • Can I use All-Purpose Flour?
  • Using Active Dry Yeast
  • Using Instant Yeast
  • Slack Dough
  • How To Shape Hoagie Buns
  • Coating Hoagie Rolls
  • Chef’s Tips
  • Freezing Pre and Post Baking Hoagie Rolls
  • Cold-Fermenting Dough (overnight rise)
  • How to Substitute Sourdough Starter

Depending on what part of the country or world you’re from, these things are called various names.  I’ve heard “Subs, Submarines, Hoagies, Grinders, Hero, Italian Sandwich, Torpedo, Blimpie, Po’Boy, and Rocket” just to name a few. 

Whatever you call it, I’m talking about those luxurious sandwiches full of meats and cheeses, then wedged into a chewy, soft bread roll.

Hoagie Bun Ingredients

  • Bread Flour – it must be at least 11-14% protein content
  • Yeast – Active Dry or Instant
  • Water
  • Salt
  • Sugar
  • Butter
  • Items for a bread wash *optional

Can I use All-Purpose Flour?

I’d advise against it because you’ll end up with a different texture and outcome. Yes, you can, but there are differences in the outcome.

  • You won’t get the same result with US all-purpose flour as you would bread flour. The higher protein in bread flour is what gives the bread its “chew” and rise
  • Plus, AP flour will make the bread denser. You can use it, but they won’t be like classic hoagie rolls, but they still will taste yummy

If bread flour is hard to find, grab some Vital Wheat Gluten and make your bread flour using your AP Flour.

I have the formula on my blog. Check out this post on how to make your own bread flour.

Working with yeast – no fears, you got this!

One of the comments I get most when I ask why folks don’t make homemade bread at home is that they are afraid of it. They are either afraid to work with yeast or unsure about the techniques. Well, that’s where I’m here to help you.

Baking bread, rolls, and dough is something I honestly find truly cathartic. It’s relaxing using the stand mixer or kneading the dough by hand. It’s pretty foolproof because I use only Red Star Yeasts (99.9% of the time it’s their Platinum).

  • Store your yeast in a dark, cool area. I tend to store mine in the fridge or the freezer for extended storage.
  • When adding it, add it to very warm liquids (120-130°F). You don’t want to add it to boiling or super-hot water as you will kill the yeast.
  • With the Instant Platinum yeast, you don’t even have to let it proof first – like how I added it to this recipe. Because I use the Instant Active Dry yeast, there’s no proofing involved.
    • To Proof, Active Dry Yeast, place a portion of the warm liquid in a bowl and add the yeast. Give it a little stir and let it sit for 1-5 minutes or until the yeast is completely dissolved. It should bubble up and “bloom”
  • If, after 5 minutes, the yeast isn’t bloome,d then your yeast is old (expiration dates matter here!) or the liquid you used is too hot
The Best Soft & Chewy Hoagie Bread Roll

TKW Family Love

Well, this recipe was a big ole SUCCESS!!! Gosh, rave reviews all around and even my uncle — a Jimmy John’s aficionado — said this was the best bread they’ve ever had. ONLY alteration I did was use lard over butter.. because that’s what I usually do for bread minus foccacia of course! 😆
Thank you so much for this very well explained guide! I’ll admit, I’ve got a lot of bread baking under my belt but I always struggled with the shaping part of the equation. Followed your directions and boom, perfect lil’ hoagies. I’m going to try cold fermenting them next time for an even more delicious flavor, I can’t imagine them getting any better though!


Julia


How to make a Hoagie Roll

Feel good about working with yeast? You should. It’s really easy, and just don’t be afraid! You can do this!  Baking is a science, and when you add ingredients, it matters. Plus we need to discuss how humidity can affect how much water you put in.

Active Dry yeast

  1. If using Active Dry Yeast (not the Instant I use) you have to proof the yeast first. Add the Active Dry Yeast, sugar, and 1/4 cup plus 2 Tablespoons of warm water in a bowl of a stand mixer. Using a whisk or spoon, mix and set aside for 5-10 minutes or until the yeast has bubbled quite a bit.
  2. In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the dough hook (this would be the same bowl your yeast mixture is in) add 2 cups of flour and the remaining cup of water. Start on low. Mix for 4 minutes.
  3. Add in the salt and 1 cup at a time of the remaining flour and mix for 5-6 minutes until the dough is slack (See note). At this point, your mixer should be at medium speed. If your dough, after 5-6 minutes is not slack add up to 1/4 more cup of water (taking you up to a full 1 1/2 cups used) but add one Tablespoon at a time. The additional water will fully depend on how humid your room is.

