Step-by-Step: How to Build and Bake
1. Prep the Bread
Preheat your oven to 350°F (175°C) and lightly grease a 9×13-inch baking dish. Without separating the individual rolls, use a long serrated bread knife to slice the entire slab of Hawaiian rolls in half horizontally. Place the bottom slab into your prepared baking dish.
2. Layer the Fillings
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The First Cheese Shield: Lay down half of your Swiss cheese slices directly onto the bottom buns. This creates a barrier so the sauce and meat juices don’t make the bottom bread soggy.
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The Meat & Sauce: Spread a generous layer of your Russian or Thousand Island dressing over the cheese, then pile the thin slices of corned beef evenly across the rolls.
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The Tang: Spread your thoroughly drained sauerkraut over the beef. (Pro-tip: Press the sauerkraut into a paper towel first to squeeze out excess moisture!)
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The Second Cheese Shield: Top the sauerkraut with the remaining slices of Swiss cheese, then place the top slab of rolls over the whole assembly.
3. Glaze and Drench
In a small bowl, whisk together the melted butter, Dijon mustard, poppy seeds, and onion powder. Using a pastry brush or a spoon, pour this golden, aromatic glaze evenly over the tops of the buns, letting it cascade down into the crevices between the rolls.
4. Bake to a Golden Crunch
Cover the baking dish tightly with aluminum foil. Bake for 15 minutes to let the interior cheese melt completely and the corned beef warm through. Then, remove the foil and bake uncovered for an additional 7 to 10 minutes, or until the tops of the rolls are a gorgeous deep golden-brown and feel wonderfully crisp to the touch.
5. Slice and Serve
Remove from the oven and let them rest for 5 minutes. Use a sharp chef’s knife to follow the natural lines of the rolls, slicing them into 12 individual, pull-apart sliders. Serve them piping hot!
Cheat Sheet: Slider Construction Matrix
Why This Recipe Wins Every Time
The magic of these sliders lies entirely in the contrast of flavors. Corned beef is naturally cured, salty, and intensely savory. When you pair that with the sharp sour notes of sauerkraut, the creamy sweetness of the dressing, and the buttery, caramelized crunch of the glazed Hawaiian rolls, every single bite fires off all your taste receptors at once.
They are quick to build, incredibly easy to scale up for massive parties, and offer a gourmet flavor profile that feels way more luxurious than your standard weeknight finger food









