Sesame Scallion Buns
Updated Dec. 21, 2025

- Total Time
- About 2½ hours
- Prep Time
- 5 minutes
- Cook Time
- 30 minutes, plus 2 hours’ rising
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- ½cup/130 grams whole milk
- 3tablespoons sugar
- 1(¼-ounce) packet active dry yeast (7 grams; 2¼ teaspoons)
- 2⅓cups/303 grams all-purpose flour, plus more for rolling
- 1teaspoon fine salt
- 3tablespoons cold unsalted butter, cut into cubes, plus more for the bowl
- 1large egg
- White sesame seeds, for sprinkling
- ¼cup/60 grams grapeseed or canola oil
- 2bunches scallions, trimmed, thick ones halved lengthwise, very thinly sliced
- 1teaspoon fine salt
For the Buns
For the Scallions
Preparation
- Step 1
Make the buns: Heat the milk until lukewarm to the touch (over low heat in a saucepan or for 30 seconds in the microwave). Stir in the sugar to dissolve, then stir in the yeast. Let stand until foamy, about 5 minutes.
- Step 2
Meanwhile, mix the flour and salt in the bowl of a stand mixer. Add butter and beat on low with the paddle until crumbs form. Make a well in the center and add the foamy milk and the egg. Beat with the paddle on low until a shaggy dough forms. Switch to the dough hook and knead on low speed until the dough is smooth and elastic, 10 to 15 minutes, scraping the bowl and hook occasionally. The dough will be a bit sticky.
- Step 3
Butter a large bowl and scrape the dough into it. Cover with a clean kitchen towel and let rise in a warm place until doubled, about 1½ hours.
- Step 4
Meanwhile, prepare the scallions: Heat the oil in a small saucepan over medium-high until shimmering and almost smoking, about 5 minutes. Remove from heat, then add the scallions and salt carefully (they’ll splatter). Stir well. Let stand while the dough rises.
- Step 5
Roll the dough: Gently press down on the dough in the bowl to deflate it. Turn it out onto a lightly floured surface. Using a lightly floured rolling pin, roll it into a rectangle 20 inches wide and 12 inches long, with the wide side facing you. It will be a scant ¼ inch thick. Use a spoon to scoop the scallions onto the dough, reserving any excess oil. Spread the scallions to the bottom and side edges and leave an inch rim at the top. Line a rimmed baking sheet with parchment paper.
- Step 6
Shape the dough: Starting from the edge closest to you, roll the dough up in a loose spiral. Pinch the long seam to seal. Using a serrated knife, cut the roll with a sawing motion into 12 even pieces. Place them cut side up on the prepared sheet, spacing evenly apart.
- Step 7
Using your fingertips, gently pull the dough layers apart a bit and if the end is coming unraveled, tuck it under the spiral. Sprinkle the rolls generously with sesame seeds. Cover loosely with the clean kitchen towel and let stand in a warm place for 20 minutes or cover the pan with greased plastic wrap and refrigerate overnight.
- Step 8
Heat oven to 375 degrees while the spirals proof. (If the buns have been refrigerated overnight, let them sit at room temperature until they’re room temperature and puffed.)
- Step 9
Bake until golden brown, about 20 minutes. Immediately after they come out of the oven, brush them with the reserved scallion oil. Serve hot or warm.
Private Notes
Comments
@Genevieve I used crescent roll dough from the pop-can and they turned out excellent! I have a newborn baby at home and this approach made it so fast and easy, yet still special!
@LittleBird you can try puff pastry, but store-bought pizza dough or another store-bought bread dough (like crescent rolls) probably would work better. I haven’t tried it but I’m excited to hear how it goes!
True especially if one is including slicing 2 bunches of scallions into tiny pieces. But could someone please share the quality of this recipe instead of just complaining about the instructions? Five comments, I still have no idea if this tastes good!
Ok, totally different recipe, but I rolled packages of crescents (3 cans for a 9x13 baking dish) with pistachio cream and chopped pistachios. Each cab rolled separately then cut into 6-7 spiral rolls. Baked for 22 minutes at 375, brushed with butter and sprinkled with more nuts. A-plus breakfast. I just post it here because making the scallion rolls from scratch last weekend inspired the riff, and I could see doing all kinds of things with these, with or without homemade dough.
I followed the recipe as written, and they came out lovely. At first, I only used the white and pale green parts of my scallions. Then I saw the video and noted they included the dark green bits. I went back and added in the green parts. After I arranged them on my baking sheet and let them rise for the second time, I used two chopsticks to gently pull them apart before baking. This worked very well. They were a huge hit at my party and all were devoured quickly.
Many have said the recipe was too salty. It calls for 1 tsp “fine salt” but I used 1 tsp Diamond Crystal kosher salt and it was perfect. Also used 1% milk since that’s what we drink, and it didn’t seem to negatively affect the recipe. I nestled my buns into a 9x9 pan so most of the edges stayed soft like pull-apart cinnamon rolls. Will make again!
