West Virginia Pepperoni Rolls
Pepperoni Rolls are a West Virginia speciality! Spicy pepperoni and melty cheese are tucked inside a fluffy bread roll — it’s the perfect portable food! One taste of this recipe and you’ll know why they’re famous here!

West Virginia Pepperoni Rolls
Pepperoni rolls are everywhere in West Virginia — from restaurants, to grocery stores, to gas stations. Our school cafeteria served pepperoni rolls at least twice a month (my favorite day to eat school lunch!) Pepperoni rolls originated as a portable lunch for coal miners, but soon became the food that the state is most famous for.
However, when I moved to Texas, I never saw pepperoni rolls here. Growing up in West Virginia, I took for granted that they were a staple. Here in Texas, almost no one has ever heard of them!
Related: We also made a second pepperoni roll recipe, which was inspired by the school cafeteria pepperoni rolls of my childhood!

What are Pepperoni Rolls?
The best way I can explain a pepperoni roll to non-West Virginians is that it is similar to a kolache (for my fellow Texans) or a stromboli (for those of you who live in the East).
The dough is a yeast roll dough and when the pepperoni bakes into it, the oils from the meat soak into the bread so the whole thing is just bursting with spicy, meaty flavor.
However, I’ve never had a kolache here in Texas that even held a candle to the pepperoni rolls of my childhood and adolescence. I don’t even like pepperoni that much, but when it’s in a pepperoni roll it turns into something magical.
My husband grew up in Texas, so he’d never heard of a pepperoni roll, let alone tried one. On our first family trip to West Virginia I made sure that he sampled them. It was a short visit for the holidays, so we only had time to grab a bag from the local Kroger. My husband is a proud Texan, but even he couldn’t deny the amazingness that is a West Virginia Pepperoni Roll.
Football season and pepperoni rolls go hand in hand — they are pretty much the perfect tailgate food! For the beginning of football season, my husband treated me to a batch of homemade pepperoni rolls!
This is his own recipe with a few little tweaks, but he stayed true to the original. This West Virginian approves!
Related: See more game day recipe ideas here!

Pepperoni Roll Ingredients
This is a quick list of shop-able ad links (whenever possible) to help you find the products used to make our Hocus Pocus Cookies. (Disclosure policy here)
- Dry yeast
- Warm water
- All purpose flour
- Sugar
- Salt
- Eggs
- Pepperoni
- Mozzarella Cheese
- Butter
Kitchen Tools Used
- Non-slip mixing bowls
- Cake Scraper
- Cookie sheet
- Parchment paper or non-stick silicone baking mat
What is the Best Cheese to Use in Pepperoni Rolls?
My husband swapped out Oaxaca cheese (similar to mozzarella) for his one Texas twist on our pepperoni rolls. However, the flavor is almost exactly the same, so feel free to use mozzarella if you don’t have Oaxaca cheese at your grocery store.

How to Prepare the Dough
Combine yeast and water in a large bowl and allow to sit for 5 minutes until you see foaming action. Stir in melted butter, salt, sugar, and eggs.
Slowly incorporate the flour one cup at a time, stirring as you go, until all flour is incorporated. The dough will become sticky and tough to stir.
Cover bowl of dough and refrigerate for 2 hours.
How Do I Know if My Yeast is Working?
Before this recipe, I’d only attempted to make yeast rolls once by myself because they require a bit of TLC to get them just right.
When working with active yeast, the most important thing is to make sure the water is warm, but not hot. If you mix your yeast with hot water, it will kill the yeast (you’ll know it’s gone bad because there will be no foaming action).

How to Make Pepperoni Rolls
When the dough is ready, flour your counter or workspace. Knead the dough, working some of the flour into it so it will be less sticky.

Cut the dough in half, then continue halving until you have 18 equal portions of dough.

TIP: When dividing your dough, a cake scraper works really well for cutting the dough quickly and cleanly. Be sure to use plenty of flour on your workspace so the dough doesn’t stick!
Add more flour to counter, roll each piece of dough into a ball, then gently flatten to about 1/2″ thick.

Place a couple pepperoni slices and a handful of cheese on one side of each circle of dough. Fold up and pinch the ends to seal the pepperoni and cheese inside.

Place rolls on a baking sheet with silicone baking mat or parchment paper, seam-side down. Cover with a towel and allow to rise for 45 minutes to an hour.

TIP: We love these reusable non-stick silicone baking mats for just about all of our baking projects! You can wash them and use over and over and your food just slides right off when done!
Brush with melted butter and bake for 18 minutes at 375°F, until the crust is golden brown. The more butter you use, the flakier the crust! Use as much as you want!

How to Serve Pepperoni Rolls
Honestly, my favorite way to enjoy pepperoni rolls is as-is, warm out of the oven! You can also sprinkle with Parmesan cheese or marinara sauce for dipping.
Since all the fixins’ are contained inside, these make an excellent school snack or lunch!
Can You Make the Dough in Advance?
Yes! You can make the dough, fill the rolls, and have them ready to bake on a pan. Simply keep in the fridge until you’re ready to bake. The dough will hold for overnight until you’re ready to bake.
You can also freeze the dough, but you’ll want to do this before you fill the dough with pepperoni and cheese. After you mix up the dough and let it rise for 2 hours, move to a freezer bag and keep frozen for up to 2 weeks. When you’re ready to bake, simply remove from freezer and thaw to room temperature.

