I Tried 5 Chain Restaurant Cinnamon Rolls & This One Was the Best

Mmm, cinnamon rolls. It's the sweet confection that sends us back to a childhood Christmas morning or a weekend at grandma's. Crafted from a carefully constructed swirl of dough, cinnamon sugar paste, and a generous dollop of icing, cinnamon rolls are equal parts indulgent and nostalgic. We would have to place them in the same category as donuts or pancakes smothered in maple syrup as a breakfast food that is perhaps not the most nutritious. However, they're nothing if not good for the soul, and most mornings that's quite alright.

Pulling apart the sticky layers of a homemade cinnamon roll is an unmatched experience. But, there are also a few places you can go to enjoy the cinnamon sugar goodness while forgoing the messy kitchen. The following bakeries, fast-food joints, and chain restaurants dole out fresh cinnamon rolls at all hours of the day. I recently grabbed one of the spiraled pastries from each to assess their level of delectability in the ultimate cinnamon roll taste test.

5. Panera Bread

PER 1 ROLL: 520 calories, 18 g fat (10 g saturated fat), 400 mg sodium, 84 g carbs (2 g fiber, 48 g sugar), 7 g protein

Panera's bakery section is stuffed with goodies galore. We're all familiar with the thing that started it all, the sourdough bread, and the iconically chewy bagels–shout out to the Cinnamon Crunch and Asiago for never letting me down on a busy morning. Then, there are the endless pastries and sweets including Kitchen Sink Cookies, brownies, croissants, and yes, cinnamon rolls. Available night and day, the roll is made with sweet dough, cinnamon sugar filling, and is topped with white icing. I picked on up for $3.59.

The Look: Like a shellacked piece of food that is only meant for display case sitting and not eating. Thinly iced like a cake, it's too picture-perfect from the dough to cinnamon swirls.

The Taste: Akin to a store-bought donut that had been hardening on the shelf all day long. It's overly sugary from the frosting shell and underneath the dough is more tough than squishy. A quick 10-second trip through the microwave solved some of these issues, creating a softer center of bread and cinnamon paste. But, not all of them. The one element that stood out to me the most was the light zip of citrus which accompanied every bite. After perusing the ingredient list, I attributed it to the "Natural Lemon Flavor Wonf" and wished this add-in had never gained entry into the recipe. It distracts from the cinnamon star, curtailing the roll's overall appeal.

4. Dunkin’ Donuts

PER 1 ROLL: 390 calories, 19 g fat (8 g saturated fat), 440 mg sodium, 48 g carbs (2 g fiber, 17 g sugar), 7 g protein

Along with your morning fuel, you can also pick up what's called a Coffee Roll at Dunkin'. It's certainly not your average cinnamon roll. But, despite its name, there is no coffee included in its makeup, leaving just a wheat and yeast base with cinnamon and a sugar glaze. Sure sounds like a cinnamon roll to us, so welcome to the club. I added the confection to my list and paid $1.99 for it as I buzzed through the drive-thru.

The Look: Surprisingly fresh considering I rolled up during the tail end of the breakfast rush. A nearly translucent gloss wraps around the entire spiraled pastry. Its cinnamon spice, on the other hand, can only be seen from the inside.

The Taste: A Honey Bun, but better. The coffee roll follows Little Debbie's lead with its melt-in-your-mouth consistency and all-encompassing icing coat. It's undeniably donut-esque but its layered structure and pockets of cinnamon elevate it to more of a cinnamon roll status. Even so, it's still not exactly the frosting-dripping gooey treat that many of us dream of, so I couldn't promote it too far in the taste test. That doesn't mean I couldn't gobble down a baker's dozen of these Dunkin' rolls, though.

2. Mimi’s Cafe

PER 1 ROLL: 603 calories, 20 g fat (8 g saturated fat), 520 mg sodium, 99 g carbs (3 g fiber, 52 g sugar), 9 g protein

At Mimi's bistro, you can sit down to a French-inspired meal from a breakfast of crepes to a dinner of Tuscan Style Grilled Chicken. You can also take a taste of France home with you thanks to the chain's in-house bakery. It's here that you'll find muffins and pastries like the Cinnamon Brioche Rolls. The vanilla icing-covered rolls are baked fresh daily and are always served warm. I was able to snag one for $6.99–a high price for a cinnamon roll in my opinion, coming in at about twice the cost of the previous options.

The Look: The browned roll is perfectly coiled around itself. But, something about its scantily-applied vanilla icing reminded me of a cinnamon roll candle.

The Taste: Maybe the Fench do cinnamon rolls a bit differently because this was unlike any other I've had here in The States. It is incredibly dense and heavy, coming off more like a cake, or better yet a concentrated cake donut, than a cinnamon roll. However, it's still a respectable contender. Insufficient frosting levels aside, it has an elevated essence to it and an oily, crunchy crust at the bottom that makes each bite better than the last.