French Dip Sliders

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Servings 4–6 people

French dip sliders hit the table with everything people want from a party sandwich: soft rolls, savory roast beef, melted provolone, and that deep, salty au jus on the side. The rolls bake up golden and buttery on top while staying tender underneath, so every pull-apart piece gets a little cheese, a little beef, and a lot of sauce-dipping potential.

What makes this version work is the balance. Hawaiian rolls bring sweetness, but the Worcestershire, garlic, onion, and beef broth keep the filling from tasting flat. The sliders bake covered first, which gives the cheese time to melt through the beef without drying out the bread, then the foil comes off for the last stretch so the tops turn glossy and browned instead of soggy.

Below, I’ll walk through the small details that keep these sliders from turning mushy, plus the easiest way to make the au jus taste like it simmered longer than it did.

The rolls stayed soft on the bottom and the tops baked up golden, and the au jus tasted rich enough that nobody missed the restaurant version. I used extra provolone and it melted into every layer perfectly.

★★★★★— Melissa T.

These French dip sliders are the kind of pull-apart party sandwich that disappears fast, especially with the rich au jus for dipping.

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Why the Bottoms Stay Soft Instead of Turning Soggy

The common failure with sliders like these is moisture. Roast beef carries enough liquid on its own, and if the butter goes everywhere before the rolls have a chance to warm through, the bread can get heavy instead of tender. Here, the covered bake does the first job: it melts the cheese, warms the beef, and lets the rolls absorb flavor without drying out.

The other detail that matters is the order of the layers. Bread on the bottom, beef in the middle, cheese on top of the filling, then the bun tops. That keeps the cheese from acting like a slippery barrier under the meat, and it also helps the top halves hold together when you slice and serve the sliders.

What the Butter Topping and Au Jus Are Doing Here

French dip sliders roast beef provolone
  • Hawaiian sweet rolls — These bring the soft, slightly sweet base that makes the sliders taste like more than just roast beef on bread. You can swap in plain dinner rolls, but you’ll lose the sweet-salty contrast that makes French dip sliders stand out.
  • Deli roast beef — Thin-sliced roast beef heats quickly and stays tender. Ask for it shaved if you can; thicker slices are harder to bite through in a slider and don’t meld into the cheese as well.
  • Provolone — This melts cleanly and gives you that familiar French dip pull. Mozzarella works in a pinch, but the flavor will be milder and less savory.
  • Worcestershire and beef broth — These are what give the au jus its dark, beefy depth without needing a long simmer. Use a broth you’d actually drink, since the dipping sauce is only as good as the liquid you start with.
  • Butter, garlic powder, onion powder, parsley — The topping adds color and keeps the rolls tasting rich from the top down. Brushing it on generously is what gives the sliders that glossy, bakery-style finish.

The 20 Minutes That Matter Most

Building the Slider Base

Slice the Hawaiian rolls in half as one slab so the bottoms stay connected in the pan. That keeps the sliders from collapsing when you serve them and makes the final cut much cleaner. Press the bottom layer into the baking dish, then spread the roast beef in an even layer so the sliders bake at the same pace. If the meat is clumped in the middle, the ends dry out before the center is hot.

Melting the Cheese in the Oven

Lay the provolone over the roast beef with a little overlap so every bite gets coverage. The covered bake is what melts the cheese without scorching the tops, and it gives the filling time to heat all the way through. If you uncover too early, the bread browns before the center is warm. That’s the easiest way to end up with sliders that look done but eat cold in the middle.

Finishing With the Butter Wash

Brush the butter mixture over the tops before the first bake so the rolls absorb flavor as they heat. The parsley is mainly for freshness and color, while the Worcestershire and seasonings push the topping from plain butter into something that tastes like part of the sandwich. Once the foil comes off, watch for a deep golden top and edges that look set, not dried out. That last uncovered stretch is short on purpose.

Making the Au Jus Taste Intentional

Simmer the broth with Worcestershire, soy sauce, and garlic powder just long enough for the flavors to come together. You’re not reducing it to a glaze; you want a thin, salty dipping sauce that coats the bread without overwhelming the sandwich. If it tastes flat, it usually needs a pinch more salt or another splash of Worcestershire, not more cooking time. Serve it hot, because warm au jus makes the roast beef taste richer the second it hits the dip.

How to Adapt These for Different Crowds and Diets

Make Them Ahead for Game Day

Assemble the sliders up to a day in advance, cover, and refrigerate without the butter topping. Add the butter mixture right before baking so the rolls don’t soak up too much liquid overnight. The texture stays softer and the tops still brown properly.