Can Pepperoni Rolls be Frozen?
They usually don’t last very long in our house, so we keep our pepperoni rolls in a large ziplock bag in the refrigerator. They should last for 3-5 days this way.
You can also freeze pepperoni rolls for up to a month or so — keep them in a sealed freezer bag. When your ready to reheat, allow rolls to thaw for a couple hours, then pop them in the oven on a baking sheet for 15 minutes at 350 degrees.
West Virginia Pepperoni Rolls Recipe (Printable Copy)
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West Virginia Pepperoni Rolls
Ingredients
Instructions
- Combine yeast and warm water in a large mixing bowl. Leave for 5 minutes until you see foaming action. Water that's too hot will kill the yeast (you can tell because there will be no foam).
- Stir in melted butter, salt, sugar, and eggs.
- Slowly incorporate flour, one cup at a time, until all four cups are mixed into the dough. The dough should be sticky and hard to stir.
- Cover bowl and refrigerate for at least two hours.
- Spread a generous amount of flour on counter or large cutting board. Knead dough on the counter to work in a bit more flour, until the dough is not so sticky.
- Cut dough in half evenly, the cut each of those halves in half again. Repeat until you have 18 rolls.
- Flour the counter again.
- Roll each ball of dough, then flatten until about 1/2 inch thick. The diameter should be about the size of the palm of your hand.
- Place cheese and pepperoni on one side, then roll. Pinch ends to seal.
- Lay pepperoni rolls on a cookie sheet covered with a non-stick silicone baking mat, about 6 per tray. Cover each tray with a dish towel and let rise 45 minutes - 1 hour.
- Before baking, brush the rolls with melted butter.
- Bake for 18 minutes at 375°F.
Video
Notes
Nutrition
Pin our West Virginia Pepperoni Rolls on Pinterest:

More of Our Favorite West Virginia Recipes:
West Virginia Pulled Pork BBQ Sandwich
- Keto Stuffed Onion Bombs - June 7, 2026
- 4th of July Pretzel Bites - June 3, 2026
- Celery Bug Snacks - June 2, 2026



Try using small sticks of pepperoni in the rolls The best from Clarksburg WV Tomaro’s Bakery
Oh I wish!! 🙂 I’m hoping to get back to West Virginia for the holidays this year if it is safe to travel by then. My husband makes a darn good pepperoni roll, but it’s always fun to get the original when we go home!
Yes I concur growing up going to Ogleby Park and having those pepperoni rolls in my backpack
Priceless
I agree, I like stick pepperoni in my rolls. And Tamoro’s Bakery does have the best pepperoni rolls
I came here from a Google search looking for a pepperoni roll recipe- funny enough, I’m also a transplant from WV (well, I moved from KY, but I was born in WV) to Texas- and I’m just over by Rosenberg! Small world!
I sure do miss pepperoni rolls from back home. I’ve been trying to explain them to my own Texan husband, and even mentioned that even our Kroger back home carried them! Including the ones with jalapeños on then, yum!
Could you use a string cheese stick as the cheese in these?
Hi Brenda- I’m not sure how well string cheese melts because I haven’t tried it. My hunch is that it might not work as well as regular cheese.
I just made the dough and I let my three year old help, so it took quite a bit longer to make than I expected initially. If I rose the dough at room temp for a shorter period, will that work ok or is rising in the fridge necessary? If so, would leaving the dough in the fridge until the next day be ok?
Thanks in advance! I can’t wait to taste them!
I am a native West Virginian – and a 1979 graduate of WVU. I lived on Pepperoni Rolls for 4 years. Never had one with cheese?
Hi Martha – growing up our school made them with LOTS of cheese (yum!) and my best friend’s mom made them without cheese (still yum!) Over time our family settled on a version with a moderate amount of cheese – it’s just our favorite way to make them! Though I know that everyone has their own preference – we once went to a pepperoni roll contest and that was so cool to see and taste all the different recipes!
I was really looking forward to this recipe. Pepperoni rolls are popular in Pittsburgh, too, and my grandson’s requested them. But it was so disappointing when your email list pop-up popped up & wouldn’t go away. It blocked out almost half of the screen & there was no X to make it go away. Since I didn’t want to sign up for it just so I could see the recipe, I left your site (after posting this, so you’d know)
I appreciate the feedback! There should always be a way to exit out of any email box, etc. on my site.
The dough for this recipe is great! I’m going to get creative with it and use different thing inside. I’m giving this only 3 stars because it needs WAY more pepperoni and cheese. I made my rolls exactly how they were listed and I ended up with 3/4 bread and 1/4 filling. I’ll make these again though and modify.
I always loved them with lots of cheese as a kid too! Though some recipes I’ve tried use NO cheese! :O
Agree no where near enough pepperoni and cheese The bread was too sweet..3/4cup should be 1/4 cup. Too much time invested into a flop recipe
That’s the thing about pepperoni rolls…there are SO many different variations. Some recipes I’ve tried even had NO cheese. I always appreciate feedback. Though calling it a flop isn’t very nice…it’s just the way our family likes them.
Do you use fast acting yeast or just the regular yeast?
I’m a W. Va. transplant living in Tulsa, OK. I’ve made them with pepperoni, mozzarella cheese, and a little pizza sauce inside, coated the outside with melted butter and sprinkled with grated Parmesan cheese before baking. Served with a side of marinara dipping sauce. Everyone that’s tried them keep asking for more.
I’ve had them with sauce inside too, though I think they were called stromboli when prepared in that style. In any case, they’re delicious!
I too am from WV. I live in Atlanta now. I made them with pizza sauce and pepperoni sticks and cheese. Kind of like a pizza roll. They are delicious. Not too much sauce. You only want the flavor in the bread; not saucy. I think I might go make some.
This dough recipe is so. Good and easy to work with. My son asked me to do Reubens filling. They were excellent. Not traditional West Virginia but good.
That sounds awesome! Thanks for the tip! Glad you liked the dough 🙂