The Ultimate Guide to Homemade Bread starts with a classic base recipe and then covers all of the common substitutions to guide you in customizing your bread to your own needs so you can create your own perfect loaf.
There is probably no smell on earth that is more inviting, comforting and symbolic of home than homemade bread. It is like a magnet for family and friends. Many of us have a recipe weโve tried or one that has been passed down through family and friends. But making bread is also a science. There is a lot that goes into it and there are a lot of possible variations. Weโve included some of those here. After making many loaves of bread and trying many variations, the recipe we decided we like best for its taste and texture is made with milk instead of water, and requires very little kneading.
You will start by warming the milk in the microwave, and then combining that with all of the other ingredients in a stand mixer and letting it knead until a dough ball is formed. This only takes a couple minutes. That dough is placed in a greased bowl to rise for 90 minutes and then transferred to two greased bread pans to rise for another 60 minutes, then baked. Youโre going to learn that the hardest part about this recipe is waiting to eat the bread!
SUBSTITUTION GUIDE
- Water vs. Milk
Milk changes bread recipes by producing a softer loaf, due to the milk fat content, which also gives bread a richer flavor. Bread made with milk browns more easily than bread made with water, as lactose or milk sugar will caramelize as it bakes. - Oil vs. Butter
Butter has a lower smoke point than oil, meaning it will brown before oil will when baked. While butter and oil are interchangeable in the same amount when making bread, using butter does produce a better flavor. - Honey vs. Sugar vs. Sugar Replacement
Honey and sugar are fairly interchangeable. You can replace sugar with honey in the same amount. Sugar replacements vary and usually come with instructions for substitution and what amounts to use. The kind of sweetener you use in making bread will alter the end result. Honey may add a floral element, depending on the source of your honey, while artificial sweeteners may add a metallic after taste. - Instant Dry Yeast vs. Active Dry Yeast
This recipe calls for Instant Dry Yeast which requires no proofing time. If you choose to use active dry yeast in this recipe you can do so in the same quantity and proof the yeast by adding it to the warm milk along with the sugar and letting this mixture sit for 5 to 10 minutes before proceeding with the recipe. - Wheat vs. White
Wheat flour is heavier and more coarse than white flour and will produce a more dense bread. You can use all wheat, a combination of half wheat and half white flour, or use all white flour. The results are pictured below.
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What if I don’t have a stand mixer? Can I make homemade bread by hand?
You donโt need a stand mixer, you can knead this bread by hand. It is physically more work, but it doesnโt require a lot of kneading. You only need to knead the dough until all of the ingredients are combined and a dough ball forms that is smooth and elastic and slightly tacky to the touch.
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Can I use this recipe in a bread machine?
Yes. This recipe will work great in a bread machine.
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Should I use a glass bread pan or a metal bread pan? What is the difference?
Glass and metal conduct heat differently which means they bake bread differently too. A glass bread pan will produce a softer, less crispy crust. A metal bread pan, especially a darker metal bread pan, will produce a crispier crust that is darker brown in color. You can see the visual difference in the photo below with the loaf made in a metal pan on the left and the loaf made in a glass pan on the right.
If youโre looking for more bread recipes, here are some of our favorites:
- Best Homemade Dinner Rolls
- Homemade Rye Bread
- Easy Homemade Pita Bread
- Irish Soda Bread
- Garlic Parmesan Herb Bread
Watch the video below where Rachel will walk you through every step of this recipe. Sometimes it helps to have a visual, and weโve always got you covered with our cooking show. You can find the complete collection of recipes on YouTube, Facebook Watch, or our Facebook Page, or right here on our website with their corresponding recipes.
Excellent bread – very tasty and great for toast.
I have used your recipes and they always work so I feel confident when I send my friends to your site that they too can make them without fear of failure. Very good site!
Do you have a wholewheat bread recipe?
Can I use can milk like Carnation milk
Evaporated milk is basically double the strength of regular milk. So you can substitute the milk in this recipe with half evaporated milk, half water. But if you use all evaporated milk, it’ll probably still be just fine.
This is the best homemade bread I’ve ever made! The texture and flavor is incredible. And, so easy!!
I have been using your recipes for some time now and they are great. Today was the first time I watched one of your videos. I watched this one because I wanted to be sure to do everything the way your recipe intended. I must say that I have never seen such an amazing instructional video about anything. You explained everything as if every viewer was brand new to baking and that is exactly how instructional videos should be. AWESOME JOB. Thank you.
Do you have the same recipe in metrics measurement?
bread comes perfect. I want to ask what if I want to make sweet bread. plz tell me amount of sugar and salt for one loaf
Can this be frozen?
Yes, bread freezes really well.
Quarantined, no milk but had half and half, used equal parts water and half and half. Still in the rising stage, will let you know how it comes out after baking. Love all your recipes I have tried. Keep them coming please.
This recipe was the best recipe ever. You explained everything and gave reasons of using different containers, white vs wheat, instant vs active yeast which is how we learn to be better in our cooking. Thank you very much for your informative information. My bread came out perfect!
If putting in bread machine. Do you need to switch any amounts of the ingredients. Or just add exactly what is in recipe
This recipe makes two loaves, so if baking in a bread machine, you’ll only be able to do half the recipe.