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This White Bread recipe is a classic you’ll want to keep on hand. So light, fluffy and incredibly soft. Everyone will think it came right from the bakery!

White bread with the first slice cut off next to a white and blue dish towel

Is anyone out there a bread lover, just like me? I love a good slice of bread, and homemade fresh, soft white bread right out of the oven is my weakness.

We love using this bread recipe for Air Fryer Fried Chicken Sandwiches, as a dipper for Roasted Tomato Soup, or as an appetizer with our easy smoked salmon dip. Don’t forget it makes a great side dish too, especially when served alongside Chicken Mushroom Pasta.

This simple white bread recipe does not disappoint when it comes to quality and flavor. No matter what you use it for, whether its prepping school lunches, making yourself a snack, or serving it as your dinner side, you’ll be in sliced bread heaven.

No need to buy the low-grade store-bought loaves, or spend all your money on expensive bakery bread, you can make this recipe at home any time you want!

A bread in a 8x4 loaf pan

Tips and Tricks for Making White Bread

  • 1 package of instant dry yeast usually contains 2 1/4 Tsp 
  • This recipe works with all-purpose and bread flour. The bread flour will give it a slightly chewier and a bit more elastic crumb. 
  • The second rise will be much faster than the first rise. Be careful not too overproof or the bread will not rise while baking and collapse.
  • Don’t use an oil spray to grease your non-stick baking pans! Oils spray will ruin the surface of those pans, better use a paper towel or brush with some oil or butter.
  • My house is pretty cold so I like to use the proof setting on my oven.
  • The amount of flour you need depends on the moisture and temperature in your house. Some days you might need more, some days less! 
  • This recipe can be halved to make only one 8×4-inch loaf but it can also be doubled to make TWO large 9×5-inch loaves! Just use the little slider in the recipe card next to servings to double the recipe. Make sure your stand mixer can handle the amount of flour. I recommend using a KitchenAid Professional
How to mak the dough for white bread collage

Why Should I Make My Own White Bread?

Making your own bread is actually very simple, and not nearly as complex as you would think. In just over 2 hours you can have a fresh out of the oven loaf of white bread, and that’s with 1 hour and 30 minutes of just waiting for it to rise.

The time it takes to prepare is so worth the peace of mind you have knowing exactly what’s in the bread you are eating. When it’s made at home you don’t run the risk of any added preservatives, it’s like having bakery-fresh bread all the time.

It’s incredibly light and fluffy, and dare I say even better than any bread I’ve bought from the store. It’s the perfect texture you want for all of your bread needs.

How to shape bread collage

What To Use Homemade Bread For

You can use your homemade white bread for anything and everything! Well, maybe not everything, but pretty close.

Use it to make your breakfast toast and nut butter, your turkey and cheese lunch sandwich, or mid-day snack avocado toast. Those are just a few of my favorite uses, but the options are really endless.

How To Store Homemade White Bread

Place in a Bread Box:

A bread box, while a little old school, is still very effective. If you have one or have the room for one, I suggest storing your loaf in there. It will give it the best odds of staying fresh as long as possible.

Wrap it in plastic wrap or foil:

If you want to just leave the white bread out on the counter, instead of in a bread box, you’ll need to cover the loaf with either plastic wrap or foil to prevent it from drying out.

Or a good hack would be to save an old store-bought bread sleeve and store your homemade loaf in there.

Freeze it:

To get more bang for my buck, I always make two loaves or even double the recipe to make two extra-large loaves, and immediately slice and freeze one to save for later. That way once I run out of the first loaf I already have another on hand and ready to eat

If you want a slice right out of the freezer, just pop it in the microwave for 20 seconds or toaster and you’ll be good to go. Or if you have the time, just let it thaw on the counter for a few hours.

A loaf of white bread on a black cooling rack next to some bronze measuring cups

Tools and Ingredients Used For Making This White Bread Recipe

Stand Mixer With Dough Hook:

For this recipe, you’ll want to pull out the big stand mixer you probably never use. Using a powerful stand mixer helps kneed the dough, allowing you to get that perfect end result.

8×4 In. Loaf Pan

I love a good metal, nonstick loaf pan, it’s so versatile and can be used for an infinite amount of recipes.

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4.94 from 601 votes

White Bread

This White Bread recipe is a classic you'll want to keep on hand. So light, fluffy and incredibly soft. Everyone will think it came right from the bakery!
Prep Time: 15 minutes
Cook Time: 30 minutes
Rising Time: 1 hour 30 minutes
Total Time: 2 hours 15 minutes
Servings: 2 Loaves

Ingredients 

  • 1 2/3 cups lukewarm water, divided
  • 2 1/4 tsp instant yeast, or active dry yeast
  • 1 tsp sugar
  • 1 Tbsp honey, (or more sugar)
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1 1/2 Tbsp unsalted butter, cubed at room temperature
  • 4 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1 1/2 Tbsp butter, melted for brushing

Instructions 

  • In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the dough hook combine the instant yeast, sugar, and half of the lukewarm water. Let sit for 5-10 minutes until foamy (if using active dry yeast, let sit for 15 minutes).
  • Add remaining water, honey, salt, cubed butter, and 4 cups flour to the bowl. Knead at low speed until the dough comes together and is soft but not sticky. Add a few more tablespoons flour if necessary. Continue to knead for 6-9 minutes until the dough pulls away from the sides of the bowl and is soft and smooth.
  • Transfer the dough to a lightly greased bowl and make sure that it is completely coated. Cover with plastic wrap and let rise in a warm and draft-free place for about 45 minutes or until doubled in size.
  • Lightly flour your work surface and turn out the dough onto it. Divide it into two equally sized portions. Use your fingers to gently pat each half into an 8×12 inch rectangle while pressing it all over to remove any air pockets. Starting at the short end, roll up the rectangle into a tight roll and pinch the seams to seal. Tuck the ends of the roll slightly under the roll to create some tension on the surface and place each loaf into a greased 8×4 inch loaf pan tucked ends and seam side down. Cover with a greased piece of plastic wrap and let rise for about 45 minutes in a warm and draft-free place until doubled in size.
  • Preheat oven to 390 degrees F and adjust oven rack to lower-middle position.
  • Bake loaves for 25-30 minutes until golden brown (and the loaf registers 208 to 210 degrees).
  • Invert bread onto a cooling rack. Reinvert loaves and brush tops and sides with melted butter. Let cool completely before slicing.

