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NOTHING beats delicious homemade bread! And as you can imagine, we are biased – our homemade bread recipe is the BEST!!
We’ve tested classic bread recipes time and time again, and this is the recipe we keep coming back to. Plus, it’s the one YOU guys keep coming back to. We use it for everything – French Toast, Grilled Cheese, Homemade Croutons – you name it!
The flavor is PERFECTION! But also – most of the ingredients can be found in your pantry, so you can make it any time. It also requires only about 20 minutes of hands-on work! The rest is rising and baking time.
And like most bread recipes, this is great to make ahead and store so you always have fresh bread on hand.
If you love a good bread recipe, you’ll also love our French Bread, White Bread, and Whole Wheat Bread!
Why we think you’ll love it:
- Made with pantry staples. The ingredients are simple and ones most everyone has on hand.
- Used for SO many recipes. It’s perfect for sandwiches like Grilled Cheese or a batch of French Toast.
- Cost-effective and healthier. Making homemade bread will cost about $1.25 worth of ingredients per loaf and you get to control the ingredients!
Homemade Bread Ingredients and Substitutions
- 2¼ teaspoons active dry yeast (1 packet) – If your yeast is old or dead, your bread will not rise correctly, if at all.
- 2¼ cups warm water – The water must be around 105-115°F.
- ¼ cup sugar plus 1 pinch
- 1 tablespoon salt
- 2 tablespoons vegetable oil – or canola oil or olive oil labeled for baking.
- 5½ – 6½ cups bread flour – or an equal amount of all-purpose flour (the texture will change a bit). To make bread flour: add 1 teaspoon of vital wheat gluten to a 1-cup measuring cup. Spoon all-purpose flour to fill the cup the rest of the way and sift.
- butter for topping (optional)
How to Make Homemade Bread
- DOUGH. In a large bowl or the bowl of a stand mixer, dissolve 2¼ teaspoons active dry yeast in 2¼ cups warm water with a pinch of sugar.
- When the yeast mixture is bubbly and foamy, add ¼ cup sugar, 1 tablespoon salt, 2 tablespoons oil, and 4 cups bread flour, and mix with a dough hook until smooth.
- Add the remaining 1-2 cups of flour, ½ cup at a time, to form a soft, smooth dough. The dough should stick just slightly to your finger when touched, but not be overly sticky.
- Knead with the dough hook on medium speed for 5-7 minutes, until smooth, then roll into a ball.
- RISE. Use olive oil or cooking spray to coat the sides of the bowl. Transfer the dough to the oiled bowl, turn over once to coat the top with oil, and cover with plastic wrap. Let rise for one hour, or until doubled for the first rise.
- SHAPE. When the dough has risen, punch it down gently and divide it in half. On a non-stick baking mat or lightly floured surface, roll each half of the dough into a long rectangle about 8 inches wide.
- Roll the dough up, starting at the short edge, to form a cylinder that is approximately 8 inches wide. Repeat with the remaining dough.
- 2ND RISE. Place the dough, seam side down, into lightly greased loaf pans, and cover with plastic wrap. Let rise for a second time for one hour, or until the dough is ½-1 inch higher than the top of the pan.
- BAKE. Preheat the oven to 375°F.
- Bake for 30-35 minutes or until the loaves are golden brown and sound hollow when tapped.
- SERVE. Brush loaves with a little melted butter after baking. Remove to a cooling rack and cool before slicing. Makes 2 loaves of bread.
- Use your bread in some of our favorite recipes: French Toast, Grilled Cheese, French Toast Bake, Garlic Bread, Homemade Croutons
Can you make this in a bread machine?
Of course! It’s super easy, and the machine does all the hard work for you!
- Layer the ingredients the right way! Add them in this order:
- Warm water
- Sugar
- Salt
- Oil
- Bread flour
- Active dry yeast (make a little well in the flour and place the yeast inside so it doesn’t touch the liquid right away!)
- Pick your settings: Use the basic bread setting and choose light or medium crust, depending on what you like best.
- Check the dough: After a few minutes of mixing, peek inside! If it looks too sticky, add a little more flour (one tablespoon at a time). If it’s too dry, add a tiny bit of water. You want the dough to be soft and slightly tacky.
- Let the bread machine do its thing! Once it’s done baking, carefully take out the loaf, let it cool on a wire rack, and—if you’re feeling fancy—brush it with a little melted butter. SO good!
Kristyn’s Recipe Tips
- My #1 tip for any bread recipe is to Measure the flour accurately! Too much flour can result in dense bread, and we all know bread should be soft.
- Be sure to activate the yeast correctly otherwise, the dough will not rise.
- Watch the rise time. If you don’t allow it to rise long enough it will be dense. If you proof it for too long, it will fall and become unusable.
- For best results use bread flour. It creates a better structure and chewier texture than all-purpose flour, although we’ve used all-purposes in a pinch and it still works.
Homemade Bread Recipe
Equipment
- loaf pans
Ingredients
- 2¼ teaspoons active dry yeast, (1 packet)
- 2¼ cups warm water
- ¼ cup sugar, plus 1 pinch
- 1 tablespoon salt
- 2 tablespoons vegetable oil
- 5½ – 6½ cups bread flour
- butter for topping, (optional)
Instructions
- In a large bowl or the bowl of a stand mixer, dissolve the yeast in warm water with a pinch of sugar. When the yeast is bubbly and foamy, add the sugar, salt, oil, and 4 cups flour, and mix until smooth.
