Recipes

Bread Machine Sandwich Bread

A very basic, enriched loaf of sandwich bread that is quick to pull together, and let the machine do the hard work for you. It has a tender crumb and is a nicely dense loaf, that is easily sliced. A little butter on a slice, and it’s perfect.

I made this loaf in our Zojirushi Home Bakery Supreme bread machine, which uses 2 paddles, and produces a normal looking loaf of bread. I’ve had this machine for a long time, almost a decade now, and it is a hard working appliance – and with how cold our house is in fall and winter, it ensures the bread turning out, versus making bread the old school way.

Bread Machine Sandwich Bread

Ingredients:

  • 1 cup water*
  • 1/3 cup milk*
  • 3 Tbsp unsalted butter, sliced into 3 sections*
  • 450 grams all-purpose flour
  • 3 Tbsp granulated sugar
  • 1½ tsp fine sea salt
  • 1½ tsp activated dry yeast

Directions:

Zojirushi bread machines warm the ingredients for you, where other brands of bread machines use warm water instead, at the temperature called for, usually around 110*, and stack the ingredients as called for in the manual. Follow your machine’s manual. Items with * should be warmed up if using a standard machine.

Add ingredients in order listed, placing the yeast on top where it doesn’t touch any liquid.

Set loaf for standard white bread, medium crust, and if size is needed, 2 pound size.

Check during the first kneading cycle, to make sure everything is mixing, and if a sprinkle or two more of flour is needed, for the dough to be slightly tacky to touch.

Remove after baking, let cool on a rack.

Once fully cooled, store in a sealed bread bag, and use within 2 days for best results.

This loaf slices well for freezing.

We take out slices at night, to thaw on the counter sealed in a plastic bag or in a sandwich bag.

Makes 1 loaf.

Recipes

Rye Caraway Bread

I was trying to figure out a rye bread that was both soft but had the flavor I was searching for. I was looking for inspiration online, and was rather scared at some of the ingredients. I saw both instant coffee powder and cocoa powder used to give the brea “the dark color” you see in marble rye bread. But rye bread isn’t necessarily dark brown bread. It’s darker than a whole wheat bread, but not by much. Caraway seeds are a must. Make sure to buy seeds that are “less bitter” on the packaging. They can be hard to source. I found it odd I couldn’t find them in bulk but could find every other spice/herb. So with that said…buying the caraway seeds did pop up the cost (a tiny jar was $4.49 and is enough for about 3 or so loaves of bread). I could see where one might say that buying the bread is far cheaper. But….the advantage is the bread is so fresh when made by hand.

This recipe I made both traditionally, and in my bread machine. I wanted to see how it would turn out and then comparing it.

Bread machine on left, traditional on right.

The winner this time was traditionally made (not in a bread machine). 

It came out very nice, and just looked perfect.

I weighed all the flours instead of scooping, read the notes below on wether or not to add in more flour while kneading. This is important.

Rye Caraway Bread

Ingredients:

  • 1¼ cups water (110° F)
  • 1½ tsp molasses
  • 2¼ tsp (1 packet) dry active yeast
  • 1 Tbsp olive or avocado oil
  • 210 grams bread flour (1¾ cups)
  • 107 grams dark rye flour (1 cup)
  • 2 Tbsp vital wheat gluten
  • 1 Tbsp caraway seeds
  • 1½ tsp fine sea salt

Directions:

In a stand mixer add the water, molasses, and yeast. Let sit for 5 minutes.

Put on your dough hook.

Add in the oil, sea salt, caraway seed, flour, rye flour, and vital wheat gluten.

Start on low, until everything is mixed in, then turn up to medium and let it knead for 5 minutes. The dough should be elastic and smooth, not sticky (see notes below on this).

Lightly oil a mixing bowl, transfer dough to it, and flip to coat. Cover with plastic wrap.

Let sit till doubled, about an hour. Due to our cold house, I often use a heating pad on low.

Punch down, recover and let sit for 15 minutes.

Sprinkle flour on a clean work surface, knock out the dough and shape into a loaf. (I rolled mine up)

Lightly oil an 8×4″ bread pan and place the bread dough into.

Lightly spritz a clean piece of plastic wrap with oil, cover the pan gently.