Instant yeast

  1. In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the dough hook add in 2 cups of flour, water, sugar, and Instant Yeast.  Start on low. Mix for 4 minutes.
  2. Add in the salt and 1 cup at a time of the remaining flour and mix for 5-6 minutes until the dough is slack (See note). At this point, your mixer should be at medium speed. If your dough, after 5-6 minutes is not slack add up to 1/4 more cup of water (taking you up to a full 1 1/2 cups used) but add one Tablespoon at a time. The additional water will fully depend on how humid your room is.

Now, depending on the temp in the kitchen or how humid it is, you can add anywhere from 3 1/2 – 4 cups of flour. Just go slow. The worst thing you can do is add too much flour because you’re impatient. At this point, your dough should start to look and feel “Slack”

The Best Soft & Chewy Hoagie Bread Roll

What is Slack Dough?

Think of a blob. It’s kind of fluid but it’s not liquidy. It’s the point where if you were to dump the dough out onto a board and try to form it into a shape, it would just blob back out and not hold a shape.

That’s what Slack Dough is. Slack dough means when the dough cannot hold a shape; it has no elasticity or spring back at all. It’s a wet dough but not too wet. It’s “billowy”. The dough is super, super soft, and smooth.

Below is what Slack dough looks like

The Best Soft & Chewy Hoagie Bread Roll

How Humidity affects dough and bread baking

If your bread dough never turns slack there can be 2 reasons for this

  • You didn’t mix it enough. Give it another minute or two. If it still doesn’t turn slack, add a tablespoon of water at a time until it forms slack.
  • Your house is super dry – add a bit more water.

The rule of thumb is if your area is hot & humid then reduce the liquid by 10%. Now, back to making the dough.

The Best Soft & Chewy Hoagie Bread Roll
  1. Once all the flour is added and the dough is slack, add in the butter one tablespoon at a time. Just like the flour, you’ll add it in slowly allowing it to incorporate into the dough. Don’t panic if it doesn’t go in all at once or the dough looks to break down. Just be patient, it’ll combine again. Patience – that’s the key.

Cold Butter or Softened Butter?

I was raised using cold butter in this recipe though you may use room temp or equal amounts of olive oil. When using cold butter, even though you ‘meld it into the flour’, you’re helping with gluten formation and the development of dough structure. I’ve made it with room-temperature butter and it works just as well. You can use either folks.

The Best Soft & Chewy Hoagie Bread Roll
  1. Once it’s mostly all in, turn the mixer up to medium and mix the dough until it pulls completely away from the side and is smooth and shiny.
  2. Transfer the dough to a large, lightly sprayed bowl.
  3. Cover with plastic wrap or use what I use – Disposable plastic clear shower caps. They have a stretchy band that snaps around the bowl and remains ballooned to allow the dough to proof without sticking to it.
  4. Once it’s doubled in size, it’s time to shape the hoagie rolls.

How to shape Hoagie Buns

The Best Soft & Chewy Hoagie Bread Roll

  1. Punch the dough down and place on a very lightly floured board. I would advise using as little flour as possible when shaping these. The more flour you add, the tougher the hoagies will be.
  2. Divide into 4-8 pieces and shape. *See below on how to shape!
  3. Once shaped, transfer to a parchment-lined tray and cover with lightly sprayed plastic wrap. Allow to rise again until almost doubled. ~30-45 minutes. Do NOT overproof them otherwise they will fall flat.

What does Overproof mean?

In simple terms it means the dough was left to rise too long, It will almost “super balloon” in size. You’ll know you’ve over-proofed dough if, when you poke it for 2 seconds, remove your finger and see if it springs back. If your dough does not spring back, it’s over-proofed.

