Brioche Hot Dog Buns

Soft, golden, butter-and-egg enriched brioche hot dog buns — the same enriched dough as the Brioche Burger Buns, shaped into the elongated log format that holds a hot dog, bratwurst, or lobster roll. The brioche’s slight sweetness and tender, yielding crumb make it the more indulgent, flavour-contributing option. The Classic Hot Dog Buns are the neutral, structurally straightforward version for everyday use — these are what you make when the bun is part of the meal rather than just the vessel for it.

Four golden brioche hot dog buns on a wire rack showing deep golden glossy egg-washed surface with elongated log shape on marble surface

Prep Time : 20 min

Cook Time : 17 min

Servings : 4

Prep Time :

20 min

Cook Time :

17 min

Servings :

4

Ingredients

For the Dough


• 250g bread flour — this one on Amazon


• 4g fine sea salt


• 25g sugar


• 4g active dry yeast


• 30g unsalted butter, softened to room temperature — this one on Amazon


• 1 whole egg, room temperature


• 70g whole milk, warm, approximately 35°C


• 50g water, warm, approximately 35°C

For the Egg Wash


• 1 egg


• Small splash of milk or water

Optional Finish


• 20g unsalted butter, melted, for brushing immediately after baking

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Directions

  1. Combine the Dry Ingredients
    In a large bowl, combine the bread flour, fine sea salt, sugar, and active dry yeast. Stir briefly to distribute all four dry components evenly before any liquid is added. The brief mixing ensures the yeast and salt are dispersed through the flour rather than sitting in concentrated contact with each other — salt in direct, undiluted contact with yeast before the liquid is introduced can suppress yeast activity at those points. Bread flour is specified over all-purpose for the same reason it is used in the brioche burger bun recipe: hot dog buns need sufficient structural integrity to hold their elongated shape through proofing and baking without spreading flat, and the higher protein content of bread flour produces the stronger gluten network that keeps the shaped log compact and upright rather than widening and flattening during the second proof.
  2. Mix and Form the Dough
    In a separate bowl or jug, whisk together the warm milk, warm water, and egg until completely combined with no streaks of unincorporated white remaining. Both liquids should be approximately 35°C — warm enough to activate the yeast and help the butter incorporate, but not hot enough to damage the yeast cells or begin setting the egg. Pour the liquid mixture over the dry ingredients and add the softened butter simultaneously. The butter must be genuinely soft — at room temperature for at least 30 minutes — rather than cold or melted. In a brioche-style dough, softened butter is worked progressively into the developing gluten network during kneading, coating the gluten strands and producing the tender, extensible crumb structure characteristic of brioche. Cold butter does not incorporate smoothly and requires aggressive mixing that can over-develop the gluten. Melted butter introduced before gluten development coats the flour particles and inhibits network formation. Room-temperature softened butter is the only correct state for this application. Mix with your hand or a dough scraper until a rough, cohesive dough forms with no dry flour remaining.
  3. Knead to Full Development
    Transfer the rough dough to a clean work surface and knead for 8–10 minutes by hand, or use a stand mixer fitted with a dough hook at medium-low speed for 8 minutes. The dough will be noticeably sticky during the first 3–4 minutes of kneading — stickier than a lean dough without enrichment — and this is expected and correct for a brioche-style dough. The fat from the butter and the lecithin from the egg yolk both increase surface tackiness during early kneading before the gluten network has developed sufficiently to bind them into the structure. Do not add flour to manage the stickiness — flour addition at this stage alters the recipe’s hydration balance and produces a denser, less tender bun. Continue kneading through the stickiness: as the gluten develops and the butter is fully incorporated over the 8–10 minute period, the dough progressively tightens, smooths, and begins to pull away from the work surface more cleanly. The finished dough should feel smooth, slightly glossy, elastic, and supple — a small piece stretched between your fingers should reach translucency without tearing, confirming the gluten development sufficient for the shaped log to hold its form during the second proof and baking.
  4. First Rise