Let rise for about 40 to 60 minutes, until it has crowned up nicely (like a mushroom).

Meanwhile preheat oven to 350°F in the last 15 minutes.

Bake for about 30 minutes, or until golden brown.

Remove and knock out onto a cooling rack.

Bread Machine Directions:

Add your ingredients as your bread machine dictates. My Zojirushi machine starts with liquids at the bottom, and ends with the yeast on top, not touching any moisture.

Bake as a normal loaf of white bread.

Makes 1 loaf.

Notes:

Flour is a subjective thing. The humidity, the brand, everything can change a loaf of bread. I found I added in at least ½ cup more flour to achieve the right dough, add visually, a Tablespoon at a time, mixing it in, then adding more as needed.

If you were hand kneading, you would feel it needed more flour, due to sticking to your hand.

With a bread machine you must keep an eye on it as the machine starts its kneading cycle. Add in till the dough looks smooth. I think for this recipe to work in the machine, I need to dial it more in. It was ugly looking because I tried to spread the dough out after it ended kneading. It still tasted good, but was far denser. It just didn’t rise as much. Now part of that is my machine makes up to a 2 pound loaf, and this recipe is far smaller, so it didn’t “fill” the bread pan like a normal recipe would have. So yes, more for me to work on. If you have a traditional bread machine, that does ¾/1/1½ pound loaves, I think it would have risen better.

~Sarah

Reviews

Reviewing Thrive Life Country White Dough Mix

I try to always use what I purchase for our long-term pantry at least once – so I’ll know wether or not it is worth buying more of. Because what good is it to have a pantry full of food you hope to never have to eat? (See here for a recent review on our sister site about an emergency food kit I would not buy again. So, yes, trying out food is important!)

Awhile back the Thrive Life Country White Dough Mix was on a sale, so I bought a can to try out. It sat on my shelf for awhile, but I decided to try it out with the cooling weather. Fall coming really has me baking bread.

It’s daily price isn’t low, but if it’s on sale it drops it quite a bit. That was enough to lure me in to try it. Each can is 1 loaf of bread. So, no, it’s not what I would classify as affordable, even on sale. But it does have some good points, that could make it having on hand.

It is pre-measured. You only need water and yeast to get going. It could even be used in a bread machine as well. The directions call for using a stand mixer with a dough hook (which I did use) and to knead for 5 minutes. Of course one could do hand kneading, with no issues.

I took the perfectly mixed dough (no need to add more water or more flour with it), put it in a lightly oiled mixing bowl, flip it, and cover with plastic wrap.

My house was a chilly 63°, Fall is very much coming, so I used a heating pad under the dough to help the first rise, which it really needed.

I gave the dough an hour to double.

At this point I could have made it into a boring loaf of bread, instead I opted to make Herbed Focaccia Bread. I knew the boys would really like that more. And it was well worth it. The bread turned out fluffy, light and indulgent.

Well worth making.

So yes, not a cheap thing to stock, but it was worth it since it turned out so tasty.

Herbed Focaccia Bread

Ingredients:

  • 1 can Country White Bread dough mix
  • 1 cup + 2 Tbsp warm water
  • 2¼ tsp activated yeast (1 packet)

Ingredients For Focaccia:

  • 2 Tbsp olive or avocado oil
  • 2 Tbsp melted unsalted butter
  • 1 head of garlic, minced
  • 1 tsp dried parsley
  • 1 tsp dried basil
  • ½ cup parmesan cheese
  • ½ cup shredded mozzarella

Directions:

Place yeast in a stand mixer bowl with the dough hook on. Add in the water and the bread mix. Mix in slowly on low, then let knead for 5 minutes. The dough should be a ball that is satin smooth and not sticky.

Lightly oil a mixing bowl, add in the dough, flip over to coat. Cover with plastic wrap, let sit for an hour, or until doubled.

Due to cold temperatures in our house, I used a heating pad on low under it.

Add the 2 Tablespoons oil to a 9×13″ glass baking pan, and spread it across and up the sides.

Take out the dough, add to the pan and work to stretch it out, to fit.

Make gentle dimples in the dough, with your finger tips.

Pour the melted butter over the dough.

