Sweet Potato Rolls with Maple Pecan Butter
These sweet potato rolls are the kind of bread that sneaks into your life and refuses to leave — pillowy, slightly sweet, with that cozy orange tint from mashed sweet potato and a butter that’s basically pecans and maple syrup having a very good time together. They’re soft, slightly chewy, and somehow both rustic and fancy enough to impress guests without making you feel like you need a degree in baking to pull them off.
My husband will text me from the couch asking if there are any leftovers like it’s a public service announcement. The kids call them “orange clouds” and will eat three before I’ve had coffee. I made these the first time because I had an accidental baked sweet potato and no plan — the dough came together, I slapped on the maple-pecan butter, and the rest is family legend. We now make them for weekend breakfasts, holiday dinners, and bribing kids into doing chores. True story: once I tried to halve the recipe and somehow created 18 rolls. We ate them for a week and learned nothing.
Why You’ll Love This Sweet Potato Rolls with Maple Pecan Butter
– They’re soft and tender but hold up to a smear of butter without falling apart.
– The sweet potato adds moisture and flavor so you can use less oil/butter in the dough and still get a rich roll.
– Maple-pecan butter turns simple rolls into a dessert-for-breakfast moment — sticky, nutty, and dangerously spreadable.
– They look like you spent hours baking, but the process is forgiving for imperfect humans.

Kitchen Talk
I learned early on that bread like this doesn’t demand perfection — it wants patience and a forgiving attitude. One time I forgot to proof the dough in a warm spot and shoved it in the oven out of spite; it was denser but still tasty and got labeled “rustic.” Another time I swapped pecans for walnuts because I was out, and everyone blinked and asked if I’d started a new bakery. Pro tip from that glorious flop: to get the rolls glossy, brush with melted butter right after they come out while they’re steaming.
These Sweet Potato Rolls with Maple Pecan Butter were a total hit—soft, fluffy, and just the right amount of sweetness. The maple pecan butter adds a rich, nutty finish that feels special but not over the top. Perfect for holiday gatherings or any cozy weekend baking!
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Shopping Tips
– Baking Basics (Flour/Sugar/Leaveners): Use bread flour if you want extra chew, but all-purpose works fine — don’t overthink the flour choice for this one.
– Nuts & Seeds: Fresh pecans make the butter sing; buy shelled if you can and give them a quick toast to boost flavor.
– Dairy: If a recipe calls for butter or milk, full-fat will give the richest rolls, but you can use a lighter milk without disaster.
– Sweeteners: Pure maple syrup makes the pecan butter taste iconic; pancake syrup is a passable fallback but not the same.
– Eggs: Look for medium to large eggs depending on what your baking stash usually has — if a recipe needs an egg wash, it helps the tops brown nicely.
Prep Ahead Ideas
– Mash the sweet potato and store it in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 3 days — it’s the best shortcut.
– You can mix the dough the night before and refrigerate it so it has a slow, chill rise; bring it to room temp before shaping.
– Toast and pulse pecans for the butter and keep them in a jar in the fridge; it saves time and keeps the flavor fresh.
– Use freezer-safe containers for shaped, unbaked rolls: freeze them on a tray, then bag; thaw and finish rising before baking.