    Shape the kneaded dough into a smooth ball and place in a lightly greased bowl. Turn once to coat all surfaces in oil. Cover with plastic wrap or a damp kitchen towel and allow to rise at room temperature — ideally 24–26°C — for 1–2 hours until clearly doubled in size. The enrichment from the butter, egg, and sugar moderates the yeast’s fermentation rate compared to a lean dough — the surrounding fat molecules create a slightly more challenging environment for yeast activity, producing a rise time at the longer end compared to plain bread dough. The first rise develops the flavour complexity that distinguishes a properly fermented enriched bread from one that was rushed — the organic compounds produced during the 1–2 hour fermentation contribute the subtle depth that makes even a simply flavoured brioche noticeably more interesting than the same recipe would be if under-fermented.
  5. Divide and Shape into Logs
    Turn the risen dough out onto a lightly floured work surface. Divide into 4 equal portions — each approximately 105g. Weigh them for consistency: equal weight produces buns that expand evenly and bake in the same time. The hot dog bun shaping technique differs fundamentally from the burger bun shaping — where burger buns are shaped into balls and flattened, hot dog buns are shaped into elongated logs through a specific rolling technique that produces the characteristic cylindrical shape. Working with one piece at a time, gently press and flatten each piece with your palm into a rough rectangle approximately 10–12cm long and 7–8cm wide. The flattening is light — just enough to produce a rectangular base for rolling, not aggressive enough to fully degas the dough. Starting from the long side nearest to you, roll the dough away from you firmly and tightly, pressing the roll against the work surface as you go to maintain tension. The rolling motion should be deliberate and consistent — a loose roll produces a bun with irregular gaps in the crumb; a tight, even roll produces a uniform, close-grained crumb structure. As you reach the far edge, press the seam firmly against the dough surface with the heel of your hand to seal it completely — an unsealed seam will open during proofing and baking, producing a visible split along the length of the bun. Once sealed, lightly roll the log back and forth on the surface with your palms, applying gentle even pressure and gradually working outward from the centre to lengthen it to approximately 15–18cm. The ends should be slightly tapered — apply a little more pressure toward each end during the rolling-out phase.
  6. Second Rise
    Place the shaped buns seam-side down on a parchment-lined baking sheet. Unlike burger buns, do not flatten hot dog buns after shaping — the elongated log shape requires height as well as length, and flattening would eliminate the rounded top profile that characterises a proper hot dog bun. Space the buns with at least 5–6cm between each one to allow for expansion during proofing without the buns pressing against each other and merging. Cover loosely with lightly greased plastic wrap or a clean cloth. Allow to proof at room temperature for 45–60 minutes until visibly puffy, noticeably expanded in both height and width, and soft and airy to a very gentle press. The buns should look clearly larger than when shaped but still retain their elongated log identity — they should not have spread flat or become dome-shaped, which would indicate either an overly wet dough or insufficient gluten development from under-kneading. Begin preheating the oven to 190°C (375°F) in the final 15–20 minutes of the second proof.
  7. Egg Wash and Bake
    In a small bowl, whisk the egg with a small splash of milk until completely smooth and uniform. Using a pastry brush, apply a thin, even coat of egg wash across the top surface and sides of each proofed bun. The egg wash on a brioche hot dog bun produces the characteristic deep golden, slightly glossy finish that is the visual identity of a quality enriched bread — the egg’s proteins and the milk’s sugars caramelise during baking in a Maillard reaction that produces both colour and a subtle complexity at the crust surface. Apply with light, even strokes from front to back rather than side-to-side, which can shift the bun on the tray and deflate the proofed gas structure. Bake for 16–18 minutes until the tops and sides are evenly, deeply golden brown and the buns sound slightly hollow when tapped on the base — a dull, solid sound indicates the interior is not yet fully baked. Transfer to a wire rack immediately. For the optional butter finish, brush the warm top surface of each bun with melted butter within the first 2 minutes of removing from the oven — the warm bun absorbs the butter into the surface, preventing the crust from hardening as it cools and producing the characteristically soft, yielding top that distinguishes a brioche bun from a standard bread roll.

