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Hamburger Buns

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Submitted by jhlanes

Bread machine hamburger buns with a hint of dried herbs and a sesame-topped golden crust. Soft, sturdy, and bakery-style. Doubles as hot dog buns with a quick reshape.

YIELD

9 servings

PREP

20 min

COOK

20 min

READY

40 min

Store-bought hamburger buns hit a low bar: gummy interiors, sweet wrappers, and a tendency to fall apart under any burger juicier than a dry chicken patty. These do better on every front. The bread machine handles the kneading and the first rise, then you take over for shaping, the second rise, and a fast bake.

The one quiet upgrade in the dough is a teaspoon of dried herbs: thyme, basil, oregano, rosemary, or Italian seasoning. The choice depends on what is going inside the bun. Italian seasoning is the move for sausage-and-pepper sandwiches; thyme works for burgers; basil pairs naturally with grilled chicken sandwiches. None of them shout, but each adds a savory backbone that store-bought buns lack.

Milk, butter, and an egg in the dough are what make these soft and sturdy at the same time. The dairy fat tenderizes the crumb so it does not turn into a brick on the second day, and the egg adds enough structure to hold up to a thick burger without going soggy.

An egg-white wash brushed on before baking is the trick that gives the buns a glossy, deep-amber top. Skip it and you get pale, matte rolls; add it and you get the bakery look that makes them photograph well.

Pro Tips

  • Weigh the dough into nine equal pieces with a kitchen scale. Eyeballing gives uneven buns that bake to different sizes and color levels.
  • Flatten the balls only to a 4-inch round before the second rise. Overflattening gives squat, crackerlike buns instead of tall, pillowy ones.
  • Use bread flour, not all-purpose. The higher protein gives the chew and structure that hold up under a heavy burger.
  • Let the baked buns cool completely on a rack before slicing. Cutting warm buns squashes them and they never recover their shape.

Variations

  • Form the dough into 6.5-inch tapered logs for hot dog or brat buns (the recipe’s own suggested twist).
  • Top with everything bagel seasoning, poppy seeds, or rolled oats instead of sesame for a different look.
  • Brush with melted butter the moment they come out of the oven for a softer, glossier potato-roll style finish.

Ingredients

½ 118
CUP ML WATER
½ 118
CUP ML MILK
1 1
LARGE LARGE EGG
1 15
TABLESPOON ML BUTTER
or margarine
¾ 3.8
TEASPOON ML SALT
3 ¼ 769
CUPS ML BREAD FLOUR
2 30
TABLESPOONS ML SUGAR
1 5
TEASPOON ML HERB
* *
2 10
TEASPOONS ML YEAST, ACTIVE DRY
bread machine
Just before baking
1 1
LARGE LARGE EGG WHITE
1 15
TABLESPOON ML WATER
1
X SESAME SEED
to taste *

Directions

  • Herb can be thyme leaves, sweet basil, oregano leaves, rosemary or Italian seasoning.

Add ingredients to machine in order given by manufacturer.

Select dough/manual cycle. When cycle is complete, remove dough from machine to lightly floured surface.

If needed, knead in enough flour to make dough easy to handle.

If dough is too elastic, cover and let rest 10 minutes before shaping.

Divide dough into 9 equal pieces.

Form each into a smooth ball.

Place on large greased baking sheet.

Flatten balls into 4 inch rounds; cover.

Let rise in warm, draft free place until doubled in size, about 20 to 30 minutes.

Lightly beat egg white and water.

Brush on buns.

Sprinkle with sesame seed.

Bake at 375~ for 12 to 15 minutes or until done.

HOT DOG BUNS: Prepare as above, except shape each portion into a roll about 6½ inch long, tapering ends.

Continue as above.

* not incl. in nutrient facts Arrow up button

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Nutrition Facts

Serving Size 93g (3.3 oz)
Amount per Serving
Calories 493 12% from fat
 % Daily Value *
Total Fat 7g 10%
Saturated Fat 3g 14%
Trans Fat 0g
Cholesterol 63mg 21%
Sodium 510mg 21%
Total Carbohydrate 30g 30%
Dietary Fiber 3g 12%
Sugars g
Protein 35g
Vitamin A 4% Vitamin C 0%
Calcium 6% Iron 31%
* based on a 2,000 calorie diet How is this calculated?
Trans-fat Free, Good source of fiber
 
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