Time-Saving Tricks
– Use leftover baked sweet potato or microwave one until soft instead of roasting from raw.
– If you’re in a rush, let the dough rise in a slightly warm oven (oven off, light on) to speed things up.
– Make the maple-pecan butter in a food processor while the rolls rise — no separate chopping or toasting needed if you toss whole pecans in first.
– Don’t skip a quick toast of pecans for the butter; it only takes a few minutes and makes a big flavor difference.
Common Mistakes
– Over-kneading in a stand mixer can make the rolls tough — I once let my mixer run too long and ended up with rolls that were more like dense little bricks; fix is to let them rest and don’t over-handle.
– Under-proofing makes dense rolls. If the dough hasn’t puffed, give it more time — proofing is patience, not a speed race.
– Too much flour when shaping dries the rolls; keep your hands lightly floured and try not to add more than necessary.
– Burning the pecans is easy if you’re not paying attention — they go from toasted to bitter in seconds. Pull them when they smell nutty, not when they’re dark.
What to Serve It With
– A big bowl of creamy soup (think butternut or tomato) for dunking.
– Soft scrambled eggs or an herb omelet for brunch.
– Roasted turkey or ham if you’re doing holiday vibes.
– A simple green salad with vinaigrette to cut the richness.
Tips & Mistakes
– Use warm (not hot) liquid when proofing yeast — too hot kills the yeast; too cold slows it down.
– Brush with melted butter right out of the oven for shine and softness.
– If rolls cool and get a little firm, microwave briefly under a damp paper towel to revive them.
– If your maple-pecan butter separates, give it a stir or zap for a few seconds in the microwave and it’ll come back together.
Storage Tips
Store leftover rolls in an airtight container at room temp for 2 days, or freeze for up to 3 months. Reheat frozen rolls in a low oven or wrapped in foil to keep them soft. The maple-pecan butter can be refrigerated — it’ll firm up but stirs back to a spreadable glory at room temp. Cold rolls? No shame: slice and toast them, then spread with the butter for an excellent breakfast emergency.

Variations and Substitutions
– Swap pecans for walnuts or almonds if needed; pecans give the signature sweetness, but walnuts work in a pinch.
– Honey or brown sugar can replace a touch of maple in the dough, but the spread will feel different without maple syrup.
– Want savory? Omit the maple in the butter, add flaky salt and fresh herbs for a compound herb butter version.
– Gluten-free? I’ve tried a 1:1 GF flour mix — results are softer and less elastic, but tasty if you accept the different texture.
Frequently Asked Questions

Sweet Potato Rolls with Maple Pecan Butter
Ingredients
Main Ingredients
- 0.75 cup warm whole milk about 105–110°F
- 2.25 tsp active dry yeast about one packet
- 3 tbsp granulated sugar
- 1 cup mashed sweet potato cooled and smooth
- 3 tbsp unsalted butter, melted
- 1.75 oz beaten egg about 1 large egg without shell
- 3.25 cup all-purpose flour start with 3 cups, add more as needed
- 1 tsp fine sea salt
- 0.5 tsp ground cinnamon
- 0.5 cup unsalted butter, softened for maple pecan butter
- 3 tbsp pure maple syrup for maple pecan butter
- 0.5 cup toasted pecans, finely chopped for maple pecan butter
- 0.25 tsp vanilla extract for maple pecan butter
- 0.125 tsp fine sea salt pinch, for maple pecan butter
- 1 tbsp unsalted butter, melted for brushing baked rolls
Instructions
Preparation Steps
- Cook the sweet potato until very tender, mash until smooth, and let it cool to room temperature.
- Warm the milk to 105–110°F. Stir in yeast and 1 teaspoon of the sugar. Let stand until foamy, 5–10 minutes.
- Whisk the remaining sugar, mashed sweet potato, melted butter, beaten egg, cinnamon, and salt into the yeast mixture.
- Add 3 cups flour and mix until a shaggy dough forms. Sprinkle in more flour as needed to make a soft, slightly tacky dough.
- Knead on a lightly floured surface until smooth and elastic, 8–10 minutes, or knead in a mixer 6–7 minutes.
- Place dough in a greased bowl, cover, and let rise in a warm spot until doubled, about 60–75 minutes.
- Punch down the dough. Divide into 12 equal pieces, shape into tight balls, and arrange in a greased 9x13-inch pan.
- Cover and let rise again until puffy and nearly doubled, 30–45 minutes. Meanwhile, heat oven to 375°F.
- Beat softened butter with maple syrup, chopped pecans, vanilla, and a pinch of salt until fluffy. Chill until serving.
- Bake rolls until golden and 195°F inside, 16–20 minutes. Brush tops with melted butter and serve warm with maple pecan butter.
Notes
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