Kentucky Hot Brown Sliders

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Pull-apart Kentucky Hot Brown Sliders bring the classic open-faced sandwich into party form without losing the part that matters: the rich Mornay sauce soaking into the rolls, the savory turkey, and the crisp bacon on top. The best version has contrast in every bite — soft bottoms, creamy sauce, a little tang from tomato, and browned edges that pick up just enough toast from the oven.

The sauce is what makes these taste like a real Hot Brown instead of a generic turkey slider. Warm milk helps the roux thicken smoothly, and adding the cheese off the heat keeps the Mornay glossy instead of grainy. The tomatoes go in under the sauce, where they soften and lend acidity without turning the rolls watery.

Below, I’ll show you how to keep the sauce silky, what to do if you want to swap the cheese, and how to broil the tops without burning the rolls. This is the kind of tray I pull out when I want something familiar, a little fancy, and easy to serve hot from the pan.

The Mornay sauce thickened right up and stayed smooth under the broiler. The bacon stayed crisp on top, and the rolls held together better than I expected for something this saucy.

★★★★★— Megan T.

Pull-apart Kentucky Hot Brown Sliders with golden Mornay, crispy bacon, and toasty edges are the kind of party pan people hover over.

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The Reason the Mornay Stays Smooth Instead of Turning Grainy

The biggest mistake in Hot Brown-style sliders is treating the cheese sauce like it can take a hard simmer. It can’t. Once the milk thickens the roux, pull the pan off the heat before adding the cheese. That keeps the sauce glossy and pourable instead of stringy or broken.

Warming the milk matters here too. Cold milk slows the thickening and makes it harder to whisk out lumps before the cheese goes in. If your sauce looks a little too thick before baking, that’s fine — it should coat a spoon, not run off like cream.

What the Rolls, Tomatoes, and Cheese Are Actually Doing Here

Kentucky Hot Brown Sliders with Mornay sauce, bacon, and toasty edges
  • Hawaiian sweet rolls — They give you a soft, slightly sweet base that balances the salty turkey and bacon. Any slider roll works, but the sweet rolls keep the whole pan from tasting flat. If you swap them, choose something sturdy enough to hold up under sauce.
  • Deli turkey — Thin slices layer evenly and heat through without drying out. Leftover roasted turkey works too, but slice it thin so it doesn’t turn stringy in the oven. Thick chunks make the sliders fall apart when you cut them.
  • Tomatoes — Use ripe, firm slices. Too juicy and they’ll leak into the rolls before the sauce even hits the pan. If your tomatoes are especially wet, blot them with paper towels first.
  • Sharp cheddar or Gruyère — Cheddar gives a bolder, saltier finish; Gruyère makes the sauce a little nuttier and more classic. Either one melts well, but grate it yourself if you can. Pre-shredded cheese often has coatings that keep the sauce from getting as smooth.
  • White pepper and nutmeg — These are the quiet ingredients that make the sauce taste like a proper Mornay. White pepper keeps the sauce speck-free, and nutmeg rounds out the dairy without making it taste sweet.

How to Build the Pan So the Bottoms Don’t Go Soggy

Start with a tight, even base

Set the bottom halves of the rolls snugly in the greased baking dish so there aren’t big gaps between them. That gives the sauce somewhere to soak in without pooling in the corners. If the rolls are loose in the pan, the sliders steam instead of warming into one cohesive pull-apart layer.

Layer the fillings before the sauce

Turkey goes down first, then the tomato slices. That order matters because the turkey acts as a buffer between the bread and the juicier tomato. If you put tomato directly on the rolls, the bottoms can turn wet before the bake is halfway done.

Pour, bake, then broil fast

Once the Mornay is smooth, pour it over the turkey layer while it’s still warm and flowy. Bake long enough for the rolls to heat through and the sauce to settle, then add the bacon before broiling. Keep a close eye on the top during broiling — the line between toasted and scorched is short, and the rolls can go from pale to burned in under a minute.

Swap the Cheese for a Gentler Finish

If sharp cheddar feels too bold, use Gruyère or a mild Swiss. The sauce will taste a little nuttier and less sharp, which leans closer to the traditional Kentucky Hot Brown flavor. Keep the amount the same so the sauce stays thick enough to cling to the rolls.

Make It Gluten-Free Without Losing the Saucy Texture

Use gluten-free slider rolls and replace the flour with a 1:1 gluten-free flour blend. The sauce still thickens well, but whisk a little longer so the starch fully hydrates. If your blend is very fine, the sauce may need an extra minute over low heat.