- Add remaining flour, ½ cup at a time, to form a soft, smooth dough. The dough should stick just slightly to your finger when touched, but not be overly sticky. Knead for 5-7 minutes, until smooth, then roll into a ball.
- Place the dough in an oiled bowl, turn over once to coat the top with oil, and cover with plastic wrap. Let rise for one hour, or until doubled.
- When the dough has risen, punch it down gently and divide it in half. Roll each half of the dough into a long rectangle about 8 inches wide. Roll the dough up, starting at the short edge, to form a cylinder that is approximately 8 inches wide. Repeat with the remaining dough.
- Place the dough, seam side down, into lightly greased bread pans, and cover with plastic wrap. Let rise for one hour, or until the dough is ½ – 1 inch higher than the top of the pan.
- Preheat the oven to 375°F. Bake for 30-35 minutes or until the loaves are golden brown and sound hollow when tapped. Brush with melted butter, if desired. Remove to a cooling rack and cool before slicing. MAKES 2 LOAVES.
Video
Notes
- To bake – unwrap and place in a greased bread pan. Cover with an oiled piece of plastic wrap. Allow it to thaw for several hours and then rise until it is about doubled in size. Bake according to recipe directions.
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
Recipe FAQ
Yes! You can totally swap instant yeast for active dry yeast in your recipe. The best part? Instant yeast doesn’t need to be dissolved in water first—just mix it right in with your dry ingredients, and you’re good to go! If your recipe calls for proofing the yeast first, you can still dissolve instant yeast in warm water to keep things consistent, but it’s not necessary. Just use the same amount, and your bread will turn out just as soft and delicious!
Place the bowl of dough near a warmer area in your home such as a warm slow cooker, sunny window, on top of a warm oven, or suspend above a bowl of steaming water.
Add an extra teaspoon of yeast and make the dough as directed. Allow the dough to rise the first time, then shape it into loaves and place them directly on a greased baking sheet. Place them in the freezer and freeze until solid. Wrap each loaf with plastic and again with aluminum foil. Label and freeze for up 3-4 months.
To bake – unwrap and place in a greased bread pan. Cover with an oiled piece of plastic wrap. Allow it to thaw for several hours and then rise until it is about doubled in size. Bake according to recipe directions.
Cool completely and place in a Ziploc bag or wrap in foil. Store at room temperature for 2 to 3 days. Place in a freezer-safe bag and freeze for 3-4 months.
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This recipe was first published December 2016.
The bread came out fluffy. The taste was spot on. The texture was too chewy though. Any idea why? What can I do to prevent it from being too chewy next time? By the way, I don’t have a stand mixer so I made it by hand. Baked for 30 minutes. It was perfectly baked.
That is a good question? I am not sure why it did. I haven’t experienced that & not familiar with why it would be chewy?? Nothing wrong with making by hand 🙂
Literally so dang addicting! Thanks for a cozy bread recipe that is easy and delicious. Warm bread is my weakness!
Haha..mine too! Thank you so much for sharing that!
Thank you for this WONDERFUL recipe! I made this for the first time toNight and it came out perfect! I did Use bread flour instead of AP flour and did an eGg wash at the second pRove, but man this bread is DELICIOUS! I also proved a little longer than reCommended but not by much. This is my new go to recipe. Thank You again For SHARING it!!
You are so welcome!! Thank you for sharing that 🙂
Omgeeee!! This bread is DELICIOUS
So easy to follow this recipe
THANK you!
This is my first time making
This kind of bread and came out
Perfect
Thank you for trying it!! I am so glad it turned out! Way to go!1
I decided on a whim this snowy Sunday morning to make some sandwich bread, since were all out. This recipe has simple ingredients that i had on hand, so i went for it. Im an experienced bread baker, but Usually in the form of rolls. This bread came together quickly and baked beautifully! Definitely a keeper for sure!
I am so happy to hear that!! Thank you for trying it!
Thank you! what a “wonderfully simple” recIpe tried it with Double Refined grOundnut oil and All purpose flour just turnded out Awesome ….. Regards
You are so welcome!! Thank you for sharing that!
Need to know the reason for the bread to become dense and cracks and opens up
I am not sure what happened. I do know there are a few reasons why bread might be too dense & they are; too much flour, not letting it rise to double the size, or not enough yeast. So, I am not sure if any of those happened? I appreciate you trying it 🙂
I found your recipe via pinterest and the time listed was a total time of 45 minutes. I clicked wanting to know how in the world you make a loaf of bread in 45 minutes because that sounds like the recipe I want.
I realized you have rising time for 2 hours but did not include this time in the total, which is rather misleading and quite important in my opinion.
Other than that Your recipe sounds delicious and I’m going to give it a try when I have a bit more time.
Do you happen to have a recipe for quick bread for people SHORt hours in the day?
It is delicious, if you do try it 🙂 I do have the rise time on there of 2 hours, but prepping & baking takes the 45 minutes. I have a round up of many recipes that are quick bread (no yeast) recipes………https://lilluna.com/50-quick-bread-recipes/. Hope you find one to try 🙂
Im making this bread tonite for the first time. Waiting on it to rise for the 2nd time . I cant wait to taste it !
It’s my favorite! Hope you like it!!
I made This today! Ive never made bread- i did have To get a fresher yeast but your directions were easy and never once did i QUESTION if i was doinG it right!!! My girls love it! Thank you!