Gluten-Free Version

Use gluten-free slider buns and swap the soy sauce in the au jus for tamari or a certified gluten-free soy sauce. The buns may brown a little faster, so start checking a few minutes early. The flavor still lands in the same savory place.

Extra-Cheesy Sliders

Add a second layer of provolone or tuck in a little Swiss for a sharper finish. More cheese makes the sliders richer and helps bind the roast beef together, but it also adds a little more melt time, so keep the covered bake in place. This version is best when you want a more gooey pull.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers tightly covered for up to 3 days. The rolls will soften more as they sit, but the flavor holds up well.
  • Freezer: Freeze the baked sliders without the au jus for up to 2 months, wrapped well and sealed in a freezer bag. Thaw in the refrigerator before reheating so the bread warms evenly instead of drying out on the edges.
  • Reheating: Cover with foil and warm in a 325°F oven until heated through. The biggest mistake is microwaving them uncovered, which makes the bread tough and the cheese separate instead of melting again.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I use sliced Swiss instead of provolone?+

Yes. Swiss gives the sliders a sharper, more classic deli flavor, while provolone stays a little milder and melts into a softer layer. Both work well, so pick based on whether you want a gentler or bolder sandwich.

How do I keep the sliders from getting soggy?+

Use thin roast beef, layer it evenly, and bake covered first so the filling heats without steaming the bread too hard. Don’t pour extra au jus over the sliders before baking; keep it on the side for dipping so the rolls stay soft but not wet.

Can I make the au jus ahead of time?+

Yes, and it reheats well. Make it up to 3 days ahead, cool it, and store it in the fridge. Warm it gently on the stove before serving so it stays thin and savory instead of reducing down into something salty and heavy.

How do I stop the tops from browning too fast?+

Keep the foil on for the first 15 minutes. That traps steam around the rolls and melts the cheese before the tops are exposed. If your oven runs hot, peek at the 4 to 5 minute uncovered mark and pull them once the tops are glossy and golden, not dark.

Can I use leftover roast beef from dinner?+

Yes, as long as it’s sliced thinly enough to warm quickly in the oven. Thicker pieces should be chopped or shaved a bit so they don’t make the sliders hard to bite through. If the meat is a little dry from being refrigerated, the au jus helps bring it back.

French Dip Sliders

French dip sliders made with pull-apart Hawaiian rolls, thinly shaved roast beef, and melted provolone. The tops bake golden, and each slider is served with a quick, rich dark-style au jus for dipping.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Total Time 35 minutes
Servings: 12 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: American
Calories: 520

Ingredients
  

Base sliders
  • 12 Hawaiian sweet rolls Use 12-count rolls.
  • 1 lb deli roast beef, thinly sliced
  • 12 provolone cheese slices 12 slices total.
Butter topping
  • 4 tbsp butter Melted.
  • 1 tsp Worcestershire sauce
  • 1 tsp garlic powder
  • 1 tsp onion powder
  • 1 tbsp fresh parsley, chopped
Au jus
  • 2 cup beef broth
  • 1 tbsp Worcestershire sauce
  • 1 tsp soy sauce
  • 0.5 tsp garlic powder

Equipment

  • 1 sheet pan
  • 1 9x13 baking dish

Method
 

Prepare and assemble sliders
  1. Preheat the oven to 350°F and grease a 9x13 baking dish.
  2. Slice the Hawaiian sweet rolls in half horizontally without separating the individual rolls, then place the roll bottoms in the dish.
  3. Layer the deli roast beef and provolone cheese evenly over the roll bottoms, then place the roll tops on.
  4. Whisk the melted butter, Worcestershire sauce, garlic powder, onion powder, and chopped parsley, then brush generously over the roll tops.
  5. Cover with foil and bake at 350°F for 15 minutes.
  6. Uncover and bake at 350°F for 5 more minutes, until the tops are golden and you can see the layers through the sides.
Make au jus and serve
  1. Simmer the beef broth with Worcestershire sauce, soy sauce, and garlic powder for 5 minutes, stirring until combined.
  2. Serve the sliders hot with the au jus in a small ramekin for dipping.

Notes

For extra pull-apart tenderness, brush the butter topping right up to the edges of the rolls before baking. Store baked sliders covered in the fridge for up to 3 days; reheat in a 300°F oven until warm through. Freeze sliders only if you wrap tightly and freeze for up to 2 months; reheat from thawed for best texture. For a lower-sodium option, choose reduced-sodium beef broth and low-sodium Worcestershire/soy sauce.

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