Turn It Into a Turkey-and-Ham Version

Swap half the turkey for thin-sliced ham if you want a saltier, more deli-style slider. That adds a little extra richness and makes the bacon feel even more at home on top. Just watch the salt in the sauce, because ham brings plenty on its own.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers covered for up to 3 days. The rolls soften as they sit, but the flavor holds up well.
  • Freezer: These don’t freeze well once assembled because the tomato and sauce can turn watery when thawed.
  • Reheating: Warm in a 325°F oven, covered loosely with foil, until heated through. The broiler is for the finish only — if you reheat under high heat, the tops scorch before the center warms.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I make Kentucky Hot Brown Sliders ahead of time?+

You can assemble the sliders a few hours ahead, but I’d hold the bacon and broil step until right before serving. The rolls stay better when the sauce isn’t sitting on them too long. If you need to prep early, keep the assembled pan covered in the fridge and bake it straight from there, adding a few extra minutes in the oven.

How do I keep the Mornay sauce from getting lumpy?+

Use warm milk and whisk it in slowly so the roux stays smooth. If you dump it in all at once, the flour can seize into little bits before it has a chance to thicken evenly. Pull the pan off the heat before stirring in the cheese, because high heat is what turns a smooth sauce grainy.

Can I use leftover turkey in these sliders?+

Yes, and it’s one of the best ways to use it. Slice or shred the turkey thin so it heats through without drying out under the sauce. If the turkey is already seasoned, go a little lighter on the salt in the Mornay.

How do I stop the bottoms from getting soggy?+

Use firm tomato slices and blot them dry before layering. The turkey should sit between the bread and the tomatoes so the rolls don’t take the full hit of the moisture. Also, don’t overload the pan with sauce — you want generous coverage, not a pool around the edges.

Can I leave out the bacon?+

You can, but the bacon gives the sliders their salty, crisp finish. If you skip it, add a light sprinkle of flaky salt after broiling or the sliders can taste a little flat. A few strips of prosciutto also work if you want a thinner, quicker-cooking topping.

Kentucky Hot Brown Sliders

Kentucky hot brown sliders with pull-apart Hawaiian sweet rolls are layered with deli turkey and tomatoes, then drenched in a golden bubbly Mornay sauce. Baked until hot and melty, they finish under the broiler for toasty brown edges and crispy bacon.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 25 minutes
Total Time 40 minutes
Servings: 12 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: American
Calories: 650

Ingredients
  

Slider rolls
  • 12 slider rolls (Hawaiian sweet rolls)
Turkey and toppings
  • 1 lb deli turkey, thinly sliced
  • 6 bacon strips, cooked until crispy
  • 2 large tomatoes, sliced thin
For the Mornay sauce
  • 2 tbsp butter
  • 2 tbsp all-purpose flour
  • 1.5 cup whole milk, warmed
  • 1 cup sharp cheddar or Gruyère cheese, shredded
  • 0.5 tsp salt
  • 0.25 tsp white pepper
  • 0.25 tsp nutmeg
  • paprika for garnish
  • fresh parsley for garnish

Equipment

  • 1 sheet pan
  • 1 cast iron skillet

Method
 

Prep the pan and roll base
  1. Preheat the oven to 350°F and grease a 9x13 baking dish.
  2. Slice the slider rolls in half horizontally and place the bottoms in the baking dish.
Layer the turkey and tomatoes
  1. Layer the deli turkey slices evenly over the roll bottoms.
  2. Top with the sliced tomatoes in an even layer.
Make the Mornay sauce
  1. Melt the butter in a saucepan over medium heat, whisking until smooth.
  2. Whisk in the flour and cook for 1 minute.
  3. Slowly whisk in the warmed milk and stir until thickened, about 3–4 minutes.
  4. Remove from heat and stir in the shredded cheese, salt, white pepper, and nutmeg until smooth.
Bake and broil to finish
  1. Pour the Mornay sauce generously over the turkey layer.
  2. Place the slider tops on and bake for 15 minutes at 350°F.
  3. Remove from the oven, place the crispy bacon strips across the top, then switch to broil.
  4. Broil for 2–3 minutes until the tops are golden and the edges are crispy, watching closely for blistering.
Garnish and serve
  1. Garnish with paprika and fresh parsley, using a light shake for color.
  2. Serve immediately while the sauce is hot and bubbly.

Notes

For the smoothest sauce, keep whisking while adding the warmed milk so no flour lumps form. Store leftovers covered in the fridge for up to 3 days; reheat in a 325°F oven until hot. Freezing isn’t recommended because the Mornay sauce can break when thawed and reheated. For a lighter swap, use low-fat milk and a reduced-fat cheddar, keeping the thickening steps the same.

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