But that doesn’t mean all is lost. Simply remove the dough from where it was rising, degas it (meaning press down firmly on the dough to get rid of the gas), then re-shape. Place it back on your pan and repeat the second proofing.

Watch your dough – things like ambient temperature, humidity, etc will cause your dough to rise slower or faster. The 30-45 minutes is fairly standard time but you need to use your judgment in the kitchen.

TKW Family Love

I just pulled my rolls from the oven. They turned out perfectly! The recipe is very clear and easy to follow. I just tested a roll to make sure it wasn’t poisonous and ohhhhh my goodness…..soft and pillowey on the inside, and a nice soft yet chewy outside. Not chewy but a good bite to it. It is going to be perfect for my leftover prime rib to make French dip sandwiches for supper. Thank you!

Christina Jackson


Chef’s Tips on shaping hoagie rolls

Shaping does take practice, but that’s the fun of baking, right?!

The Best Soft & Chewy Hoagie Bread Roll
  1. After you divide the dough into your pieces (4-8), with your fingers, gently pat it into a rectangle where the dough is about 1/4″ thick.
  2. Next, fold the bottom third to the center, then fold the upper quarter (like an envelope) towards the center, and press gently to seal.
  3. Rotate the dough 180 degrees (so the last fold faces away from you), repeat the above folding step, and use your hand to seal the dough seams as you fold it. What you’re doing is folding the dough into itself.
  4. At this point, your dough is almost shaped like a log/snake. Gently cup your hand over the center of the dough and, without pressing down, roll the dough back and forth to reinforce the seal, then roll it out into a log. If necessary, gently pinch the seam closed.
  5. Grab the ends and lightly, carefully pull them outwards to stretch the dough (just an inch or so – again, depending on how long you want your rolls).
  6. To help round out the ends, cup each hand at the end of the roll and move them in opposite directions with a back-and-forth motion to roll the ends and then tuck them underneath the roll. At this point, they are ready for the next rise.

Adding Slashes/Slits

While completely not necessary, you can add slashes/slits to the rolls before they bake to give them a prettier look. Cutting them adds zero taste value; it just pretties them up. 

However, it does help with the texture. Did you ever make or buy bread that has a huge bubble or has a blowout? The bread “ruptures” in a sense. By scoring the bread, you can help control where gas can escape without ruining its appearance.

Bread Lame

A lame is a handle with a very thin razor blade at the end, specifically used for slashing bread.  In a quick motion, make a slash (or multiple slashes) down the center of the bread, but do not go in deep. You’re going in maybe a 1/4″ at best.

I use a Lame to do mine.

Can I use a sharp knife instead?

I would say no, as the blade isn’t thin enough, and the knife may not be super, SUPER sharp. You could risk tearing the bread instead of a quick, pretty slash.

Coating your rolls before baking

The Best Soft & Chewy Hoagie Bread Roll

You do not have to coat these if you do not want to. They will bake up beautifully and taste amazing, BUT they won’t really have that deep color, crust, or shine like the ones most pizzerias have. Again, not a bad thing. Go with what you like.

When it comes to these rolls, the application you use to coat them will determine the results. For my hoagie rolls, I use an egg white mixed with just a Tablespoon of milk

  • Whole egg: This will give your bread a sheen and color
  • Egg Yolk: This will give your bread color and will help brown it
  • Egg White: Will give you a firmer crust
  • Milk: will give your crust color
  • Butter: will make your crust softer and richer
  • Egg White with Milk: will give you a firmer crust and deeper crust color
The Best Soft & Chewy Hoagie Bread Roll

Cutting your hoagie rolls

At first cut, the bread insides are so soft and billowy.  It’s as if it’s held together by pockets of air and strands of sweet dough. 

The Best Soft & Chewy Hoagie Bread Roll

While it’s hard to resist, I HIGHLY recommend waiting about 10 minutes before slicing into these hoagie rolls. If you don’t, you risk tearing the bread (even with the best bread knives) because it’s simply too hot and too soft inside.

Trust me on this, it’s worth the wait!

The Best Soft & Chewy Hoagie Bread Roll

I would HIGHLY recommend using a quality bread knife to slice these, as the rolls are soft and chewy, and nothing is worse than cutting into them with a crappy knife! You’ll love this knife! Sani-Safe S162-8SC-PCP 8″ Scalloped Bread Knife with Polypropylene Handle Pan is a great knife that’s affordable!