*Notes

  • The hot dog bun shaping is the technique that most separates this recipe from the burger bun version — the log roll with sealed seam requires more care than the ball-and-flatten method but is not difficult once understood. The key variables are: the tightness of the initial roll (tighter produces a more uniform crumb), the completeness of the seam seal (any gap will open during baking), and the evenness of the subsequent length extension (more pressure toward the ends to taper slightly). A bun where the seam opens during baking is cosmetically imperfect but not structurally compromised — it will hold a hot dog correctly and taste identical. For a cleaner result, ensure the seam is pressed firmly and completely before rolling out to length.
  • The length target of 15–18cm is calibrated for a standard hot dog or bratwurst. A standard hot dog is approximately 15cm. If your hot dogs or bratwursts are longer — some artisan bratwursts reach 20cm — adjust the bun length accordingly by rolling to a longer dimension during shaping.
  • The butter finish immediately after baking is the single step that most elevates these buns toward their best possible result. Butter applied to a hot surface melts and absorbs into the crumb’s outer layer within seconds, and the fat prevents the subsequent formation of the firmer, slightly stiff crust that develops as an unenriched surface cools and the surface starch retrogradrates. The result is a bun that remains soft and slightly yielding to the touch even when cooled to room temperature — the texture that makes an excellent brioche bun immediately identifiable.

Why This Recipe Works

This recipe works because the dough formula — identical to the brioche burger bun — is calibrated at the specific enrichment level that produces a bun with enough structure to hold the elongated log shape through proofing and baking, while being soft and tender enough in the crumb to compress pleasantly around a hot dog without tearing. The bread flour provides the structural strength for the log shape.

The softened butter, egg, and milk provide the tenderness, richness, and glossy golden exterior. The specific shaping technique — rolling tightly from the long side, sealing the seam, and extending to length — produces the uniform, even crumb structure that makes the bun hold together when loaded and bitten.


Ingredient Breakdown

Bread Flour

Provides the stronger gluten network required to hold the elongated hot dog bun shape through proofing and baking — a hot dog bun needs more structural integrity than a round burger bun due to its length-to-width ratio.

Softened Butter (Incorporated Through Kneading)

The primary richness and tenderness element — worked progressively into the gluten network, lubricating the strands and producing the soft, slightly yielding crumb characteristic of brioche.

Whole Egg

Contributes lecithin for gluten lubrication, protein for structure, fat from the yolk for richness, and the golden interior colour of enriched bread.

Warm Milk

Enriching liquid — the fat and protein contribute tenderness and flavour depth beyond what water alone would provide.

Sugar

Yeast food and Maillard browning contributor — at 25g produces the faint sweetness associated with brioche character.

Egg Wash

The glossy golden finish — the visual signature of an enriched bread and a specific signal of quality in a hot dog bun.


Flavor Structure Explained 

This brioche hot dog buns follow a layered balance model:

  • Soft sweet base (brioche crumb)
  • Buttery richness (butter)
  • Subtle savory depth (egg)
  • Light caramelized crust (sugar, egg wash)
  • Smooth enriched finish (butter glaze)

The crumb establishes the foundation with a mild, slightly sweet profile that stays supportive rather than dominant. Butter builds rounded richness throughout, giving the bun its signature softness and depth. Egg adds a faint savory note that balances the sweetness. Sugar contributes to crust development, creating a slightly more caramelised, flavorful exterior. The butter finish enhances the surface with additional richness and softness, integrating with the crust. The overall structure is enriched but controlled — designed to complement fatty, savory fillings without competing.


Common Mistakes to Avoid 

  • Rolling Too Loosely – A loose roll produces irregular gaps and tunnels in the crumb. Roll firmly and consistently, maintaining tension throughout.
  • Not Sealing the Seam Completely – Any unsealed section of the seam will open during proofing or baking, producing a visible split. Press firmly with the heel of your hand along the entire seam length before rolling out to the final length.
  • Flattening After Shaping – Unlike burger buns, hot dog buns need their rounded top profile. Do not flatten — place seam-side down and leave as shaped.
  • Early Stickiness Panic – The brioche dough is legitimately sticky for the first 3–4 minutes of kneading. Do not add flour. Continue kneading and it will tighten progressively.
  • Under-kneading – Insufficient gluten development means the log cannot hold its shape during proofing and spreading flat occurs. Knead for the full 8–10 minutes.
  • Cutting While Hot – Cutting enriched bread before it has cooled for at least 20 minutes compresses the still-setting crumb into a gummy layer.

Variations

Sesame Seeded

After applying the egg wash, scatter white sesame seeds generously along the top surface of each bun before baking. The seeds toast to a nutty aromatic character that pairs particularly well with classic beef hot dogs and bratwursts.