Notes

  • Pan Size: This recipe makes 2 regular loaves baked in two 8×4-inch pans or one large loaf baked in a 9×5-inch loaf pan. To make one large loaf don’t divide the dough into two and pat it into a 9×13-inch rectangle. Bake for 30-35 minutes. Some readers commented that their 9×5 loaf was too big, so I recommend using two 8×4 pans. 
  • No stand mixer: This bread can be kneaded by hand if you don’t have a stand mixer. Use a large bowl and knead the dough for 10 minutes.
  • Bread Machine: I have successfully made this bread in my Oster Bread Machine using half the recipe. Depending on the size of your bread machine you can make one big loaf or half the recipe and make a smaller loaf. The bread won’t be as pretty but taste and texture will be the same.
  • Butter: Salted butter will work too. I would still add the tsp of salt because the amount of butter is so small. You could reduce to 3/4 tsp salt if you are sensitive to salt. Vegan Butter or margarine can also be used.
  • Fresh Yeast: You can also use fresh yeast for this recipe! 2 1/4 teaspoons instant yeast = 21 grams fresh yeast or 1 1/4 blocks (0.6-ounce size) or about 1/2 block (2-ounce size) fresh yeast.
  • Rapid Rise Yeast: Rapid rise yeast is the same as instant yeast, so no changes are necessary. 
  • Flour: This recipe works with all-purpose and bread flour. You can use whichever you have on hand! Bread flour will give it a slightly chewier and a bit more elastic crumb which I really like, but most people don’t have bread flour in their pantry so I made sure this recipe works as well with all-purpose. I don’t recommend using self-rising flour.
  • Lukewarm Water: Water should be warm, not hot. Between 95 F and 110 F is perfect.
  • Baking Temperature: Yes, the temperature is correct!
Looking for a bread recipe made with whole wheat flour? Check out my Whole Wheat Bread 

Nutrition

Calories: 1231kcal | Carbohydrates: 227g | Protein: 31g | Fat: 20g | Saturated Fat: 11g | Cholesterol: 46mg | Sodium: 1259mg | Potassium: 344mg | Fiber: 9g | Sugar: 11g | Vitamin A: 535IU | Calcium: 48mg | Iron: 13.1mg
Like this recipe? Rate and comment below!

About Julia Foerster

Hi, I'm Julia! Born in Germany, I call Canada now my home and love to share my favorite dishes with you! Here you'll find hundreds of recipes, all made from scratch, with lots of tips and detailed step-by-step instructions.

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926 Comments

  1. 4 stars
    This was my 1st time making bread. The flavor and is inside is really good. We just got a really hard crust. Any ideas what I did wrong?

  2. Ahh, my appologies, I must have mis-read it. It came out wonderfully with bread flour. One of the best bread recipes that I’ve tried. Thanks so much for the recipe!

  3. I am confused about your description saying “all-purpose bread flour”, but your recipe saying “all-purpose flour”. They aren’t the same thing. I am going to try it with bread flour, since I dug it out of the cabinet already.

    1. I’m not sure which description you are referring to, Ashley? The ingredients list all-purpose flour and the tips and tricks above the recipe card state: “This recipe works with all-purpose and bread flour.” You can use whichever you have on hand! Bread flour will give it a slightly chewier and a bit more elastic crumb which I really like, but most people don’t have bread flour in their pantry so I made sure this recipe works as well with all-purpose.

    1. I don’t recommend using self-rising flour for this recipe, Ruth! Yeast and self-rising flour just don’t work well together. But you could make beer bread, biscuits, or soda bread with the self-rising flour.

  4. This turned out really well.  Thank you! Just a question though….how come you roll out the dough then roll it up?

    1. Rolling up the dough gives the bread a better shape and is the easiest way to shape it properly. It also reduces the risk of having large air bubbles in the finished loaf.

  5. I’ve never made bread before and I failed at this first attempt :( I did my best to follow every instruction but certain things were unclear to me…I think because I don’t really understand baking. My bread came out flat topped, dense and a bit crumbly. Help! What do you think I did wrong?

    1. Sorry, it didn’t come out as it should, Tricia! This usually happens if it is over-proofed in the pan. When it has risen too much before you put it in the oven, it can’t rise anymore in the oven and will collapse. Dense and crumbly also sound like you used too much flour. Did you measure the flour correctly? I recommend using a spoon to fluff up the flour in the container, then sprinkle the flour with the spoon in the measuring cup, when the cup is full use the back of a knife to level the flour. Also, make sure to use the right-sized baking pan; if the pan is too big, you might be tempted to let it rise longer. I hope this helps and you give it another try!

  6. Hi! How well does this bread keep? Does it need to be refrigerated? I’ve made a whole wheat bread before and I kept in the fridge but it was only good for about a week. Thank you!

    1. Because this bread has no added preservatives (store-bought bread often has stuff added to make it last longer) it will only keep for about 3-4 days. I recommend storing it in a breadbox, in a large ziplock bag, or cut side down on a cutting board. It should not be refrigerated, because that will dry the bread out faster.