Pillowy, soft and sweet, these brioche burger buns are perfect for burgers, hotdogs or deli sandwiches. These buns are made with hard white wheat and milled fresh for the best nutrition, giving you the perfect excuse the eat burgers! The cold fermentation allows for an enhanced flavor profile, improved texture, and increased digestibility. All that adds up to the healthiest brioche burger buns you’ll ever eat!
Timeline
This is a basic breakdown for a two day process with a cold fermentation. I do suggest this timeline as it improves the flavor, texture and the cold fermentation helps with digestion issues if you are sensitive to gluten. I also provide a same day timeline if you are interested.
Same Day Timeline

Brioche Burger Buns with Freshly Milled Flour
Follow along for detailed instructions on how to make Brioche Burger Buns with freshly milled flour.
Mixing the Dough
To make brioche burger buns, start by combining the water, milk, flour, egg, yolk, sugar, amylase and vital wheat gluten. Autolyse for 30 minutes. You can save the leftover egg white to use as the egg wash.
I like to pre-weigh my yeast, salt and butter and place it in an obvious place so I do not forget to add it in later! Without salt and yeast your brioche burger buns are going to be more of brioche burger pucks!
Kneading
Add your yeast, salt and butter and mix until combined. I do not recommend adding the butter before the autolyse step as the oils will coat the flour, preventing it from properly hydrating.
Begin to knead your dough by hand or with a mixer. The dough will be sticky but do not add more flour as this will throw off the hydration levels. If you are kneading by hand use the slap and fold method to help with the sticky dough. Brioche burger buns rely on moderately high hydration and butter to achieve the pillow soft texture we want. I use grams for my ingredients because it will give you the most accurate, consistent results. Avoid adding flour so that the hydration levels are not altered.
It is essential that you reach a windowpane. You can see a video on windowpanes here.
I find if you are using a kitchen aid mixer, if you do not have enough dough it will end up just going for a ride in circles. To fix this I either turn up the speed to three or four so the dough is pulled away from the hook allowing it to catch or scaling my recipe up so I have more dough. These buns freeze very well so I tend to scale up and just make a big batch. Please be aware that Kitchen Aid does not suggest mixing over level 2 with doughs to protect the motor so do so at your own risk and keep an eye on if it is getting warm. I personally have never had an issue.
Once you have reached a windowpane, cover and allow the dough to rise until almost doubled. This will take about 45 minutes to an hour. Place the dough into the fridge for 1 hour and up to 12 hours. This will allow the butter to stiffen and make the dough easier to shape.
Shaping
On a clean work surface, turn out the dough. I do not recommend flouring the surface as we will be using the surface tension to shape the dough. Instead you can use a bench scraper if it is sticking. Watch a tutorial on shaping here.
Divide your dough into 10-12 even pieces depending on the size you would like. I like using a scale to ensure the finished buns will be the same size. For 10 buns each will be around 100 grams and for 12 buns they will be about 80 grams. Take one piece and pinch the sides into the middle to form a ball and then with a cup shaped hand, move the dough in circles on the surface of the table allowing the surface tension to create a taut ball. Place the ball on a baking sheet and press down creating a 1 inch tall disc. Repeat with all the pieces. Cover and rest for 45 minutes to an hour or until tall and a poke test comes back slowly and not completely.
Resting and Baking
Preheat your oven to 375. Using the leftover egg white, add 1 tablespoon water and a tablespoon honey if you want a sweet finish. Wisk and then brush over the rolls. While the egg wash is still wet, sprinkle on your sesame seeds. Bake for 15 minutes or until the internal temperature reads 200 degrees. Cool completely before cutting open.
Brioche Burger Buns with Fresh Milled Flour
Course: MainCuisine: AmericanDifficulty: Intermediate12
servings45
minutes15
minutes2
hours30
minutes3
hours30
minutesPillowy, soft and sweet, these brioche burger buns are perfect for burgers, hotdogs or deli sandwiches. These buns are made with freshly milled hard white wheat and milled fresh for the best nutrition giving you the perfect excuse the eat burgers! The cold fermentation allows for an enhanced flavor profile, improved texture, and increased digestibility. All that adds up to the healthiest brioche burger buns you’ll ever eat!
Ingredients
160g whole milk
160g water
525g hard white wheat
1 egg
1 egg yolk
60g sugar
4g amylase (optional)
5g vital wheat gluten (optional)
10g yeast
7g salt
50g softened butter
sesame seeds for garnish
Directions
- Mill your wheat on the finest setting. Combine the water, milk, flour, egg, yolk, sugar, amylase and vital wheat gluten. Autolyse for 30 minutes.
- Add your yeast, salt and butter. Knead the dough until window pane is achieved.
- Cover and rise for 45 minutes or until doubled. Refrigerate for at least an hour or overnight. Do not exceed 12 hours.
- Turn the dough out onto a clean surface and use a bench scraper to divide the dough into ten to twelve pieces. Form into taut balls and place onto a parchment lined baking sheet. Press down on each one to flatten it out to an inch thickness.
- Cover and rise for 45 minutes to an hour. Brush with an egg wash, sprinkle with sesame seeds and bake at 375 for 15 minutes or until golden brown and the dough reaches 200 degrees with a probe thermometer. Cool completely before slicing in half.
Recipe Video
Notes
- Dough. This dough is a good base for a variety of rolls. Burger, hotdog or deli. Simply change the way you shape it and watch the baking times.
- Amylase. Amylase is an enzyme that breaks down starches into sugars. It provides the yeast with more food yielding softer doughs and lengthening shelf life. I like to use amylase in my burger buns because the texture is divine and I like make large batches and freeze the excess rolls for another time. Amylase will help the rolls taste just as fresh after freezing. You can purchase Amylase powder on Amazon.
- Vital Wheat gluten. While this is optional, I do recommend trying it though as it improves the texture.
- Rings. I use English Muffin rings to help keep the buns consistent size and rise upward instead of out. This is not necessary as you will just have slightly wider buns but they do create beautifully consistent results.
Nutrition Facts
12 servings per container
Serving Size85g
- Amount Per ServingCalories292
- % Daily Value *
- Total Fat
10g
16%
- Saturated Fat 5g 25%
- Cholesterol 50mg 17%
- Sodium 350mg 15%
- Total Carbohydrate
45g
15%
- Dietary Fiber 3g 12%
- Sugars 10g
- Protein 8g 16%
- Calcium 60%
- Iron 2%
* The % Daily Value tells you how much a nutrient in a serving of food contributes to a daily diet. 2,000 calories a day is used for general nutrition advice.