Mini Pretzel Buns

If you want to treat your family or friends with mini burgers or sliders made on delicious and soft mini pretzel buns, here is the recipe is for you. 

These mini pretzel buns are soft, flavorful, and incredibly fun to serve, making them perfect for sliders, mini burgers, party sandwiches, or game day gatherings. They have that classic pretzel flavor everyone loves — slightly chewy on the outside with a rich golden crust, while the inside stays wonderfully soft and fluffy. Their smaller size makes them ideal for entertaining because guests can easily enjoy a variety of fillings and flavors.

One of the things that makes pretzel buns so special is the traditional baking soda bath before baking, which creates the signature deep brown color, glossy finish, and distinctive pretzel taste. Combined with a sprinkle of coarse salt on top, these mini buns feel just like bakery-style pretzel rolls fresh from a German bakery.

They pair beautifully with juicy burger patties, pulled pork, crispy chicken, ham and cheese, or even vegetarian slider fillings. Their soft texture holds fillings well without falling apart, making them both practical and delicious.

Fresh from the oven, they smell absolutely incredible and are nearly impossible to resist warm. The contrast between the lightly chewy crust and pillowy interior creates the perfect bite every time.

Whether you’re hosting a party, preparing family dinners, or simply looking for a fun homemade bread recipe, these mini pretzel buns are guaranteed to impress both kids and adults alike.

Ingredients

Sourdough starter 

Dough

  • 500g bread flour (100%) +/- 20g flour if needed
  • 190g water (38%)
  • 100g sourdough starter/levain (30%)
  • 50g sugar (10%)
  • 1 egg
  • 10g salt (2%)
  • 35g oil without flavor (7%)
  • 0.5 g dry yeast (optional, to reduce sourness)

Garnish

  • Sea salt (optional)
  • Melted butter for brushing baked pretzel buns (optional)

Boiling 

  • Wide pot 
  • 1 gallon of water
  • 3 tbs baking soda

Lye bath

• Plastic container

• gloves

• plastic spoon

• 900g water

• 30g lye

Directions 

Day 1

Starter 

  • 10 pm add starter to the water and whisk together, add flour, mix well, cover loosely, let it sit at a room temp 74-78F for about 8-10 hours until starter reaches its peak (at least triples in volume).

Dough 

  • Add all the ingredients, except oil, into a mixing bowl, knead for 5-10 minutes until well incorporated, at the end of mixing add pour oil, continue to mix for a 4-6 more minutes, until gluten is developed.
  • Cover and let it rise until the dough becomes lighter and bigger with bubbles on the surface for about  3-4 hours, perform a couple of folds during this time.

Shaping 

  • Prepare baking tray with parchment paper generously oiled.
  • Place the dough onto a non-floured surface. Flatten the dough and divide on a pieces about 50-55 grams each, shape them  them as balls, by pinching all the sides into the center.
  • Set the pretzel buns on a prepared baking tray. Cover and let them proof for about 2 hours at 76-80F (until they become puffy).
  • When proofing is done, move the pretzel buns into the fridge for 30 minutes (it will help to transfer them into boiling water later).

Boiling 

  • While the dough chills in the fridge boil the water. Add baking soda and whisk well to have it dissolved. 
  • Preheat your oven to 375F (190C).
  • Remove the pretzel buns from the fridge, put 4 of them into the pot with boiling water and wait for them to float on the surface (5 seconds or less). Cook for 20-30 seconds on each side for a thin crust. Using a slotted spoon, remove your pretzel buns from the boiling water, and place them on a well oiled parchment paper, let them cool for about 1 minute. 
  • Use scoring lame to make an “X” shaped cut on top of each bun.
  • Sprinkle some sea salt on top (optional).

Lye bath (if using)

• Wear gloves, add lye to a container with water, deep each pretzel, let soak 10 sec. Transfer to a tray covered with parchment paper.

Baking 

  • Bake pretzel bunsfor about 25-27 minutes until they turn nice and brown.
  • Brush them with melted butter, while still hot for more flavor.

Note: to store, let your pretzel buns cool down, place them into an airtight bag. They will remain fresh for 3-4 days. Or freeze them for up to 1 month.