The Best Soft & Chewy Hoagie Bread Roll

Chef Tips About Bread Baking

  • As mentioned above, humidity and heat in your kitchen will drastically affect the dough texture (too wet/too dry while mixing) and proofing.
  • If your kitchen is warmer, your bread will rise faster. Think of bread dough like a toddler. You really can’t let it be unsupervised for very long. Use the times as a guideline, but your eyes will be your best judge.
  • If you overproof your dough, it will fall flat when it bakes. The gluten structure will be too weak to hold the gas production.
  • USE GENTLE HANDS when shaping your dough.
  • Make sure your yeast is not expired!
  • Watch your oven as it bakes. If your oven thermostat is on the fritz, it can affect your bread: either it bakes too fast, leading to burnt bread on the outside or raw bread on the inside.
  • Just relax. If you don’t get it perfect the first time, try again. Ask questions if you’re not sure what went wrong. The biggest things are:
    • Not mixing your dough enough before the first proof
    • If you’re too rough on shaping it, you lose the gas in it
    • Overproofed the 2nd shape, and the bread went flat upon baking
    • Your oven thermostat is on the fritz
  • PATIENCE – BE PATIENT and keep dumping in more flour or water. Rome wasn’t built in a day, just as the dough won’t come together in a minute or two.

There’s no limit to how you can use these hoagie rolls or what you can put in or on them.

The Best Soft & Chewy Hoagie Bread Roll

How to serve Homemade Hoagie Rolls

  • Italian Rocket Hoagie or any favorite hoagie topping such as steak, meatball, cheese, pizza… you get the idea!)
  • Meatball Hoagie like the pics below – use any of my meatball recipes, top with sauce of choice, cheese, and bake at 400F for 10-15 minutes or until the cheese is melted
  • French Bread Pizza – split in half, top each side with cheese and pizza toppings. Bake at 400F until the cheese is melted
  • Stuffed Breakfast Boats – these were such a HUGE seller at our pizzeria (even though they were on the ‘secret’ menu
  • Make them smaller as dinner rolls and, while still warm, top with honey cinnamon butter right before serving

How to store your Best Soft and Chewy Hoagie Rolls

Store them uncut.  When you’re storing overnight, you’ll want to store it in a paper bag OR, wrapped tightly in plastic wrap and then in a plastic bag. Air is your enemy here.

The Best Soft & Chewy Hoagie Bread Roll

How to Freeze Hoagie Rolls

These rolls can be frozen either before or after baking.

Post-baking

  • I prefer to freeze these after they are baked. Simply wrap each cooled loaf in plastic wrap twice and place it in a freezer-safe bag for up to 3 months.

Pre-baking

  1. If you do this, add a little more yeast (about a teaspoon more) to the recipe. This ensures that the post-freeze rise will give you a stunning result.
  2. Allow the dough to proof and then shape it on a parchment-lined pan.
  3. Wrap the pan with plastic wrap. Once each loaf is frozen stiff, wrap each roll twice in plastic wrap. Store in a freezer-safe bag for up to 6 months.
  4. To use frozen dough rolls, remove a loaf from the freezer the night before you want to bake it. Keep the loaf wrapped in plastic and let it thaw overnight in the refrigerator.
  5. Place the thawed dough in a greased bread pan, cover it, and let it rise in a warm, dry place. Bake the bread per the recipe below.
The Best Soft & Chewy Hoagie Bread Roll

Cold Fermenting Your Dough

If you want, you can also cold-ferment this dough as soon as it comes together!

  1. Once the mixture is combined and forms a soft/smooth bread ball, you can add it to a buttered bowl/lidded large container and refrigerate it overnight.
  2. The next day, remove the container from the fridge to perform the first rise. Then, punch down, shape, and allow it to proof a second time. *Note: it will take longer to rise initially as it will be cold.

Subbing Sourdough Starter

I get asked this question a lot. I never use sourdough starter in this recipe, as I love it as-is; however, you can substitute sourdough starter with some recipe modifications.

