Speedy Homemade Wheat Hamburger Buns (Amazing No Rise Recipe!) (2024)

Do you ever have one of those nights when a burger sounds so good, but you don’t have any buns on hand? Or what about when you do make it to the store, but every single burger bun variety contains whey, casein, milk, or cheese? Problem solved. These Homemade Wheat Hamburger Buns are insanely fast to whip up (literally 40 minutes from start to slicing), because they do not require any rising time (just a few minutes of rest).

Speedy Homemade Wheat Hamburger Buns (Amazing No Rise Recipe!) (1)

Homemade Wheat Hamburger Buns that Are Ready in Just 40 Minutes

Speedy Homemade Wheat Hamburger Buns (Amazing No Rise Recipe!) (2)I originally posted this speedy wheat hamburger buns recipe more than a decade ago. It’s since circulated quite a bit, and I’ve tested it countless times over the years. As a result, I’ve updated the recipe with more options and included it in the 2nd edition of Go Dairy Free: The Ultimate Guide and Cookbook for Milk Allergies, Lactose Intolerance, and Casein-Free Living.

Go Dairy Free is all about making the transition easy and delicious, but it also contains many recipes that you will use as a veteran dairy-free diner. In fact, there are over 250 recipes, ranging from homemade dairy substitutes, to any day meals, to baked goodies (enough to start your own bakery!).

Recipe Tips for Making the Perfect Speedy Wheat Hamburger Buns

Choosing the Right Flour: For the best results, I use part white all-purpose flour, part wheat flour. This gives you some of the whole grain goodness, but keeps the texture from being too dense. You can use all white flour, which will produce even softer and fluffier buns. But if you opt to go all whole wheat, I recommend adding some vital wheat gluten, about 3 tablespoons, for the best results. Without it, the buns can be too dense. If you need gluten-free, I recommend my Skinny Gluten-Free Hamburger Buns Recipe.

Sweet Adjustments: If needed, you can reduce the sweetener to 2 or 3 tablespoons without drastically affecting the results. You can pretty much use any sweetener – the two listed are just the ones that we prefer for this recipe.

You Can Let it Rise: If you prefer fluffier, traditionally risen buns, you can reduce the yeast to 1 tablespoon and cover the dough after step 4 and let it rise for 30 minutes to 1 hour. Then let the buns rise for 30 minutes to 1 hour in step 5, or until doubled in size.

Make Sure Your Yeast is Active: The leading cause of under-risen buns is inactive yeast. Make sure you test it as noted in the recipe before committing all of your ingredients. Once open, still active yeast can be stored in the freezer to preserve it. If you use frozen yeast, it might not bubble or foam, even if it is active. But it will still give you good results. If you are sure your yeast is active, you can skip the 5 minute proofing, making this recipe even faster!

Speedy Homemade Wheat Hamburger Buns (Amazing No Rise Recipe!) (3)

Reader Raves for My Quick & Easy Homemade Wheat Hamburger Buns

When I first shared this recipe eons ago, it was on my old blog. Over the years, it became so popular that more than a hundred people came back to comment how much they loved it. We are fully transitioning all posts from that blog to here, which means that feedback will be lost. But here are a few of the comments, randomly selected, to give you the gist.

These are great and easy! I’ve recently gone dairy and soy free after realizing that the dairy and soy in my diet was making my nursing 2 month old daughter miserable (and in turn making the rest of us miserable). It’s daunting to figure out how to cut out dairy and soy but these buns fit the bill and saved me for the 4th of July BBQ. Thanks! ~ Danica

I googled “homemade hamburger buns” and found this recipe. I just tried it – and it is fantastic! I don’t know why I’m surprised… I bake two loaves of bread a week using the recipe from your cookbook! I should have known better! ~ Heather B

Excellent recipe! I used the ener g egg replacer and they came out wonderfully. My vegan daughter and son-in-law scarfed them down, and she hates whole wheat anything. ~ Carolsue Hill

Just love your recipe! My daughter is allergic to sesame seeds and it is impossible to find store-bought buns that are undoubtedly safe for her. My family raves about these buns and I will never use another bun again!!! Thank you for making my daughter so happy now that she can have a bun with her burger just like everyone else – really, even better! I am one happy mom and very grateful! ~ DE Ladden