Poppy Seeded

Apply poppy seeds over the egg-washed surface the same way — their slightly bitter, dense character provides contrast to the brioche’s sweetness.

Garlic Herb Butter Finish

Mix 5g of finely minced garlic and 5g of chopped fresh parsley into the melted butter used for the post-bake brush. The garlic and herb butter absorbs into the warm surface and transforms a simple brioche bun into a garlic bread-adjacent vehicle — excellent for Italian sausages and bratwursts.

Slider Hot Dog Buns

Divide the dough into 8 equal portions of approximately 52g each and shape into shorter logs of 10–12cm length. Reduce the second proof to 35–40 minutes and the baking time to 13–14 minutes. The mini buns are perfectly sized for cocktail frankfurts and party applications.


Storage & Make-Ahead

Baked buns can be stored in a sealed bag at room temperature for up to 3 days. Because the dough is enriched with butter, they stay softer for longer than lean buns, which makes them especially practical for storing.

To refresh day-old buns, split them and toast them cut-side down in a dry skillet for 60 to 90 seconds, until golden. This brings back much of the surface texture and warmth of a freshly baked bun.

The buns can also be frozen in a sealed bag for up to 1 month. For convenience, split them before freezing so the halves can be toasted directly from frozen without thawing.

For a make-ahead option, shape the dough, place the logs seam-side down on the tray, cover tightly, and refrigerate them for up to 16 hours before the second proof. Then remove them from the refrigerator and let them proof at room temperature for 60 to 75 minutes before egg washing and baking. This cold rest also adds a subtle depth of fermentation flavor.


Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between brioche hot dog buns and classic hot dog buns?

Brioche hot dog buns are enriched with butter, egg, and milk, producing a tender, slightly sweet, golden-crusted bun that contributes its own flavour to the eating experience. Classic Hot Dog Buns are lean — less enrichment, more neutral character — providing structural support without adding flavour. Choose brioche for a more indulgent, flavour-forward bun; choose classic for everyday use and applications where the filling is the sole focus.

Can I make these without a stand mixer?

Yes — the 8–10 minutes of hand kneading produces equivalent results. The enriched dough is more challenging to knead by hand than a lean dough due to the butter and egg stickiness, but it resolves through consistent kneading without additional flour.

How do I get a clean, even log shape?

The key is the tight initial roll from the long edge and the complete seam seal before rolling to length. A tight first roll produces a uniform cylinder; a complete seam seal prevents splitting during baking; even hand pressure from centre to ends during lengthening produces a consistent diameter throughout.

What fillings work best in brioche hot dog buns?

Classic beef hot dogs and bratwursts benefit from the brioche’s slight sweetness complementing the savory, fatty sausage. Lobster rolls — both the warm butter-dressed Maine style and the cold mayo-dressed Connecticut style — are one of the most specific and famous applications for brioche hot dog buns in American cooking. Chicago-style dogs, corn dogs, and Italian sausages with peppers all work equally well.

Why does my bun spread flat during the second proof?

Either the dough was under-kneaded (insufficient gluten development to hold the log shape), the seam was not sealed properly (causing the log to unroll), or the dough was too warm during proofing (causing the yeast to over-ferment and weaken the gluten before baking). Ensure full kneading, complete seam sealing, and room-temperature proofing at 24–26°C maximum.



Nutrition Facts 

( Per Brioche Hot Dog Bun )

Calories

~310 kcal

Protein

9 g

Fat

9 g

Carbs

48 g

Calories

~310 kcal

Protein

 9 g

Fat

9 g

Carbs

48 g

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Four golden brioche hot dog buns on a wire rack showing deep golden glossy egg-washed surface with elongated log shape on marble surface

Brioche Hot Dog Buns

Soft, golden, butter-and-egg enriched brioche hot dog buns — the same enriched dough as the Brioche Burger Buns, shaped into the elongated log format that holds a hot dog, bratwurst, or lobster roll. The brioche's slight sweetness and tender, yielding crumb make it the more indulgent, flavour-contributing option. The Classic Hot Dog Buns are the neutral, structurally straightforward version for everyday use — these are what you make when the bun is part of the meal rather than just the vessel for it.
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 17 minutes
Proofing Time 3 hours
Total Time 3 hours 30 minutes
Servings: 4 hot dog buns
Course: Baking
Cuisine: American
Calories: 310