  • 8 ounces of ripened sourdough starter
  • Reduce the total flour to 334-339 grams
  • Reduce the total water to 177-237 grams
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Using Whole Wheat Flour

So the answer is yes, but you have to modify it and play with the texture to get it right. Let me explain.

  1. You only use 3/4 cup of whole wheat for every 1 cup of flour substituted. AND,
  2. I’ve yet to use all whole wheat and am loving the flavor. I currently recommend substituting 50% whole wheat for the rest of the flour (again, using the measurements in step 1). AND,
  3. You’ll need to add another 2 Tablespoons of water for every 3/4 cup of whole wheat flour added.
  4. And don’t forget to factor in humidity, too.

I have yet to have an OMG YUM moment when making the recipe with a 100% whole wheat swap. It’s still too dense for my liking. Then again, 100% wheat bread tends to be thick in general (at least in my experience).

I’m still working on it, but I’m confident I can nail it and achieve the results I want and love.

TKW Family Love

Ok, since finding this recipe a few weeks ago, I have made these at least once a week. I have made many many bread recipes before, but nothing that my family ever requested so much! Seriously, this recipe is amazing! And so forgiving! I’ve added extra flour, and too much water and I’ve tried every wash possible (our favorite is whole egg) and each time they are just outstanding. I’ve shared this post with quite a few friends as well. I’ll never buy rolls again.

Lauren


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Best Super Soft and Chewy Hoagie Roll Recipe

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5 from 469 reviews

The BEST soft and chewy bread roll for hoagies/submarine/grinders. Pillowy soft rolls that are begging to be filled with deliciousness!

  • Author: The Kitchen Whisperer
  • Prep Time: 2 hours
  • Cook Time: 25 minutes
  • Total Time: 2 hours 25 minutes
  • Yield: 4-8 rolls depending on how big you want them
  • Category: Bread
  • Method: oven
  • Cuisine: baking

Ingredients

  • 3 1/2 – 4 cups bread flour/448-512 grams *see note
  • 1 1/4 cups plus 2 tablespoon – 1 1/2 cups warm water (110-115F degrees) / 308-355 grams *see note
  • 2 Tablespoons / 25 grams of sugar
  • 1 packet instant yeast (2 1/4 teaspoon of RedStar Platinum Yeast) / 7 grams
  • 1 teaspoon kosher salt / 6 grams
  • 4 Tablespoons / 56 grams cold unsalted butter, cubed *see note

Instructions

Using Active Dry Yeast? Start here

  1. If using Active Dry Yeast (not the Instant I use), you have to proof the yeast first. Add the Active Dry Yeast, sugar, and 1/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons of warm water in the bowl of a stand mixer.
  2. Using a whisk or spoon, mix and set aside for 5-10 minutes or until the yeast has bubbled quite a bit.
  3. In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the dough hook (this would be the same bowl your yeast mixture is in) add 2 cups of flour and the remaining cup of water. Start on low. Mix for 4 minutes.
  4. Go to Step 1 of Recipe Continuation and follow the rest of the recipe

Using Instant Yeast? Start here

  1. In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the dough hook, add in 2 cups of flour, water, sugar, and Instant Yeast.  Start off on low. Mix for 4 minutes.
  2. Go to Step 1 of Recipe Continuation and follow the rest of the recipe.

Recipe Continuation

  1. Add in the salt and 1 cup at a time of the remaining flour and mix for 5-6 minutes until the dough is slack (See note). At this point, your stand mixer should be at medium speed. If your dough is not slack after 5-6 minutes, add up to 1/4 more cup of water (up to a full 1 1/2 cups), but do so one Tablespoon at a time. The additional water will entirely depend on how humid your room is.
  2. Add in the butter 1 Tablespoon at a time and mix until almost fully melded in before adding the next Tablespoon.  In total, mix for 1-3 minutes, or until the dough comes back together and pulls completely away from the sides, leaving a smooth, shiny surface. Remove from bowl and transfer to a greased, covered bowl until doubled in size. ~1 hour.
  3. Punch the dough down and place it on a very lightly floured board. Divide into 4-8 pieces and shape. I would advise using as little flour as possible when shaping these. The more flour you add, the tougher the hoagies will be. Transfer to a parchment-lined tray and cover with lightly sprayed plastic wrap. Allow to rise again until almost doubled. ~30-45 minutes. Do NOT overproof them; they will fall flat.
  4. Preheat the oven to 375°F/190°C. If you want to slash your bread, use a lame to make your slashes. If desired, brush with a coating of choice and bake for 16-23 minutes or until golden brown. To ensure doneness, test the internal temperature of the bread. It should be at 200°F/93°C.
  5. Allow to cool before cutting with a quality bread knife ( Sani-Safe S162-8SC-PCP 8″ Scalloped Bread Knife with Polypropylene Handle Pan )