Enjoy!

Mini Pretzel Buns

2626kcal
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Prep 30 minutes
Cook 25 minutes
Rise & Rest Time 15 hours 30 minutes
Total 16 hours 25 minutes
Perfect for slider season, these Mini Pretzel Buns are beautifully deep-brown, shiny, and soft on the inside. Combining a multipurpose sourdough starter with a touch of commercial yeast guarantees a reliable, fluffy rise while keeping any sharp sour notes perfectly in check.
Cuisine American, German Bakery Style

Ingredients

The Sourdough Starter Levain (Night Before)
  • 10 g Sourdough starter culture
  • 60 g Water
  • 55 g All-purpose or bread flour
  • 5 g Rye flour
The Enriched Pretzel Main Dough
  • 500 g Bread flour (100% – Adjust up or down by 20g based on flour absorption properties)
  • 190 g Water (38%)
  • 100 g Active sourdough starter levain (20% – From the stage above)
  • 50 g Sugar (10%)
  • 1 Large egg
  • 10 g Salt (2%)
  • 35 g Flavorless neutral baking oil (7%)
  • 0.5 g Dry instant yeast (Optional helper pinch used strictly to eliminate natural sour tang)
The Traditional Alkaline Boiling Bath
  • 1 Gallon Water
  • 3 tbsp Baking soda (Or check the notes below for an authentic food-grade lye bath setup)
The Finishing Bakery Garnish
  • Coarse sea salt (To taste)
  • Melted butter (Reserved strictly for a hot post-bake brush coating)

Equipment

  • Stand Mixer (Fitted with a dough hook attachment)
  • Large Baking Sheet
  • Parchment Paper (Generously oiled)
  • Wide Cooking Pot
  • Slotted Spoon (For lifting the boiled buns safely)
  • Scoring Lame or a brand-new razor blade

Method

Day 1 – Starter Peak Build
  1. 10:00 PM: In a clean glass jar, add your 10g of starter culture to 60g of water and whisk together. Add the 55g of white flour and 5g of rye flour.
  2. Mix thoroughly, cover loosely, and let it ferment at room temperature 74–78°F (23–26°C) overnight for 8 to 10 hours until it triples in volume and peaks.
Day 2 – The Enriched Knead, Bulk Rise, and Shaping
  1. In your stand mixer bowl, combine the 190g of water, 100g of your active peak starter, 50g of sugar, 1 large egg, 10g of salt, the optional 0.5g of dry yeast, and all 500g of bread flour.
  2. Attach your dough hook attachment. Knead on low-medium speed for 5 to 10 minutes until the ingredients come together into a firm dough ball.
  3. Pour in the 35g of flavorless baking oil. Increase the speed to medium-high and continue mixing for an additional 4 to 6 minutes until the oil is completely absorbed and the gluten network is fully developed.
  4. Cover the bowl and let bulk ferment for 3 to 4 hours at room temperature. Perform 2 separate rounds of structural stretch-and-folds across the first two hours until the dough looks notably lighter and develops tiny bubbles on the surface.
  5. Shaping: Line a large baking sheet with a sheet of parchment paper and oil it generously.
  6. Tip the dough out onto a completely un-floured work surface. Flatten it down slightly and use a bench scraper to divide the mass into small, uniform pieces weighing roughly 50 to 55 grams each.
  7. Shape each piece into a tight, neat ball by pinching all the outer sides into the bottom center, then rolling it under your cupped palm to smooth out the skin.
  8. Arrange the mini buns across your oiled tray. Cover loosely and let them proof for roughly 2 hours at 76–80°F (24–27°C) until they expand and turn beautifully puffy.
  9. The Firming Chill: Once proofed, transfer the entire tray uncovered straight into your refrigerator for exactly 30 minutes. Chilling the dough solidifies the structure, making them incredibly easy to handle without wrinkling during the upcoming boiling bath.
The Alkaline Bath & Blazing Bake
  1. While the dough chills, bring 1 gallon of water to a rolling boil inside a wide pot. Add the 3 tablespoons of baking soda and whisk well until it fully dissolves. Preheat your oven to 375°F (190°C).
  2. Remove the chilled buns from the fridge. Working in batches of 4, drop them carefully into the boiling water bath.
  3. Wait for them to float to the surface (usually 5 seconds or less), and boil for exactly 20 to 30 seconds per side to create a wonderfully thin pretzel skin.
  4. Use a slotted spoon to lift the boiled buns out of the water, drain off any excess liquid, and return them onto your oiled parchment paper. Let them cool and settle for 1 minute.
  5. Use a sharp scoring lame or clean razor blade to slice a deep “X” pattern cleanly into the top center of each bun. Sprinkle with coarse sea salt if desired.
  6. Slide the tray into the oven and bake at 375°F (190°C) for 25 to 27 minutes until the outer crust turns a deep, gorgeous pretzel brown color.
  7. Pull them out and immediately brush the tops generously with melted butter while they are still steaming hot for maximum flavor and shine!