Ingredients
  

For the Dough
  • 250 g bread flour
  • 4 g fine sea salt
  • 25 g sugar
  • 4 g active dry yeast
  • 30 g unsalted butter softened to room temperature
  • 1 whole egg room temperature
  • 70 g whole milk warm, approximately 35°C
  • 50 g water warm, approximately 35°C
For the Egg Wash
  • 1 egg
  • Small splash of milk or water
Optional Finish
  • 20 g unsalted butter melted, for brushing immediately after baking

Method
 

Combine the Dry Ingredients
  1. In a large bowl, combine the bread flour, fine sea salt, sugar, and active dry yeast. Stir briefly to distribute all four dry components evenly before any liquid is added. The brief mixing ensures the yeast and salt are dispersed through the flour rather than sitting in concentrated contact with each other — salt in direct, undiluted contact with yeast before the liquid is introduced can suppress yeast activity at those points. Bread flour is specified over all-purpose for the same reason it is used in the brioche burger bun recipe: hot dog buns need sufficient structural integrity to hold their elongated shape through proofing and baking without spreading flat, and the higher protein content of bread flour produces the stronger gluten network that keeps the shaped log compact and upright rather than widening and flattening during the second proof.
Mix and Form the Dough
  1. In a separate bowl or jug, whisk together the warm milk, warm water, and egg until completely combined with no streaks of unincorporated white remaining. Both liquids should be approximately 35°C — warm enough to activate the yeast and help the butter incorporate, but not hot enough to damage the yeast cells or begin setting the egg. Pour the liquid mixture over the dry ingredients and add the softened butter simultaneously. The butter must be genuinely soft — at room temperature for at least 30 minutes — rather than cold or melted. In a brioche-style dough, softened butter is worked progressively into the developing gluten network during kneading, coating the gluten strands and producing the tender, extensible crumb structure characteristic of brioche. Cold butter does not incorporate smoothly and requires aggressive mixing that can over-develop the gluten. Melted butter introduced before gluten development coats the flour particles and inhibits network formation. Room-temperature softened butter is the only correct state for this application. Mix with your hand or a dough scraper until a rough, cohesive dough forms with no dry flour remaining.
Knead to Full Development
  1. Transfer the rough dough to a clean work surface and knead for 8–10 minutes by hand, or use a stand mixer fitted with a dough hook at medium-low speed for 8 minutes. The dough will be noticeably sticky during the first 3–4 minutes of kneading — stickier than a lean dough without enrichment — and this is expected and correct for a brioche-style dough. The fat from the butter and the lecithin from the egg yolk both increase surface tackiness during early kneading before the gluten network has developed sufficiently to bind them into the structure. Do not add flour to manage the stickiness — flour addition at this stage alters the recipe’s hydration balance and produces a denser, less tender bun. Continue kneading through the stickiness: as the gluten develops and the butter is fully incorporated over the 8–10 minute period, the dough progressively tightens, smooths, and begins to pull away from the work surface more cleanly. The finished dough should feel smooth, slightly glossy, elastic, and supple — a small piece stretched between your fingers should reach translucency without tearing, confirming the gluten development sufficient for the shaped log to hold its form during the second proof and baking.
First Rise
  1. Shape the kneaded dough into a smooth ball and place in a lightly greased bowl. Turn once to coat all surfaces in oil. Cover with plastic wrap or a damp kitchen towel and allow to rise at room temperature — ideally 24–26°C — for 1–2 hours until clearly doubled in size. The enrichment from the butter, egg, and sugar moderates the yeast’s fermentation rate compared to a lean dough — the surrounding fat molecules create a slightly more challenging environment for yeast activity, producing a rise time at the longer end compared to plain bread dough. The first rise develops the flavour complexity that distinguishes a properly fermented enriched bread from one that was rushed — the organic compounds produced during the 1–2 hour fermentation contribute the subtle depth that makes even a simply flavoured brioche noticeably more interesting than the same recipe would be if under-fermented.
Divide and Shape into Logs
  1. Turn the risen dough out onto a lightly floured work surface. Divide into 4 equal portions — each approximately 105g. Weigh them for consistency: equal weight produces buns that expand evenly and bake in the same time. The hot dog bun shaping technique differs fundamentally from the burger bun shaping — where burger buns are shaped into balls and flattened, hot dog buns are shaped into elongated logs through a specific rolling technique that produces the characteristic cylindrical shape. Working with one piece at a time, gently press and flatten each piece with your palm into a rough rectangle approximately 10–12cm long and 7–8cm wide. The flattening is light — just enough to produce a rectangular base for rolling, not aggressive enough to fully degas the dough. Starting from the long side nearest to you, roll the dough away from you firmly and tightly, pressing the roll against the work surface as you go to maintain tension. The rolling motion should be deliberate and consistent — a loose roll produces a bun with irregular gaps in the crumb; a tight, even roll produces a uniform, close-grained crumb structure. As you reach the far edge, press the seam firmly against the dough surface with the heel of your hand to seal it completely — an unsealed seam will open during proofing and baking, producing a visible split along the length of the bun. Once sealed, lightly roll the log back and forth on the surface with your palms, applying gentle even pressure and gradually working outward from the centre to lengthen it to approximately 15–18cm. The ends should be slightly tapered — apply a little more pressure toward each end during the rolling-out phase.
Second Rise
  1. Place the shaped buns seam-side down on a parchment-lined baking sheet. Unlike burger buns, do not flatten hot dog buns after shaping — the elongated log shape requires height as well as length, and flattening would eliminate the rounded top profile that characterises a proper hot dog bun. Space the buns with at least 5–6cm between each one to allow for expansion during proofing without the buns pressing against each other and merging. Cover loosely with lightly greased plastic wrap or a clean cloth. Allow to proof at room temperature for 45–60 minutes until visibly puffy, noticeably expanded in both height and width, and soft and airy to a very gentle press. The buns should look clearly larger than when shaped but still retain their elongated log identity — they should not have spread flat or become dome-shaped, which would indicate either an overly wet dough or insufficient gluten development from under-kneading. Begin preheating the oven to 190°C (375°F) in the final 15–20 minutes of the second proof.
Egg Wash and Bake
  1. In a small bowl, whisk the egg with a small splash of milk until completely smooth and uniform. Using a pastry brush, apply a thin, even coat of egg wash across the top surface and sides of each proofed bun. The egg wash on a brioche hot dog bun produces the characteristic deep golden, slightly glossy finish that is the visual identity of a quality enriched bread — the egg’s proteins and the milk’s sugars caramelise during baking in a Maillard reaction that produces both colour and a subtle complexity at the crust surface. Apply with light, even strokes from front to back rather than side-to-side, which can shift the bun on the tray and deflate the proofed gas structure. Bake for 16–18 minutes until the tops and sides are evenly, deeply golden brown and the buns sound slightly hollow when tapped on the base — a dull, solid sound indicates the interior is not yet fully baked. Transfer to a wire rack immediately. For the optional butter finish, brush the warm top surface of each bun with melted butter within the first 2 minutes of removing from the oven — the warm bun absorbs the butter into the surface, preventing the crust from hardening as it cools and producing the characteristically soft, yielding top that distinguishes a brioche bun from a standard bread roll.

