These soft, sweet, and secretly healthy Auntie Anne’s pretzels are just as delicious as the ones you can get at the mall!

I still remember my first Auntie Anne’s pretzel.
It was in West Chester, Pennsylvania, when I was eight years old. The little shop smelled like cinnamon sugar as soon as you walked in, and a friendly lady in a striped apron smiled across the counter as she quickly and skillfully twisted long strips of dough into perfect pretzel shapes. For a while, I thought she was the actual Auntie Anne, and I dreamed about growing up and working in that shop, smelling cinnamon all day, as I learned to roll perfect pretzels.
Last weekend, Auntie Anne’s came to my own kitchen. This was my first time making soft pretzels, but I adapted a base recipe I already knew would yield a successful dough: my recipe for Pumpkin Cinnamon Rolls.
All in all, these homemade Auntie Anne’s pretzels were much easier to make than I’d anticipated.

Healthy Auntie Anne’s Pretzels
(Auntie Katie’s soft pretzels)
- 1 cup milk of choice
- 1 tsp agave or honey or sugar
- 1 tbsp yeast
- 2 1/2 cups ww or white flour, or a combination of the two
- 1 tsp salt
- 2 tbsp brown sugar or coconut sugar
- 2 tbsp butter spread, such as Earth Balance OR firm coconut oil
- 1/3 cup baking soda
- Extra flour as needed
In a measuring cup, heat the first two ingredients to around 110 degrees F. (Mine reached this point after 1 minute in the microwave.) Sprinkle the yeast on top, then let it sit 5 minutes. If your yeast is good, it will bubble up. Meanwhile, in a large bowl, stir together the flour, salt, and the 2 tbsp sugar. (Do not use xylitol here.) Cut in the butter spread (or oil), using a fork or stand mixer. Combine with the yeast mixture, using your hands or stand mixer, until well-combined, then knead on a floured surface or in the bowl for 5 minutes, adding more flour as needed to keep it from being too sticky to knead. (I mixed the dough in the bowl and added a total of 6 extra tbsp flour by the end of the 5 minutes.)
Lightly grease the mixing bowl, then set the dough in the bowl, cover the bowl with a towel, and put in a warm place (such as an oven on “bread proof”) for 50-60 minutes or until it has doubled in size. Preheat oven to 350 F and lightly grease a baking tray. In a long and shallow dish or container, dissolve the baking soda in 3 cups warm water. Set aside. Now get out your risen dough: punch dough to deflate, then form evenly-sized pieces (6 for large pretzels, 12 for smaller ones). Roll each section as thinly as you possibly can (seriously, the thinner the better), then twist into a pretzel shape. Dip into the baking soda, shake to dry, then arrange pretzels on the baking tray. Baking time will vary, depending on whether you’re using whole-wheat flour or all-purpose, but homemade Auntie Anne’s pretzels are done when they have turned golden-brown and you can smell them (15-18 minutes). Scroll down for flavors.
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Homemade Auntie Anne’s Soft Pretzel Flavors:
- Cinnamon Sugar Pretzels: melt some of your favorite butter-type spread or coconut oil in a shallow dish, then dip the hot pretzels into the spread. (For a fat-free version, you can spray them with oil spray instead. They just won’t be anywhere near as rich and buttery!) Immediately dip into a mixture of cinnamon and sugar (or xylitol).
- Salted Soft Pretzels: sprinkle pretzels with coarse salt before baking
- Coconut Pretzels: dip each pretzel in melted coconut butter. Sprinkle shredded coconut over top.
- Homemade Soft Pretzel Dip Ideas: dip pretzels in ranch dressing, maple-mustard dressing (combine mustard with pure maple syrup), or even peanut sauce or a nutritional-yeast cheese sauce.