Sprinkle on the garlic and herbs.

Add the parmesan and then the mozzarella cheese evenly.

Cover with plastic wrap, let rise for 45 minutes, or so.

Preheat your oven to 400° in the last 15 minutes time.

Take off the plastic wrap and bake for 20 to 25 minutes. The bread should be golden on the sides, and the cheese all golden.

Let cool on a wire rack, slice and enjoy. Leftovers should be covered once cooled to stay fresh.

Out of the oven.

First slice.

Not dense at all, so fluffy.

~Sarah

Recipes

Bread Machine Basil Sandwich Bread

This basil sandwich bread recipe produces a nice sized loaf of bread. It’s easy to slice, as it is a denser bread. The big airy loaves are notoriously hard to slice, so I love an easy slicer.

I use a Zojirushi bread machine that produces a bakery style loaf, however most bread machines will work with the recipe, as long it can make up to a 2 pound loaf. For us, this bread machine has been worth the cost. I got the machine around 9 years ago, and it still works like it is new. Quality really matters!

You will want to weight the flour, and watch it in the first kneading stage, as humidity can play into if a bit more flour is needed or if a splash of water. I use a digital postal scale for baking, always measuring my flour.

The dough on this loaf is pretty firm.

Bread Machine Basil Sandwich Bread

Ingredients:

  • 1 1/3 cups water
  • 2 Tbsp avocado or olive oil
  • 3 Tbsp granulated sugar
  • 2 tsp fine sea salt
  • 1 tsp dried basil
  • 510 grams all-purpose flour
  • 2¼ tsp (1 packet) rapid dry yeast*

Directions:

Zojirushi bread machines warm the ingredients for you, with other brands of bread machines use warm water instead, at the temperature called for, and stack the ingredients as called for in the manual.

Add ingredients in order listed, placing the yeast on top where it doesn’t touch any liquid.

Set loaf for standard white bread, medium crust, and if size is needed, 1½ pound size.

Check during the first kneading cycle, to make sure everything is mixing, and if a sprinkle or two more of flour is needed.

Remove after baking, let cool on a rack.

Once fully cooled, store in a sealed bread bag, and use within 2 days for best results.

This slices well for freezing. We take out slices at night, to thaw on the counter sealed in a plastic bag or in a sandwich bag.

Makes about a 1½  pound loaf.

Notes:

This recipe uses rapid dry yeast. I used Redstar Quick-Rise for it. This is different than using regular active dry yeast.

See here for all the Zojirushi Bread Recipes on Never Free Farm.

~Sarah

Recipes

Brown Sugar Rosemary Bread

I use a Zojirushi bread machine that produces a bakery style loaf, however most bread machines will work with the recipe, as long it can make up to a 2 pound loaf. For us, this bread machine has been worth the cost. I got the machine around 9 years ago, and it still works like it is new. Quality really matters!

You will want to weight the flour, and watch it in the first kneading stage, as humidity can play into if a bit more flour is needed. I use a digital postal scale for baking.

Brown Sugar Rosemary Bread

Ingredients:

  • 1¾ cups water
  • 2 Tbsp olive oil
  • 3 Tbsp light brown sugar
  • 2 Tbsp dry milk
  • 2 tsp fine sea salt
  • 1 Tbsp dried or 1 tsp fresh Rosemary, crumbled
  • 650 grams all-purpose flour
  • 2 tsp dry yeast

Directions:

Zojirushi bread machines warm the ingredients for you, with other brands of bread machines use warm water instead, at the temperature called for, and stack the ingredients as called for in the manual.

Add ingredients in order listed, placing the yeast on top where it doesn’t touch any liquid.

Set loaf for standard white bread, light crust and if size is needed, 2 pound size.

Check during the first kneading cycle, to make sure everything is mixing, and if a sprinkle or two more of flour is needed.

Remove after baking, let cool on a rack.

Once fully cooled, store in a sealed bread bag, and use within 2 days for best results.

This slices well for freezing. We take out slices at night, to thaw on the counter sealed in a plastic bag or in a sandwich bag.

Makes a 2 pound loaf.

See here for all the Zojirushi Bread Recipes on Never Free Farm.

~Sarah