Pullman Sandwich Bread – Pain De Mie
Pain de mie is a French sandwich bread with four square corners baked in a Pullman loaf pan. This simple and easy recipe for Pullman sandwich bread makes a light and fluffy loaf of bread with perfect four square corners. And, it has a delicate soft texture, soft crumb, and delicious flavor.

One of my fondest childhood memories revolves around the perfectly square sandwiches my mom used to pack for my school lunches.
What made these sandwiches extra special was the bread—my mom’s homemade bread. It was soft, fluffy, and perfectly square. I remember how it would squish gently when I took a bite, the crust revealing a pillowy interior that practically melted in my mouth. It was the only bread we used for butter sandwiches or jam sandwiches. I don’t ever remember eating a dinner roll or any other bread with butter, jam, or peanut butter
Now, as a parent myself, I find myself recreating this cherished tradition for my own kids. I take just as much care in making their sandwiches as my mom did for me. Watching my kids dig into their sandwiches brings me immeasurable joy. It’s a simple pleasure, to be sure, but one that connects us across generations and brings back cherished memories of childhood.
In a world that often moves too fast, there’s something comforting about slowing down and savoring the simple things in life – like a perfectly square sandwich made with love and shared with those we hold dear.
What is Pullman bread?
All bread made in a loaf pan can be used to make sandwiches, and yet to be characterized as a Pullman sandwich bread, you must have four square corners. Yup!! That’s the defining characteristic of this bread. That shape comes from using a specific loaf pan that has a nifty sliding lid. You actually bake the bread with the lid on. So when the bread rises as it bakes, it fills the corners of the pan on all sides, giving it those perfect square corners.
I’m not really sure how true this is, but I read somewhere that the Pullman Railway Company invented this bread back in the old days to make storage and transport easier. With this shape, they could stack the bread one on top of the other, using space more efficiently.
The texture of the Pullman sandwich bread is supposed to be soft, light, and fluffy. So, you must have a good recipe that’s just right for the pan you have, so it will give you a perfect bread, not too dense nor too limp.

Why make this bread?
- This bread recipe tastes great and is quick and simple to prepare.
- Most of the ingredients are simple and easy to find or pantry staples.
- The dough is made with commercial yeast, so the rise and proofing time is 60 to 90 minutes, unlike the many hours needed to make sourdough bread with a sourdough starter.
- It’s really not that complicated. In fact, it is one of the simplest breads you can make in the kitchen. Follow the directions below and eat it fresh, or French toast it for breakfast.
- Because of its square sides, this classic pain de mie is the best bread to use for sandwiches. It has a light and airy yet soft, tight crumb with a chewy texture.
- I am using a stand mixer with the dough hook, but you can also use a bread machine. Pour all ingredients into the pan. Set to dough or manual. Start and let the dough run its cycle for about 9 to 10 minutes – continue with the recipe as shown above.

Ingredients and substitutes
- Flour – Often, bread flour is recommended for making homemade bread, but this one works perfectly with all-purpose flour.
- Instant dry yeast – I like to use instant dry because I’ve always had great success with it. If you have to use active dry yeast, you will need 2 1/4 tsp or one packet. And if you use fresh yeast, you will need about 21 grams.
- Sugar – Not much, so it won’t make the dough sweet, but it will help feed the yeast and help it ferment quicker. If you prefer, you can also substitute sugar with 2 tbsp of honey.
- Butter – Will add richness and feed the yeast, helping it ferment quicker. You can also substitute the butter for 2 tbsp of oil in this recipe.
- Eggs – You can also omit the egg to make an eggless Pullman bread and replace it with 1/2 cup warm milk.
- Milk – Enhances the flavor and tenderizes the dough, giving it a soft texture.

Step-by-step: Best Pullman sandwich bread recipe
Dough
- Liquid ingredients – Ensure milk is warm, not hot (about 110°F). In a small bowl, add the yeast, sugar, and egg. Stir and set aside to foam for 5 mins.
- Dry ingredients – In the large bowl of a stand mixer, with the dough hook attachment, combine the flour and salt. Then, add the yeast mixture. Combine with a wooden spoon or rubber spatula.
Pro tip – If you do not like kneading, I highly recommend using a stand mixer with the hook attachment. - Combine – Add the yeast mixture to the flour mixture and combine on medium-high speed for about 3 minutes, scraping the sides of the bowl as necessary.
Pro tip – Avoid the temptation to add more flour. We want soft, light, and fluffy bread, and this is only possible when the dough is soft, elastic, yet slightly sticky.