That’s not to say I have anything against the real Auntie Anne’s. Their soft pretzels are certainly not the worst snack you can get at a mall food court! And if you ask them to hold the butter, the following Auntie Anne’s pretzels are actually vegan: Original, Cinnamon Sugar, Almond, Garlic, Jalapeño, and Raisin. If you are a super-strict vegan, you’ll want to skip the pretzels due to the processed sugar. (It’s a personal choice; my goal with my veganism is to present the lifestyle as do-able, fun, and easy, not to show that I’m getting bogged down with tiny details like processed sugar. I feel that would just turn more people off to the lifestyle, which is opposite of my goal. So when I’m out with friends, I jump at the chance to eat “normal” food when we all stop at the mall food court.)
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This looks so yummy!
This is perfect! I’ve been craving Auntie Anne’s lately, but so far my willpower has won out. Good thing now! The yeast does make me a little nervous though. I’ve been less than successful in the past. Did you use Active Dry Yeast or Rapid-Rise Yeast?
As to your question, for much of my childhood, I wanted to be a cow-milker. At the time, I didn’t know that they use machines to do most of that stuff. I think that the idea of a farm life just sounded appealing. Little House on the Prairie books may have played a role in that obsession.
Regular active dry yeast. The important thing is for it to bubble. If it bubbles, you should be fine. If it doesn’t bubble, don’t even bother proceeding with the rest of the recipe because it means your yeast has gone bad.
I live in Spain and the only yeast we can get is dry yeast (which comes in powdered form). According to the instructions, I just have to add it to the flour mixture and it doesn’t have to be mixed directly with hot milk.
Do you think it would work as well? Should I just mix it with the dry ingredients? Or should I add it to the milk anyway?
It will be my first experiment with yeast so I’m a bit worried!
I have used this kind of yest for making pizza(I usually used the fresh kind of yest), I did it like the instructions said and it worked well! I live in Spain to,Barcelona 😀
Thanks for the reply! I live in BCN too by the way 😉
These look delicious! I used to love auntie annies when they had whole wheat – would order with no butter or salt and it was amazing …warm and soft!!! I have another recipe for vegan pumpkin pretzels too – very good with all whole wheat flour, applesauce etc – very subtle pumpkin taste so does not need to be Fall for these 😉
As far as yeast – it can also not bubble if your water is not the right temp – needs to be lukewarm – not hot (can get it out of tap this way and avoid the microwave).
Thanks for another great recipe Katie – tomorrow is my boys’ birthday and I am making your cookie ice cream cups with homemade ice cream – Yummmm!
These look so good! I can’t wait to try them!
– Danielle
http://www.keenbeauty.com
excited to try out this recipe! The smell of those pretzels always get me when I’m at the mall, so it’s nice to have a homemade, good for you version 🙂
I want to be an author (but not necessarily when I grow up! I’m starting now, at the age of 13). I thought maybe a veterinarian would be a cool job to do, too. That was before our homeschool group took a behind-the-scenes field trip and watched a dog get neutered. My friend fainted that day!
I would have fainted, too. Wow.
I love Auntie Anns, and I’m so happy to see a healthier look-alike recipe! These look fantastic.
(Not sure if this comment got posted the first time).
I want to be an author (but not necessarily when I grow up! I’m starting now, at the age of 13). I thought maybe a veterinarian would be a cool job to do, too. That was before our homeschool group took a behind-the-scenes field trip and watched a dog get neutered. My friend fainted that day!
I always wanted to be an author when I was growing up. The funny thing is, my aspiration still hasn’t changed! But when I was really young, I wanted to be a dog trainer or veterinarian.
The pretzels look amazing! I haven’t been to Auntie Anne’s in forever. My favorite pretzel was the cinnamon and sugar. 🙂
These look delicious but I thought that yeast wasn’t vegan???
I’m still in the process of growing up but I either want to be a writer or some sort of visual artist. Or a chef!
Yeast is vegan.
These look so yummy! I love soft pretzels!
But I was wondering, do you think it could be gluten-free? maybe with an all purpose gluten-free flour mix?
just wondering!
I wanted to be a singer!
I really don’t know, as I haven’t tried. If you try it, be sure to report back!