Campfire Cinnamon Rolls on a Stick

Category: Desserts & Baking

Golden cinnamon rolls wrapped around a stick and cooked over coals come out with crisp edges, soft centers, and that warm icing melt that always disappears fast. The spiral shape gives you more browned surface than a flat pan ever could, which means every bite gets a little caramelized crunch before you hit the pillowy middle.

The trick is keeping the rolls over coals, not open flames. Flames char the outside before the dough cooks through, while steady heat lets the dough set from the outside in. A tight wrap also matters because loose spirals slump and slide before they finish baking. The end result feels a little playful, but the method is solid enough to work every time once you get the rhythm of turning the stick.

Below you’ll find the small details that matter most, from how tight to wrap the dough to the easiest way to keep the icing from turning into a sticky mess before everyone gets their roll.

The outside got this perfect toasted crunch while the center stayed soft, and the icing dripping down the stick was a hit with the kids.

★★★★★— Megan T.

These campfire cinnamon rolls on a stick turn into golden spiral breakfast treats with crisp edges and gooey icing.

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The Coals Matter More Than the Flame

The biggest mistake with stick-cooked cinnamon rolls is holding them too close to active flames. The sugar in the dough and icing scorches fast, and once that happens the outside turns bitter before the center has a chance to cook. What you want is a bed of steady coals or a gentler spot around the fire where the heat is even and predictable. Rotate the stick constantly so one side doesn’t blister while the rest stays doughy.

Keeping the spiral tight also changes the outcome. If the dough is loosely wrapped, the coils open up as the roll warms and you lose that even, bakery-style shape. A snug wrap helps the layers hold together and gives the dough enough contact with the heat to brown in the right places.

  • Constant rotation keeps the roll from burning on one side and raw on the other.
  • Coals instead of flames give you heat that cooks the dough before the sugar darkens too much.
  • Tight spirals help the roll keep its shape as the dough softens over the fire.

What the Ingredients Are Doing Here

Campfire Cinnamon Rolls on a Stick golden spiral, gooey icing
  • Refrigerated cinnamon rolls give you the right dough structure and the built-in sugar layer that caramelizes over heat. A homemade dough can work, but it usually needs a different proofing and cooking approach. Here, the canned version is the smart choice because it cooks through before the outside dries out.
  • Roasting sticks matter because they hold the spiral securely while you rotate it over the fire. Long metal skewers work, but campfire roasting sticks with insulated handles are easier and safer to manage. If you use wooden sticks, soak them well so they don’t scorch too quickly.
  • Aluminum foil isn’t for wrapping the rolls tight here, but it helps if you want a quick resting surface or a cleaner place to catch drips when the icing goes on. It also comes in handy if you’re cooking near uneven heat and need a shield from direct flare-ups.

Getting the Spiral Cooked Without Burning the Sugar

Unrolling and Wrapping the Dough

Separate each cinnamon roll and unroll it into a long strip, then wind it around the end of the stick in a tight spiral. The dough should overlap just enough to cling to itself without leaving big gaps. If the strip tears, press the pieces back together; the roll doesn’t need to be pretty, but it does need to stay snug so it doesn’t slide as it heats.

Roasting Over the Right Heat

Hold the stick over hot coals and rotate it every few seconds. The surface should slowly turn golden, not dark brown in one spot after a few seconds. If the outside is browning faster than the center is setting, move it farther from the heat. The roll is done when the spiral feels firm enough to hold its shape and the dough no longer looks wet in the thickest part.

Cooling and Finishing With Icing

Let the roll rest for about 2 minutes before sliding it off the stick. That short pause keeps the center from tearing apart when you remove it. Drizzle the icing while the roll is still warm so it melts into the grooves instead of sitting on top like a glaze. If you add it too soon, it just runs off before the surface has a chance to settle.

How to Make These Work for a Crowd or a Different Fire Setup

Make Them on a Grill Instead of a Campfire

Use the same spiral method, but roast the rolls over a medium grill with the lid open. The indirect, steady heat acts a lot like coals and gives you more control than a lively fire. This is the best swap when you want the same texture without the unpredictability of open flames.

Make Them Dairy-Free

Choose a dairy-free refrigerated cinnamon roll brand if you can find one, then skip the included icing and use a simple powdered sugar glaze made with plant milk and a little vanilla. You lose a bit of the classic canned-roll finish, but the texture stays close and the fire-roasted flavor still carries the whole thing.