Just found this recipe today, took me 30 min total prep and cook time, and they are great! I did not have to leave the house to get buns for the 3 burger patties warming up for our lunch. Seriously, it was so easy and turned out so well. I will think twice before I buy buns again. ~ J L

These are wonderful, but I just want to say thank you so much. Let me explain. The veggie burgers for which these were earmarked did not turn out, so I ended up eating one of these little buns uncut as a dinner roll and it almost brought me to tears. My grandmother used to make the BEST yeast rolls and when she passed seven years ago the recipe died forever with her. Or so I thought. I could have sworn I was eating one of her rolls last night and it brought back such happy memories. Soooo happy to have found this. By the way, used a flax egg to make it vegan and whole wheat pastry flour because it tends to sub better for all purpose 🙂 ~ Brandie Rushing

And a special thank you to The Leaf, who featured Go Dairy Free on their list of 22 Healthy Living Bloggers You Need to Be Following. We do our best!

Speedy Homemade Wheat Hamburger Buns (Amazing No Rise Recipe!) (4)

Special Diet Notes: Homemade Wheat Hamburger Buns

By ingredients, this recipe is dairy-free / non-dairy, optionally egg-free, nut-free, peanut-free, soy-free, optionally vegan, and vegetarian.

5.0 from 22 reviews

Speedy Homemade Wheat Hamburger Buns

Prep time

Cook time

Total time

These fast and easy buns go from ingredients to table ready in just 40 minutes, with minimal hands-on time! The recipe is a sample from the 2nd edition of my flagship book, Go Dairy Free: The Ultimate Guide and Cookbook.

Author: Alisa Fleming

Recipe type: Bread

Cuisine: American

Serves: 8 hamburger buns

Ingredients

  • 1 cup warm water (about 105ºF)
  • 2 tablespoons active dry yeast (reduce to 1½ tablespoons above 4,000 feet)
  • ⅓ cup grapeseed, olive, or rice bran oil
  • ¼ cup cane sugar or coconut sugar
  • 1 egg (see Vegan Option below for egg free)
  • 2 cups all-purpose flour or white bread flour
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1½ to 1¾ cups whole wheat flour or white whole wheat flour

Instructions

  1. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper or a silicone baking mat.
  2. Put the warm water in a large bowl and sprinkle in the yeast. Let sit for 5 minutes to proof and ensure the yeast is active. It should bubble or foam. If it doesn't your yeast might be inactive. Start again with fresh yeast.
  3. Add the oil, sugar, and egg to the yeast mixture and whisk to combine. Add the all-purpose or bread flour and salt and stir to combine. Gradually stir in the wheat flour, as needed, until soft dough forms. Bring the dough together with your hands when it becomes too thick to stir. It should be slightly tacky, but should not stick to your hands.
  4. Turn out the dough onto a lightly floured surface. Knead it for about 5 minutes, or until smooth and elastic.
  5. Divide the dough equally into 8 pieces. Shape each piece into a round and place them on your prepared baking sheet. Lightly cover the dough with plastic wrap and let it rest while your oven preheats (about 10 to 15 minutes).
  6. Preheat your oven to 425ºF.
  7. Gently remove the plastic wrap and bake for 10 to 12 minutes, or until lightly golden.
  8. Let cool on the baking sheet or a wire rack for 5 to 10 minutes before slicing.
  9. Store in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 3 days, or individually wrap and freeze to enjoy later.

Notes

Vegan Option: Substitute the egg with 1 powdered egg replacer (about 1 tablespoon powder + 2 tablespoons water, depending on the brand) or whisk 1 tablespoon ground flaxseed or ground chia seed with 3 tablespoons water and let it gel for 5 minutes before adding.

For More of My Easy Recipes, Get Go Dairy Free!

Speedy Homemade Wheat Hamburger Buns (Amazing No Rise Recipe!) (6)

Speedy Homemade Wheat Hamburger Buns (Amazing No Rise Recipe!) (2024)

FAQs

Why didn t my burger buns rise? ›

Add more yeast, blend in the starter, or knead in more flour to help initiate rising. Dough that has expired yeast, too much salt, all-purpose or cake flour, or antifungal spices like cinnamon might have trouble rising.

How do you elevate hamburger buns? ›

"Using melted butter with just a 1/2 teaspoon each of garlic powder, chili powder, or cumin can totally transform a boring bun." Use a small kitchen syringe or plastic pipette to insert the butter mixture into the buns. Be careful not to over-baste the bread, as this can make it soggy.