Notes

Flour & Water

Depending on the type of bread flour as well as how humid your kitchen is you may need to increase the water to 1 1/2 cups (which is only another 2 tablespoons more than the original). At times I’ve had to actually go up to 1 3/4 cups total but that was due to how humid my house was at the time.

Cold Butter

I was raised using cold butter in this recipe though you may use softened or equal amounts of olive oil. When using cold butter, even though you ‘meld it into the flour’, you’re helping with gluten formation and the development of dough structure.

Slack Dough

Slack dough means when the dough cannot hold a shape; it has no elasticity or spring back at all. It’s a wet dough but not too wet. It’s “billowy”. The dough is super, super soft, and smooth.

Equipment

I would HIGHLY recommend using a quality bread knife to slice these as the rolls are soft and chewy and nothing is worse when cutting into them with a crappy knife! You’ll love this knife! Sani-Safe S162-8SC-PCP 8″ Scalloped Bread Knife with Polypropylene Handle Pan

Coating your bread

  • Whole egg: this will give your bread a sheen and color
  • Egg Yolk: this will give your bread color and will help brown it
  • Egg White: Will give you a firmer crust
  • Milk: will give your crust color
  • Butter: will make your crust softer and richer

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1,324 responses

  1. Steve
    May 28, 2016

    Quick question on the freezing of these I saw a post that said they could be frozen can you please explain a little more about that. Such as can the dough be made than frozen to make them later if so should they be shaped first? Or do they have to be made, baked, cooled then frozen?
    Thanks in advance
    Ciao

    Reply
    1. TKWAdmin
      May 29, 2016

      Hi Steve!

      You have a few choices here. If you want to freeze them, let them rise first, then shape. Once you shape them flash freeze them (meaning place them on a parchment lined tray and place directly into the freezer until frozen solid. Once solid, wrap them up and store for 2 months in the freezer. Or you can make them, let them cool completely and then freeze (well that is, after you wrap them completely).

      One thing to keep in mind when you freeze the ‘raw’ dough is it has to be left in the fridge overnight to thaw completely before the second rise and baking.

      Best Kitchen Wishes!

      Reply
      1. Steve
        May 30, 2016

        Thank you very much cant wait to try making them!

        Reply
  2. Sebastian
    April 7, 2016

    You can only get a decent hoagie roll in german cities that have/had a US presence, and therefor feature real sandwich bars (not that Subway crap). Born in Bamberg, a small town blessed with over 60 years of US Army on site, I grew up on subs, hoagies and heroes. But cruel fate: 18 years ago I moved to Leipzig, a barren wasteland when it comes to sandwiches. I went to at least 10 bakeries, asking if they knew hoagies – nope. I tried over a dozen recipes, and non of them were the real deal. And then I found yours.

    I don’t think you can even begin to grasp what that first bite into that perfect hoagie – now available whenever I want it – meant to me. I cried. A man and his sandwich, finally together. Thank you.

    Reply
    1. TKWAdmin
      April 7, 2016

      Sebastian how I so wish you were here to see my face when I read your comment. You truly made my day and brought a tear to my eye. THANK YOU! It means so much to me when people leave comments. I so happy that after all these years now you can make your hoagies as often as you want and you never have to go without!

      Best line ever… “A man and his sandwich, finally together.” I’ll forever remember this. Thank you again!

      Best Kitchen Wishes!

      Reply
      1. Melissa Crimboli
        April 11, 2017

        Are you baking at a different elevation that Pittsburgh or something where I need to tweak the recipe to rise like it should?