Nutrition

Calories2626kcalCarbohydrates459gProtein79gFat49gSaturated Fat5gPolyunsaturated Fat15gMonounsaturated Fat25gTrans Fat0.2gCholesterol179mgSodium10829mgPotassium786mgFiber14gSugar52gVitamin A263IUVitamin C0.3mgCalcium247mgIron6mg

Notes

  • Why the 30-Minute Fridge Chill is a Lifesaver: Attempting to drop warm, freshly proofed dough balls straight into a boiling water pot will instantly deflate your air bubbles, leaving you with wrinkly and misshapen buns. Sliding the tray into the fridge for 30 minutes chills the starches and sets the shape, allowing you to handle and move them into the water cleanly without losing any volume.
  • The Yeast Pinch for a Soft Sandwich Crumb: Traditional German pretzels feature a distinctly dense, chewy bite. Because these are specifically scaled to be used as soft burger sliders or party sandwiches, adding a tiny 0.5g pinch of instant yeast alongside your levain ensures the crumb stays incredibly soft and light while cutting down on any intense sourdough sourness.
  • Why the Parchment Paper Must Be Oiled: Alkaline baths make the exterior starch layer of boiled dough remarkably sticky. If you land your wet buns directly onto dry parchment paper right after boiling, they will glue themselves to the paper permanently as they bake through. Rubbing a light coating of oil across the paper ensures they slide right off cleanly once baked.
  • The Authentic Food-Grade Lye Bath Option: If you want to achieve that shiny, mahogany crust found in professional German bakeries, you can swap out the hot baking soda water for a traditional cold lye bath. In a dedicated plastic container, wear protective gloves and dissolve 30g of food-grade lye beads into 900g of cold water. Dip each chilled bun into the lye bath for exactly 10 seconds, then transfer them straight to your oiled baking sheet to score and bake immediately.

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14 Comments

      1. Thanks for sharing the recipe. I’m baking them tonight. Bread isn’t a staple at my house. How do I revive these if I freeze the buns?

      2. After freezing bring them to a room temperature, and then you can toast them, to make it warm and soft.

  1. hi, love your recipe Natasha, always big success. I like to ask why we make 130 g levain but we only use 90?
    thanks a lot!
    Nava

  2. hi Natasha, I really love your recipe, always big success 😋 I like to ask why we make 130 g levain but only use 90 g?
    thanks a lot!

  3. Awesome thank you – so delicious and easy!
    I have been using this as my quick go to all the the COVID-19 lockdowns and trying crazy adaptions here in Melbourne Victoria, Australia

  4. I made these, and when I put them in the baking soda “bath,” they flattened and shriveled quite a bit. I though they might revive in the oven, but still had a shriveled appearance. Any thoughts on where I went wrong. I’m wondering if i overproved in the second proofing. Mine got quite a bit puffier than yours in the photo, but that’s just a guess.

    1. I would like to add, however, that even though they weren’t pretty like yours, they tasted delicious!

  5. Howdy. I’m giving these a go today, (because they look absolutely delicious) but was just wondering about a recent reel that you posted where butter was used. Did you use that instead of the oil in this recipe? Thanks

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