Why do hamburger buns go bad so fast? ›

Room Temperature

For the best burgers in Capalaba, QLD, store your buns at room temperature in an air-tight container or plastic bag. The reason behind this recommendation is that it helps to maintain their texture and flavour. Buns in a warm or humid environment can become soggy, stale and even mould.

What makes the best burger bun? ›

The ideal burger bun is pillowy soft, squishy and tender. It needs enough structural integrity that it will hold strong with a juicy burger, but should never be tough and chewy - that would distract from all the other delicious flavours and textures in a perfectly crafted burger.

What happens if you don't do a second rise for bread? ›

If you skip the second rise and proceed directly to baking after the first rise, several things might happen: Denser Texture: The bread might be denser in texture. The second rise allows the dough to further expand and develop air pockets, leading to a lighter, more.

Why are my homemade hamburger buns dense? ›

Avoid adding too much extra flour to the dough.

Your instinct might be to add extra flour; however, any extra flour will create a denser, tougher bun instead of the light, fluffy, brioche-style bun we want.

How do you keep hamburger buns flat? ›

Flatten the individual balls of dough for each bun into a disk prior to letting them do their final proof on the baking sheet. Usually you would just do this with your hand, a rolling pin, or with the bottom of a floured flat bottomed glass or something similar.

Should you refrigerate burger buns? ›

If you think putting them in the fridge is the way to go, you're totally wrong. The truth is, if you want to keep your burger buns (or any bread, for that matter) fresher longer, wrapping them in plastic and storing them in the fridge is the worst thing you can do.

What is the longest lasting bread? ›

Sourdough bread: Sourdough bread can last for up to a week at room temperature, but may become stale faster than other bread types. It can be stored in the refrigerator for up to 2 weeks or frozen for up to 3 months. Rye bread: Rye bread tends to be more dense and have a longer shelf life than other bread types.

Can you eat old hamburger buns? ›

How Long Do Buns Stay Fresh? Commercial hamburger and hot dog buns usually stay soft for up to one week. Freshly made rolls from the bakery section of the supermarket will only last a couple of days before they toughen up.

What is the most popular hamburger bun? ›

Top 50 Scanned: Hamburger Bun beta
Popularity
#1Hamburger Buns, Enriched Great Value100 Calories
#2Hamburger Buns, 100% Whole Wheat Pepperidge Farm130 Calories
#3Hamburger Enriched Buns, White Kroger120 Calories
#4Hamburger Buns L'oven Fresh110 Calories
46 more rows

What bun does Gordon Ramsay use? ›

Ramsay's burger has quite a few more ingredients than Fieri's. To make Ramsay's cheeseburgers at home, you'll need: Ground beef. Brioche buns.

Why didn't my buns rise in the oven? ›

If you're dough didn't rise, the yeast is probably dead. This could be because the yeast was old, it wasn't refrigerated, or because the water you bloomed it in was too hot (ideally the water should be warm, about 100F). You can still bake the dough but don't expect the same flavor.

Why are my buns so flat? ›

99% of the time this happens, the problem lies with the yeast used. The quality might be compromised, or you might have applied it incorrectly, or under poor cooking conditions. Read on for why your yeast is not working as it should and what you can do to avoid it.

Why are my buns not fluffy? ›

Simply put, you have to control the temperature of the bread. Allowing ample time for your bread dough to rise and the yeast to form will create the holes in the bread that give it a lighter texture. Letting your dough get puffy and grow before it goes into the oven is critical.

Why aren't my buns light and fluffy? ›

Use a good-quality bread flour that has a high protein content, as this will give your dough the structure it needs to rise and become light and fluffy. Make sure to use the right amount of yeast for your dough. Too much yeast will cause the dough to rise too quickly, resulting in a denser texture.

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Carmelo Roob

Last Updated:

Views: 6189

Rating: 4.4 / 5 (65 voted)

Reviews: 80% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Carmelo Roob

Birthday: 1995-01-09

Address: Apt. 915 481 Sipes Cliff, New Gonzalobury, CO 80176

Phone: +6773780339780

Job: Sales Executive

Hobby: Gaming, Jogging, Rugby, Video gaming, Handball, Ice skating, Web surfing

Introduction: My name is Carmelo Roob, I am a modern, handsome, delightful, comfortable, attractive, vast, good person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.