The Wannabe Chef: Pumpkin Cinnamon Rolls

Think about it: breakfast gets left out of holiday feasts, while our lunches and dinners are filled with a smorgasbord of Thanksgiving favorites. I know, turkey and mashed potatoes for breakfast? No thanks. But this year, I do want to start off my Thanksgiving morning with at least one flavor of the holiday season: pumpkin!

I read a description of pumpkin cinnamon rolls to my friend Liz and we both practically started drooling. That was my cue to go home and test the recipe right away. I was intimidated at first about making my own dough, but the recipe I found doesn’t call for yeast, a fear I have yet to conquer. Maybe one day…

Anyway, canned pumpkin incorporated into the dough gives these rolls the holiday flavor – and color – I was looking for. The dough was easy to roll out; I filled it with brown sugar and cinnamon, formed it into a log and cut it into the spirally cinnamon roll shape we all know and love. My kitchen smelled just like pumpkin pie as these babies baked! Topped with a cream cheese icing, my pumpkin cinnamon rolls are the perfect Thanksgiving breakfast. Bet you can’t eat just one, but I would recommend trying to resist to save room for the turkey!

Pumpkin Cinnamon Rolls

Adapted from Ally’s Sweet and Savory Eats

For the rolls:

  • 2 ¼ cup flour (add more, one tablespoon at a time, if dough is too sticky)
  • 4 tsp. baking powder
  • 1 tsp. nutmeg
  • 2 Tbl. sugar
  • ¼ tsp. salt
  • ¼ cup cold butter
  • 1 cup canned pumpkin
  • 1/3 cup cold milk
  • For the filling:
  • ¾ cup brown sugar
  • 2 Tbl. cinnamon

For the icing:

  • 4 oz. cream cheese, softened
  • ½ cup powdered sugar
  • Sift together dry ingredients. Cut butter into flour, working it into pea-sized pieces. Add pumpkin and milk.
  • On a floured surface, roll the dough into a ½-inch rectangle. Sprinkle with mixture of brown sugar and cinnamon. Roll dough into a log; cut into 1- to 2-inch slices.
  • Place each roll on a buttered pie plate or cake pan. Bake for 15-20 minutes or until golden brown.
  • While rolls cook, mix cream cheese and powdered sugar with an electric mixer. Spread icing over rolls while still warm.

Yield: 12 rolls          

You Might Also Like:

e1b70596-05c8-11f1-92e0-1248ae80e59d-3-2026rueanemone--credit-Joe-Cook

March’s Mountain Wildflower: Rue Anemone

A member of the buttercup family and found in the open woodlands, rue anemone (Thalictrum thalictroides) has long, thin stems that tremble in the slightest of winds—prompting its other common name, windflower.
Pokeweed growing in Floyd County, Virginia.

January’s Wild Edible: Pokeweed

Pokeweed is one of the wild plants that is most associated with the Blue Ridge Region.
A purple-spored puffball growing in a field in Botetourt County, VA.

December’s Wild Edible: Purple-Spored Puffball

The purple-spored typically grows in this region’s fields, often appearing from October through December and into early January.
d289022c-696f-11f0-a179-1248ae80e59d-CGZ_0845-011

Ride the Rails, Explore Rockbridge County: Make a Weekend of the 611 in Goshen!

This fall, one of America’s most iconic steam locomotives is making tracks and memories.
The compound, lancelike leaflets of the bitternut are a good identifier.

November’s Wild Edible: Bitternut Hickory

Frankly, this native species to the Blue Ridge mountains comes by its name honestly.
Mullein growing in Ingram's backyard.

October’s Wild Edible: Mullein

Earlier, this year, a lone mullein plant appeared along the fence that encloses my garden, which made me curious about this plant.
An indigo milk cap growing in Botetourt County, Virginia.

September’s Wild Edible: Indigo Milk Caps

When young, indigo milk caps are one of the most stunningly beautiful mushrooms in the Blue Ridge Mountains.
ec3b964c-5201-11f0-968d-1248ae80e59d-9-2025spottedjewelweed--credit-Joe-Cook-and-Monica-Sheppard

September’s Mountain Wildflower: Spotted Jewelweed

Seek out spotted jewelweed growing beside a stream or along a moist area and you will have a good chance of getting to watch one or more ruby-throated hummingbirds flit from flower to flower.
A black staining polypore growing in Botetourt County, VA.

August’s Wild Edible: Black-Staining Polypore

The black-staining polypore is certainly one of the more fascinating wild edible mushrooms.
Northern Dewberry growing in Botetourt County, Virginia.

July’s Wild Edible: Northern Dewberry

For several reasons, the northern dewberry is often overlooked as a summer berry in the Blue Ridge.

CALENDAR OF EVENTS