        Reply
  3. Sara
    January 27, 2016

    Hi! I really enjoyed your recipe. However, mine turned out super salty. Can I cut the salt and still have these turn out? Thanks!

    Reply
    1. TKWAdmin
      January 27, 2016

      Hi Sara,

      1 tsp of salt to 4 cups of flour is pretty standard however you can reduce it to 1/2 tsp if you want. It won’t hurt the outcome.

      Best Kitchen Wishes!

      Reply
  4. Elly
    December 31, 2015

    I want to make these tomorrow. I have bread flour and fresh ground whole wheat. My mr. Fantabulous of 52 yrs insists on whole wheat. I’ve been baking bread for that long, but lately have been sneaking in bread flour as I need no salt bread for his 100+ dad. Hints on how to substitute for these. Thanks.

    Reply
    1. TKWAdmin
      January 2, 2016

      Hi Elly,

      My apologies for not responding sooner but my hosting company went down for a day and I am now just back online.

      If you scroll above in the comments (just do a browser search for whole wheat) you’ll see how other pinners have incorporated it.) Using all whole wheat is not a simple 1-for-1 swap. One pinner wrote “I used whole wheat bread flour reduced to 3 1/2 cups, added 1 Tbsp. of gluten, and let it sit as a sponge for 1 hour before proceeding with the recipe”

      As for no salt, I’ve never made bread (on purpose… LOL) without salt. Salt slows down fermentation and enzyme activity in dough. The salt crystals draw water away form their environment (salt is ‘hygroscopic’). When salt and yeast compete for water, salt wins and the yeast is slowed down. Because of its moisture maintaining properties, salt can prevent bread from getting stale but it can also (this is especially true in humid environments) absorb moisture from the air and leave you with soft crusts and soggy bread.

      Best Kitchen Wishes!

      Reply
      1. Elly
        January 5, 2016

        Thanks for answering. I made this 1/2 whole wheat, reduced to 1-1/2 cups of white whole wheat, fresh ground and 2 cups of bread flour. I didn’t let it sit except to check the yeast. I followed the rest of the recipe but chopped the butter very fine. My dough the first time I made the hoagies wasn’t hydrated enough and the hoagies were very small. I decided the double the recipe and used 1/2 no salt butter, 1/2 regular butter. Only changes I made that time. I made 4 loaves like french bread. OMG these were hands down the best I’ve ever made. This is a keeper and the taste was absolutely great even though limited salt. I figured 100 mg per loaf. We split on loaf into 4 for sandwiches and so that brought the total to 33 mg per sandwich bread. I’m going to try this on my regular whole wheat recipe and instead of oil, will add diced butter at the end. I’m also going to buy vital gluten to add so that I have stronger gluten. I’m in love with your site. Thanks for all the work.

        Reply
        1. TKWAdmin
          January 10, 2016

          Yeah when using whole wheat or even regular wheat flour often you need to add more water. I’m THRILLED your second batch came out perfect! I don’t like the texture oil gives to bread. I like what butter ‘adds’ to it. And yes, the vital wheat gluten is a must – especially when working with wheat.

          Thank you so much for your kind words too! That really means so much to me!

          Best Kitchen Wishes!

          Reply
  5. Blanko
    November 13, 2015

    thank you so much. i’m from germany and finally my quest has come to an end. i was looking for so long to find some really good hoagie rolls, which are easy to make and have that special, soft texture on the inside.
    in germany you just can get those standard burger buns or hot dog rolls. same taste, same texture, just the shape is different between burger buns and hot dog rolls. but looking for sandwich rolls made me go nuts. you can take baguette…but it’s not the same. so i decided to look for a recipe and make them by myself. this recipe is the third i tried and i’m so happy. exactly what i was looking for. so again…thank you very much!

    Reply
    1. TKWAdmin
      November 15, 2015

      Aw you are most welcome Blanko! I’m so happy that you finally found us and this recipe! I agree with you – baguettes are great but… they aren’t what you want for a great hoagie/sandwich roll.