- Knead – Once all the flour is incorporated, knead the dough for 8 to 10 minutes on medium speed until smooth. The dough will be soft and sticky.
Pro tip – A soft and sticky dough is a light and airy bread, so don’t add more flour. - Butter – Next, add the soft room-temperature butter a little at a time. Knead again for another 10 to 12 minutes until smooth and elastic.
Pro tip – When you add the butter, it will seem like the dough is falling apart. Trust the process and keep kneading. It will become smooth and shiny. - Bowl – Remove the dough from the mixer bowl onto a lightly floured surface. Shape it into a ball. Then, place in an oiled bowl.
Pro tip – Using a flexible bread scraper does a good job of removing the sticky dough from the bowl.

Rise, Shape, Proof
- Rise – Cover with plastic wrap or a clean kitchen cloth. Leave to rise in a warm place for about an hour until doubled in volume.
Pro tip – In winter, you may need 90 minutes or more. But in summer, the dough may double in 45 minutes. If you can’t attend to it at that moment, de-gas, reshape, and let doubles in volume again. - Shape – When the dough has doubled in volume, invert it onto a lightly floured surface. Next, start to roll like a jelly roll. Fold from the top to the center, then again once more towards the end. Pinch the seams together.
Pro tip – The idea is to fold the dough into a nice, tight package. Folding helps strengthen the gluten strands and prevents loose, floppy bread. - Proof – Place into a buttered Pullman loaf pan seam side down. Then, cover the loaf pan with plastic wrap or a clean kitchen cloth. Let rise in a warm place for about 45 minutes until almost 2 inches from the top rim of the loaf pan.
- Cover – Once you see your dough is almost halfway up the sides, spray the cover of the Pullman pan lid and place it on.
Pro tip – You want to place the lid on before it rises to the top, so you don’t ruin the rise.

Bake
- Oven – Once you see your dough is almost halfway up the sides, preheat the oven to 380°F / 190°C / Gas Mark 5 for at least 20 minutes.
- Bake – Place the loaf pans on a baking sheet and into the oven.
- Bake the 13-inch loaf for about 45 to 50 minutes,
- Bake the 9-inch loaf for about 25 to 30 minutes,
- and the 7-inch loaf for about 20 to 25 minutes.
Pro tip – The bread is done when you tap the bottom of your loaf, and you will hear a hollow sound (or the internal temperature registers between 160° and 180°F on an instant-read thermometer.
- Cool – Partially open the lid and let it cool for 10 minutes – before you invert it onto a cooling rack. Then, cover it with a clean kitchen towel for 5 minutes to keep it soft.
Pro tip – Wrapping the bread in a kitchen cloth will let the steam cool in the bread, keeping it soft. - Note – Always let bread rest for at least an hour before you cut it – this is the hardest part!! But it will prevent the steam from escaping and making the bread dry.
- Enjoy!



