Breakfast

Chocolate Sweet Rolls

Pillowy soft rolls with rich cocoa filling and cream cheese glaze — the ultimate weekend bake

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The Chocolate Sweet Rolls You've Been Waiting For

If you've ever made cinnamon rolls and thought "what if these had more chocolate," these rolls are the answer. Same pillowy, butter-enriched yeast dough. Same gooey, sugary center. But instead of pure cinnamon, the filling layers in rich cocoa powder, chocolate chips that melt into a fudgy ribbon through every swirl, and just enough cinnamon to keep things warm and spiced. The cream cheese glaze finishes them with a sweet, tangy richness that makes them genuinely difficult to stop at one.

This is a weekend baking project — there's no way around the rising time. But the active work is maybe 45 minutes, and almost none of it is difficult. The dough is forgiving, the filling is foolproof, and the reward is a pan of rolls that makes the whole house smell extraordinary.

The Dough: Soft, Enriched, Perfect

Sweet roll dough is what bakers call an enriched dough — it contains butter, eggs, and milk in addition to flour, yeast, salt, and sugar. These additions slow gluten development, which is exactly what you want: a tender, soft crumb rather than the chewy structure you'd want in a baguette. The fat from the butter and egg yolks coats the gluten strands, keeping everything silky and pull-apart soft even after baking.

Kneading for the full 8 minutes is important. Under-kneaded dough doesn't develop enough structure to hold the filling inside the rolls during the second rise. The dough is ready when it passes the windowpane test: stretch a small piece between your fingers — if it stretches thin enough to see light through without tearing, the gluten network is properly developed.

The Chocolate Filling

The filling here goes beyond the usual butter-and-sugar spread. Brown sugar for molasses-rich sweetness. Unsweetened cocoa powder for that deep, bitter chocolate note. Ground cinnamon for warmth. And a full cup of semi-sweet chocolate chips scattered over the top before rolling — these melt completely during baking into pockets of intense molten chocolate that run through every slice.

Freshly baked chocolate chip sweet rolls on a pan

The key to a tight, beautiful swirl is rolling the dough snugly from the long edge without stretching it. Once rolled into a log, cut the rolls using dental floss or a sharp serrated knife — a straight knife compresses the roll and distorts the spiral. Floss gives you a perfectly clean cut every time with zero squishing.

Two Rises: Non-Negotiable

The first rise doubles the dough and develops flavor. The second rise, after shaping, is what makes the rolls light and airy rather than dense. Skipping or rushing either rise results in rolls that bake up heavy and bread-like instead of fluffy and cloud-soft.

The second rise can be done in the refrigerator overnight — this is actually a better result because the slow cold fermentation develops more complex flavor. Assemble the rolls in their pan the night before, cover tightly, refrigerate overnight, and bake in the morning after a 30-minute room temperature rest. Fresh hot rolls in the morning with almost no morning effort.

The Cream Cheese Glaze

The glaze goes on when the rolls are warm — not hot. If you pour glaze onto piping-hot rolls, it runs off entirely and pools in the pan. Wait about 10 minutes after pulling them from the oven, then spread generously. The warmth softens the glaze to a perfect drizzle consistency that seeps into every crevice of the rolls.

If you prefer a thinner, pourable glaze, add more milk. For a thick frosting you can pipe or spread, reduce the milk. Either way, the cream cheese base gives it a tangy counterpoint to all the sweetness and chocolate that keeps the rolls from being overwhelming.

Variations

Swirl in a tablespoon of espresso powder with the cocoa filling for mocha sweet rolls. Add a handful of toasted pecans or walnuts on top of the chocolate chips before rolling for crunch. Drizzle with caramel sauce alongside the cream cheese glaze. These rolls are an excellent base for experimentation — almost anything you fold into the filling will work.

Chocolate chip sweet rolls baked golden

Chocolate Sweet Rolls

Soft pillowy rolls with cocoa filling and cream cheese glaze

★★★★★ 4.9 (1,764 ratings)
Prep30 min
Rise2 hrs
Bake25 min
Servings 12
Calories380 kcal

Ingredients

  • Dough:
  • 4 cups all-purpose flour
  • 2¼ tsp active dry yeast
  • 1 cup warm milk (110°F)
  • ⅓ cup granulated sugar
  • ⅓ cup unsalted butter, melted
  • 2 large eggs
  • 1 tsp salt
  • Chocolate Filling:
  • ½ cup unsalted butter, softened
  • ¾ cup brown sugar, packed
  • ¼ cup unsweetened cocoa powder
  • 1 tsp cinnamon
  • 1 cup semi-sweet chocolate chips
  • Cream Cheese Glaze:
  • 4 oz cream cheese, softened
  • 1½ cups powdered sugar
  • 3 tbsp milk
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract

Instructions

  1. Combine warm milk, 1 tsp sugar, and yeast. Let sit 5 minutes until foamy.
  2. Add melted butter, eggs, remaining sugar, and salt. Mix in flour 1 cup at a time until a soft dough forms.
  3. Knead 8 minutes until smooth and elastic. Place in greased bowl, cover, let rise 1–1.5 hours until doubled.
  4. Roll dough to a 16×12 inch rectangle. Spread softened butter over surface.
  5. Mix brown sugar, cocoa, and cinnamon; sprinkle evenly over butter. Scatter chocolate chips on top.
  6. Roll tightly from the long edge. Cut into 12 rolls using dental floss or serrated knife.
  7. Place in a greased 9×13 pan. Cover, let rise 45 minutes. Meanwhile, preheat oven to 350°F.
  8. Bake 23–25 minutes until golden. Cool 10 minutes.
  9. Beat cream cheese, powdered sugar, milk, and vanilla until smooth. Spread over warm rolls.

Nutrition (per roll with glaze)

Calories380
Fat15g
Carbs56g
Sugar28g
Protein7g
Sodium180mg

Pro Tips

  • Use dental floss to cut: Slide unflavored floss under the roll log, cross the ends over the top, and pull to cut each roll without squishing the spiral.
  • Don't overbake: Rolls are done when the tops are golden and the center roll doesn't look raw. A few degrees past done and they dry out quickly.
  • Make the overnight version: After cutting and placing in the pan, cover and refrigerate overnight. Bake the next morning after a 30-minute counter rest for fresh morning rolls with almost no effort.
  • Windowpane test: Stretch a small piece of kneaded dough thin enough to see light through — if it tears, knead 2 more minutes and test again.
  • Room temperature butter for filling: The butter must be soft enough to spread easily without tearing the dough. Take it out of the fridge 1 hour before rolling.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I make chocolate sweet rolls overnight?

Yes — after cutting and placing in the pan, cover and refrigerate overnight instead of the second rise. Let them rest at room temperature 30 minutes the next morning, then bake as directed.

Why didn't my rolls rise?

Yeast that doesn't foam after 5 minutes is likely dead. Use fresh yeast and make sure milk is 105–115°F — too hot kills yeast, too cold won't activate it.

Can I use instant yeast instead of active dry?

Yes — same amount. Skip the activation step and mix instant yeast directly into the flour. Rise times may be slightly shorter.

How do I store chocolate sweet rolls?

Cover at room temperature up to 2 days, or refrigerate up to 5 days. Microwave individual rolls 20–30 seconds with a damp paper towel to restore softness.

Can I freeze sweet rolls?

Freeze fully baked, unglazed rolls up to 3 months. Thaw at room temperature, warm in the oven at 300°F for 10 minutes, then add glaze fresh.