      I just made another batch of these for hoagies (pulled pork sandwiches actually). Also I use this same recipe to make dinner rolls (just make them smaller in size and rolled). They are so soft and chewy. As soon as they come out of the oven a little melted butter on top and I’m in heaven!

      Best Kitchen Wishes!

      Reply
  6. Jennifer
    October 21, 2015

    Just made this. I have about made rolls about 3-4 different recipes and just looking to do something different. This did not disappoint! It was super easy and probably came out closest of anything to what I’m looking for in a roll. The consistency is on point! Thanks for sharing!

    Reply
    1. TKWAdmin
      October 22, 2015

      Thank you so much Jennifer! I’m thrilled you loved it!

      Best Kitchen Wishes!

      Reply
  7. Nana Murg
    October 13, 2015

    wow….. very excellent. I changed a few steps as in I put the dough into my bread on dough cycle. I let them rise for 45 min afterwards. I used a baking matte so no extra flour or cooking spray was required. I am grilling some organic meat cause anything less would be an insult.

    Reply
    1. TKWAdmin
      October 13, 2015

      Thank you so much Nana!!! Mmmm I beat that tasted amazing with the grilled meat!

      Best Kitchen Wishes!

      Reply
  8. Mary
    October 12, 2015

    When making these using the bread machine. when do you add the butter?

    Reply
    1. TKWAdmin
      October 13, 2015

      Hi Mary!

      I had to scroll through the comments and thankfully many commented on how to make it in a bread machine. Thank you to Stephanie to write up a very detailed bread machine set of instructions.

      “I’m in the process of making these in my Cuisinart CBK-200 bread machine. I thought I would write a review to help those making this recipe in a bread machine.

      I followed the instructions above exactly. I warmed my bread pan with warm water, dumped that out, added the 6 tablespoons of water, sugar and swished it around to help dissolve it. I added the yeast and waited about 10 minutes. Then I added the bread flour and the rest of the remaining water, put the pan in the machine and selected dough setting, 2 pound loaf, no mix-ins, and hit start. With the lid open, I let the machine mix about 5 minutes, slowly sprinkled in salt, and let it mix for about another 5 minutes. I added the small pieces of butter and after about a minute it looked like a sloppy, greasy, bread ball, and I started to get worried because the dough ball was just spinning around in the machine and the butter was not incorporating. I sprinkled about a teaspoon of AP flour in to help the ball get some traction and after about another 5 minutes it was a gorgeous looking ball of dough! On the dough setting it kneads for a total of 35 minutes before a 65 minute rest.

      After the rise I dumped the bread on a board and cut it into 8 separate pieces. I didn’t use much flour at all, just shaped them into 2×4 inch baguettes and let them rise another 40 minutes or so. I baked them at the recommended time.

      They taste absolutely wonderful, I just wish they would have risen higher. I think that was totally on me though, when I did the second rise after I had formed them into the baguettes.

      The taste is wonderful, and I’m happy I found this recipe cause for the first time I’ve used my bread machine in a different way and it turned out wonderful! Go bake this bread!”

      Best Kitchen Wishes!

      Reply
  9. Jazmine
    October 8, 2015

    I’ve made these twice now! Thanks for posting such a great recipe! The first time I made them, I ran out of white flour after 3 cups, so I ended up using 1 cup of whole wheat. They turned out great! Still soft and chewy with the whole wheat flour. I use my bread machine to make the dough. I do melt the butter and add it in with the water in my machine. I also only use a half tablespoon of yeast due to my elevation at 5500+ feet. I shape the dough into little batards, because my shaping skills are crap and rolling/slapping the dough against the counter to create a somewhat elongated shape and then tapering the ends is easy. When shaped that way, they also look more like the Wal-Mart bolillo sandwich rolls that I used to buy all the time, but will never have to purchase again. Thanks again for a wonderful recipe!

    Reply
    1. TKWAdmin
      October 11, 2015

      Hi Jazmine!

      Thank you so very much for commenting! I really appreciate it! Hey shaping dough takes practice and how you made yours into little batards is perfect.

      Best Kitchen Wishes!

      Reply
  10. Tracey
    August 26, 2015

    Ment you or other followers who have used dough cycle for this….

    How did auto correct come up with THAT? Other typos of my making 😉 lol

    Reply
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