Sunday brunch falls apart when the bake is still 90 minutes from done and the table is already set. The trick most home bakers miss is letting the work happen the night before, so morning becomes a short oven session instead of a full prep job. These 9 brunch bakes are built for the make-ahead schedule: cinnamon rolls and French toast casserole that proof or soak overnight, scones with dough that holds in the freezer, donuts that stay soft for a day, and a 35-minute cinnamon roll casserole when even a head start feels like too much. Set things up Saturday, and the only Sunday morning task is sliding a pan into the oven before the coffee pours.

French Toast Casserole

Custard-soaked bread cubes baked under a brown sugar pecan streusel make French Toast Casserole a brunch centerpiece for 8 in under an hour of total time. Eggs, heavy cream, milk, brown sugar, vanilla, and cinnamon make the soak; cold butter, brown sugar, nutmeg, and pecans build the crumb topping. Assemble it Saturday night, refrigerate overnight, then sit it on the counter for 30 minutes Sunday morning before a 45-minute bake. Serve warm with maple syrup, powdered sugar, or fresh berries while the coffee finishes.
Get the Recipe: French Toast Casserole
Blueberry Scones

Crumbly, golden, and packed with juicy blueberries and lemon zest, Blueberry Scones make 8 wedges in about an hour and 15 minutes, with a 40-minute freeze step that the recipe handles overnight if you want to push the work back. Frozen butter cut into flour gives the bakery-style flake; heavy cream, egg, lemon juice, and vanilla bind it; a powdered sugar and lemon glaze finishes them after baking at 400°F for 18 to 22 minutes. Pair them with coffee or tea and clotted cream for the brunch table.
Get the Recipe: Blueberry Scones
Baked Oatmeal

Set up Sunday-morning breakfast for 8 with Baked Oatmeal, an 8×8 pan layered with chopped Granny Smith apples and a custardy mix of rolled oats, toasted pecans, brown sugar, cinnamon, whole milk, eggs, vanilla, raisins, and dried cranberries. Total time runs about an hour, with a 40 to 45 minute bake at 350°F until the top is golden and the center is set. Squares hold in the fridge for 4 days, so leftover slices reheat through the week as grab-and-go breakfasts after the brunch table is cleared.
Get the Recipe: Baked Oatmeal
Cinnamon Roll Casserole

When everything else on this list needs a head start, Cinnamon Roll Casserole is the 35-minute exception, built from 8 frozen Pillsbury cinnamon rolls cut into pieces and soaked in eggs, milk, vanilla, cinnamon, and maple syrup before a 25-minute bake. The icing from the cinnamon roll tubes goes on after baking, drizzled over the warm 9×13 dish for 8 servings. It’s the recipe that fits the title literally, ready before a slow pot of coffee finishes brewing, with the option to assemble it the night before if Sunday morning needs to be even shorter.
Get the Recipe: Cinnamon Roll Casserole
Cinnamon Roll Apple Pie

For a brunch that doubles as dessert, Cinnamon Roll Apple Pie layers spiced Gala or Royal apples with brown sugar, cinnamon, and nutmeg over a blind-baked puff pastry base, then tops the whole thing with sliced cinnamon rolls from the can that bake into a spiraled crust. Total time is 50 minutes for 8 servings, with a 25 to 30 minute final bake until the rolls turn golden and the apple filling bubbles up underneath. A quick powdered sugar and cinnamon glaze drizzles over the warm pie before serving.
Get the Recipe: Cinnamon Roll Apple Pie
Buttery Scones

Tender, fold-layered Buttery Scones bake into 10 servings (8 wedges per disc) in 40 minutes from start to finish, with a short 5 to 10 minute fridge chill that helps the cold butter firm up before the oven. Flour, sugar, baking powder, salt, cold cubed butter, buttermilk, vanilla, and an egg make the dough; folding it 4 to 5 times before shaping is what creates the flaky structure. Bake at 400°F for 20 to 30 minutes, then serve with strawberry, raspberry, or cherry jam alongside the brunch coffee.
Get the Recipe: Buttery Scones
Fruity Pebbles Donuts

Bake 10 colorful Fruity Pebbles Donuts in 50 minutes total with just 10 minutes in the oven and a 20-minute cool in the donut pan. The batter soaks crushed Fruity Pebbles in buttermilk first, then folds in flour, baking powder, baking soda, melted butter, sugar, egg, Greek yogurt, oil, and vanilla. A pink glaze of powdered sugar, milk, vanilla, strawberry extract, and food dye gets dipped over each cooled donut before a final shower of crushed cereal. Pile them onto a platter for the kids’ end of the brunch table.
Get the Recipe: Fruity Pebbles Donuts
Glazed Cinnamon Toast Crunch Donuts

A maple-cinnamon glaze and a crushed-cereal topping turn Glazed Cinnamon Toast Crunch Donuts into 12 servings of brunch-coffee nostalgia in 50 minutes total. Crushed cinnamon toast crunch cereal soaks in buttermilk before joining flour, baking powder, baking soda, butter, maple syrup, brown sugar, egg, Greek yogurt, oil, vanilla, and cinnamon for a 10-minute bake. The glaze of powdered sugar, milk, maple syrup, vanilla, and cinnamon coats each cooled donut, with whole and crushed cereal pieces driving the cereal-bowl flavor home.
Get the Recipe: Glazed Cinnamon Toast Crunch Donuts
Cinnamon Rolls

Soft, gooey Cinnamon Rolls from scratch make 8 servings in 2 hours and 55 minutes, with most of that being a 2-hour proofing window the recipe instructions explicitly let you push to overnight in the fridge. Instant yeast, warm milk, sugar, eggs, melted butter, flour, and salt build the dough; brown sugar, cinnamon, and room-temperature butter make the filling; cream cheese, butter, confectioners sugar, and vanilla blend into the frosting that goes on after a 20 to 25 minute bake. Set the cut rolls in the fridge Saturday night, sit them out 30 minutes Sunday, then bake while the coffee brews.
Get the Recipe: Cinnamon Rolls