Notes

The hot dog bun shaping is the technique that most separates this recipe from the burger bun version — the log roll with sealed seam requires more care than the ball-and-flatten method but is not difficult once understood. The key variables are: the tightness of the initial roll (tighter produces a more uniform crumb), the completeness of the seam seal (any gap will open during baking), and the evenness of the subsequent length extension (more pressure toward the ends to taper slightly). A bun where the seam opens during baking is cosmetically imperfect but not structurally compromised — it will hold a hot dog correctly and taste identical. For a cleaner result, ensure the seam is pressed firmly and completely before rolling out to length.
The length target of 15–18cm is calibrated for a standard hot dog or bratwurst. A standard hot dog is approximately 15cm. If your hot dogs or bratwursts are longer — some artisan bratwursts reach 20cm — adjust the bun length accordingly by rolling to a longer dimension during shaping.
The butter finish immediately after baking is the single step that most elevates these buns toward their best possible result. Butter applied to a hot surface melts and absorbs into the crumb’s outer layer within seconds, and the fat prevents the subsequent formation of the firmer, slightly stiff crust that develops as an unenriched surface cools and the surface starch retrogradrates. The result is a bun that remains soft and slightly yielding to the touch even when cooled to room temperature — the texture that makes an excellent brioche bun immediately identifiable.