Add a Little Extra Spice

Brush the strip lightly with melted butter and a pinch of cinnamon sugar before wrapping it around the stick. That gives you a deeper caramel note and a stronger crust, but it also browns faster, so keep the roll a little farther from the heat.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Best eaten warm and fresh. If you have leftovers, store them covered for up to 2 days, but the exterior will soften.
  • Freezer: These don’t freeze well once cooked because the dough gets gummy after thawing.
  • Reheating: Warm briefly over low heat or in a 300°F oven just until heated through. High heat dries them out and makes the sugar scorch.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I use wooden skewers instead of roasting sticks?+

Yes, but soak them first and keep them away from direct flames. Metal roasting sticks are easier because they hold heat and stay sturdier, while wood can scorch if the fire is too hot. If the stick starts to darken fast, move the roll farther from the heat.

How do I keep the cinnamon roll from falling off the stick?+

Wrap the strip tightly and press the first coil firmly onto the stick so it anchors at the base. Loose wrapping is the reason these slip, especially once the dough warms and relaxes. If the dough feels too soft, chill the rolls for a few minutes before wrapping.

How do I know when they’re cooked through?+

Look for a deep golden color on the outside and a springy feel when you touch the dough lightly with a fork or the end of the stick. If the surface is darkening too quickly but the center still looks pale and wet, the fire is too hot. Move it away and keep turning until the roll firms up.

Can I make these ahead of time for camping breakfast?+

You can unroll and wrap them around the sticks at home, then chill them until you’re ready to cook. That saves time at the campsite, but the dough should stay cold so it doesn’t loosen before roasting. Hold the icing back until serving.

How do I fix cinnamon rolls that burned on the outside and stayed raw inside?+

The heat was too intense. Move the roll farther from the fire and keep it rotating more slowly over coals instead of flames so the center has time to cook before the sugar burns. If one side is already dark, wrap a loose piece of foil around that side for a minute or two to slow further browning.

Campfire Cinnamon Rolls on a Stick

Campfire cinnamon rolls on a stick—spiral stick bread roasted over campfire coals until golden brown and cooked through. Wrapped on roasting sticks, then finished with the included icing for a warm, gooey spiral treat.
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 12 minutes
cooling 2 minutes
Total Time 24 minutes
Servings: 8 servings
Course: Breakfast
Cuisine: American
Calories: 320

Ingredients
  

Campfire cinnamon rolls on a stick
  • 1 can (16 oz) refrigerated cinnamon rolls with icing Use the tube of cinnamon rolls that includes the icing packet.
  • 8 roasting sticks Sticks should be straight and sized so the roll fits without unraveling.
  • 1 sheet aluminum foil Use foil for shielding hands or setting sticks down safely after roasting.

Equipment

  • 1 sheet pan

Method
 

Prep the stick rolls
  1. Separate the refrigerated cinnamon rolls and unroll each one into a long strip, keeping the dough intact in even lengths. Lay the strips out flat so they’re ready to wrap quickly at the fire.
  2. Wrap each strip around the end of a roasting stick in a tight spiral with no gaps between turns. Press the end lightly into place so it won’t unwind while roasting.
Roast over campfire coals
  1. Hold each spiral roll over campfire coals (not flames) and rotate constantly for 10-12 minutes. Roast until deeply golden brown and cooked through, with the surface looking set and lightly blistered.
Cool, slide off, and ice
  1. Remove the rolls from the heat and let them cool for 2 minutes to firm up slightly. Place them on aluminum foil while they cool so they don’t stick to surfaces.
  2. Slide each roasted cinnamon roll off the stick and drizzle with the included icing. Let the icing fall in ribbons down the stick for a warm, glossy finish.
Serve
  1. Serve warm right away so the spiral stays gooey and the icing looks fresh. Keep remaining rolls over foil near the coals to rewarm quickly before serving.

Notes

Pro tip: roast over steady coals (no flames) and rotate continuously to prevent burnt edges and undercooked centers. Store any leftovers covered in the fridge up to 2 days; reheat briefly in a microwave or over low heat. Freezing isn’t recommended because the icing texture can turn grainy. Dietary swap: use a dairy-free refrigerated cinnamon roll tube (if available) and the included dairy-free icing for a similar result.

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