Pillowy rolls, sliced turkey, juicy tomato, and a blanket of golden Mornay sauce turn these Kentucky Hot Brown sliders into the kind of pan you set down once and then watch disappear. The tops get toasted and crisp at the edges, the sauce settles into the rolls without turning them soggy, and the bacon finishes everything with that salty crackle that makes people reach for a second one before they’ve finished the first.
The trick here is balance. The sauce needs to be thick enough to cling, but not so thick that it sits in a lump on top of the sliders. Warming the milk first helps the sauce come together faster and smoother, and adding the cheese off the heat keeps it silky instead of grainy. The tomatoes add the classic Hot Brown brightness, but they need to be sliced thin so they don’t flood the sandwich while it bakes.
The Mornay sauce turned out smooth and thick enough to soak into the rolls without making them mushy, and the broiled tops came out perfectly crisp. I used Gruyère and the whole pan tasted like a restaurant Hot Brown in slider form.
Save these Kentucky Hot Brown sliders for the nights when you want a bubbly Mornay-topped party pan that feels special without extra fuss.
The One Mistake That Makes Hot Brown Sliders Collapse
The most common failure with slider bakes like this is sogginess. It happens when the sauce is too thin, the tomatoes are too wet, or the rolls sit too long before baking. This version gets around that by using a proper Mornay sauce that thickens on the stove before it ever touches the bread, so it settles into the turkey instead of soaking straight through the bottom buns.
The second thing that matters is timing. The sliders bake first with the bacon off, which lets the cheese sauce melt and the rolls heat through without the bacon burning. Then the bacon goes on at the end under the broiler, where it stays crisp and the tops get that browned, slightly blistered finish Hot Browns need.
What Each Ingredient Is Doing in the Pan

- Slider rolls — Hawaiian rolls bring a little sweetness that plays well with the salty bacon and sharp cheese sauce. Any soft slider roll works, but a sturdy, enriched roll holds up best under the Mornay.
- Deli turkey — Thin slices layer neatly and stay tender after baking. Freshly roasted turkey works too, but keep the slices thin so the sliders don’t turn bulky and hard to cut.
- Tomatoes — Use thin slices and pat them dry first. They give the Hot Brown its classic brightness, but thick or watery slices will leak into the bread and loosen the whole pan.
- Whole milk — Warm milk speeds up the sauce and helps prevent lumps when you whisk it into the roux. Lower-fat milk will work in a pinch, but the sauce won’t be as plush.
- Sharp cheddar or Gruyère — Cheddar gives a bolder, saltier finish; Gruyère makes the sauce taste a little closer to the classic restaurant version. Shred it yourself if you can, because pre-shredded cheese melts less smoothly.
- Bacon — Add it after baking and before the brief broil so it stays crisp instead of softening in the sauce. Thick-cut bacon is fine, but it should be cooked fully before it goes on the sliders.
Building the Sauce and Finishing the Sliders Without Getting a Grainy Mess
Making the Roux
Melt the butter over medium heat, then whisk in the flour and let it cook for about a minute. You want it to smell a little nutty and look smooth, not browned. If the flour stays raw, the sauce tastes chalky; if the heat is too high, the roux can darken before the milk goes in.
Thickening the Mornay
Add the warm milk slowly while whisking, and keep whisking as the sauce thickens over a gentle simmer. It should coat a spoon after 3 to 4 minutes. If you dump the milk in all at once, you’ll spend twice as long beating out lumps, and if the heat is too high the sauce can seize at the edges before it thickens evenly.
Layering and Baking
Build the sliders with turkey and tomato first, then spoon the sauce over the filling instead of pouring it all in one spot. That helps it spread through the pan in an even layer. Bake just until the rolls are hot and the sauce has melted into the sandwich, because overbaking is what dries the turkey and toughens the bread.
The Bacon and Broiler Finish
Lay the bacon on after baking, then broil only long enough to turn the tops golden and the edges crisp. Stay close to the oven here, because the sugar in the rolls can go from toasted to burnt fast. The goal is a glossy, bubbling top with bacon that still snaps when you bite it.
How to Adapt These Kentucky Hot Brown Sliders
Make it gluten-free
Use gluten-free slider rolls and swap the flour for a one-to-one gluten-free flour blend. The sauce will thicken a little differently, so give it an extra minute on the stove and whisk until it turns silky before adding the cheese.
Use ham instead of turkey
Thin-sliced ham gives you a saltier, more old-school deli-style sandwich. It’s a good swap if that’s what you have on hand, but it does push the whole dish a little farther from the classic Hot Brown flavor, so keep the sauce on the sharper side with Gruyère if possible.
Lighten it up with thinner sauce
If you want less richness, use a bit less cheese and add a splash more milk so the sauce stays pourable but not heavy. It won’t coat the sliders as thickly, but you’ll still get the creamy layer that makes the dish feel complete.
Make-ahead party prep
You can cook the bacon, slice the tomatoes, and make the sauce a few hours ahead, then assemble and bake just before serving. The sauce may thicken as it sits, so loosen it with a splash of warm milk before spooning it over the sliders.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store leftovers covered for up to 3 days. The rolls will soften a bit as they sit, which is normal for a saucy slider bake.
- Freezer: These freeze best before broiling, but the texture is softer after thawing. Wrap portions tightly and freeze for up to 1 month.
- Reheating: Reheat covered in a 325°F oven until hot, then uncover for a few minutes to wake up the tops. The biggest mistake is using the microwave alone, which makes the bread chewy and the sauce oily.
The Questions People Ask Before They Bake These

Kentucky Hot Brown Sliders
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Preheat oven to 350°F and grease a 9x13 baking dish. Use a light coating so the sliders release cleanly after baking.
- Slice slider rolls in half horizontally and place the bottoms in the baking dish. Arrange them snugly to encourage pull-apart layers.
- Layer deli turkey slices evenly over the roll bottoms, then top with sliced tomatoes. Distribute in an even layer so each slider gets turkey and tomato.
- Melt butter in a saucepan over medium heat. Whisking the fat while it melts helps the sauce start smoothly.
- Whisk in all-purpose flour and cook for 1 minute. Keep whisking so the roux smells lightly toasted, not burnt.
- Slowly whisk in warm whole milk and stir until thickened, about 3–4 minutes. Stop when it coats the back of a spoon and looks glossy.
- Remove from heat and stir in shredded sharp cheddar or Gruyère cheese, salt, white pepper, and nutmeg until smooth. Let the cheese fully melt for a lump-free pour.
- Pour Mornay sauce generously over the turkey layer, then place slider tops on. Pour slowly so the sauce fills the corners of the baking dish.
- Bake for 15 minutes at 350°F until the rolls are set and the sauce is bubbling. Look for active bubbling around the edges and light golden tops.
- Remove from the oven, place bacon strips across the top, and switch to broil. Arrange bacon evenly so it crisps in place under the broiler.
- Broil for 2–3 minutes until the tops are golden and edges are crispy. Watch closely because broilers brown quickly.
- Garnish with paprika and fresh parsley and serve immediately. Finish right before serving to keep the tops crisp.