Pullman Sandwich Bread aka Pain de Mie
Video
Ingredients
- 276 ml (1¼ cups) Warm milk or water (110℉)
- 100 g (2 large) Egg
- 50 g (4 tbsp) Sugar or honey
- 9 g (3 tsp) Instant dry yeast
- 562 g (4.5 cups) Bread flour or all-purpose flour
- 12 g (2 tsp) Salt
- 60 g (4 tbsp) unsalted Butter room temperature (or ¼ cup oil)
- 180 ml (¾ cup) Warm milk or water (110℉)
- 60 g (1 large) Egg
- 40 g (2½ tbsp) Sugar or honey
- 7 g (2¼ tsp) Instant dry yeast
- 400 g (3¼ cups) Bread flour or all-purpose flour
- 9 g (1½ tsp) Salt
- 42 g (3 tbsp) unsalted Butter room temperature (or 2½ tbsp oil)
- 160 g (⅔ cup) Warm milk or water (110℉)
- 50 g (1 large) Egg
- 25 g (1½ tbsp) Sugar or honey
- 5 g (1½ tsp) Instant dry yeast
- 370 g (3 cups) Bread flour + 2 tbsp more for consistency
- 7 g (1¼ tsp) Salt
- 35 g (2½ tbsp) unsalted Butter room temperature (or 2 tbsp oil)
Method
- Liquid ingredients – Ensure milk is warm, not hot (about 110 F). In a small bowl add the milk, yeast, sugar, and egg. Stir and set aside to foam for 5 mins.276 ml Warm milk or water (110℉), 100 g Egg, 50 g Sugar, 9 g Instant dry yeast
- Dry ingredients – In the large bowl of a stand mixer, with the dough hook attachment combine the flour and salt. Then, add the yeast mixture. Combine with a wooden spoon or rubber spatula562 g Bread flour , 12 g Salt
- Combine– Add the yeast mixture to the flour mixture and combine on medium-high speed for about 3 minutes scraping the sides of the bowl as necessary.
- Knead – Once all the flour is incorporated, knead the dough for 8 to 10 minutes on medium speed until smooth. The dough will be soft and sticky.
- Butter – Next, add the soft room-temperature butter a little at a time. knead again for another 10 to 12 minutes until smooth and elastic.60 g unsalted Butter
- Bowl – Remove the dough from the mixer bowl onto a lightly floured surface. Shape it into a ball. Place in an oiled bowl.
- Proof – Cover with plastic wrap or clean kitchen cloth. Leave to rise in a warm place for about an hour until doubled in volume.
- Shape – When the dough is doubled in volume invert the risen dough onto a lightly floured surface. Start to roll like a jelly roll. Fold from the top to the center then again once more towards the end. Pinch the seams together.
- Proof – Place into a buttered Pullman loaf pan seam side down. Cover the loaf pan with plastic wrap or a clean kitchen cloth. Let rise in a warm place for about 45 minutes until almost 2 inches from the top rim of the loaf pan.
- Cover – Once you see your dough is almost halfway up the sides – spray the cover of the Pullman pan lid and place it on.Pro tip – you want to place the lid on before it rises to the top so you don't ruin the rise.
- Oven – Once you see your dough is almost halfway up the sides preheat the oven to 380°F / 190°C / Gas Mark 5 for at least 20 minutes.
- Bake – Place the loaf pans on a baking sheet and into the oven. Bake – the 13-inch loaf for about 45 to 50 minutes, – the 9-inch loaf for about 25 to 30 minutes, – and the 7-inch loaf for about 20 to 25 minutes. Pro tip – The bread is done – when you tap the bottom of your loaf and you will hear a hollow sound (or the internal temperature registers between 160° to 180°F on an instant-read thermometer.
- Cool – Partially open the lid and let it cool for 10 minutes – before you invert it onto a cooling rack. Cover it with a clean kitchen towel for 5 minutes to keep soft.
- Note – Always let bread rest for at least an hour before you cut it – this is the hardest part!! But, it will prevent the steam from escaping and making the bread dry.
Notes
-
Knead until smooth and elastic.
A well-developed dough rises higher and gives you that soft, even Pullman crumb. -
Keep the dough slightly firm.
A tighter dough holds its shape, fills the corners of the pan, and bakes into a square, even loaf. -
Chill the dough for 10–15 minutes before shaping.
A short rest firms it up just enough to roll tightly, which prevents gaps and tunnels. -
Fill the Pullman pan just under halfway.
This gives the dough room to rise without popping the lid or overflowing.
Equipment you will need
Nutrition
Tried this recipe?
Mention @veenaazmanov_kitchen or tag #veenaazmanovkitchen!Tips for Success
- Knead until smooth and elastic – A well-developed dough rises higher and gives you that soft, even Pullman crumb.
- Keep the dough slightly firm -A tighter dough holds its shape, fills the corners of the pan, and bakes into a square, even loaf.
- Chill the dough for 10–15 minutes before shaping – A short rest firms it up just enough to roll tightly, which prevents gaps and tunnels.
- Fill the Pullman pan just under halfway – This gives the dough room to rise without popping the lid or overflowing.
more pullman bread variations
- If you like Brioche bread try my Brioche Pullman Bread
- And if you have sourdough make my Sourdough Pullman Loaf (Pain de Mie)
Troubleshooting Pullman Sandwich Bread
| Issue | What Went Wrong | How to Fix It |
|---|---|---|
| The loaf is dense, or didn’t rise enough | The dough was under-kneaded or proofed in a cool environment | Knead until windowpane; proof at 26–28°C; extend rise if needed |
| Lid popped open, or loaf ballooned | Overproofed or too much dough placed in the Pullman pan | Shorten final proof; weigh dough correctly for your pan size |
| Sides pulled in or shrank while cooling | The loaf was underbaked, so the structure didn’t set | Bake 5–8 minutes longer; aim for internal temp 93–95°C (200–205°F) |
| Crumb has tunnels or large gaps | Shaping was loose, or air pockets weren’t expelled | Roll tightly, pinch seams well, and tap the pan before proofing |
more sandwich bread recipes
- White sandwich bread recipe
- Brioche sandwich bread or Brioche Pullman Loaf
- No-knead sandwich bread
- Whole wheat sandwich bread
- Challah Sandwich Bread
- Challah Recipe – 3 strands, 4 strands, 5 strands, 6 strands
- See all Sandwich Bread recipes
Frequently asked questions
If stored properly, this white bread will stay for 4 to 5 days at room temperature. It can also be frozen for a month or more, too. However, never store bread in the fridge as it dries out.
Pain de mie is a soft, white or brown sliced bread in French. ‘Pain’ means bread, and ‘(de) la mie’ refers to the soft part of the bread. In English, pain de mie is similar to a Pullman loaf or regular sandwich bread.
Yes, the only difference is that a Pullman is baked in a square pan, and you need to use the right amount of dough in the pan. Too little and it won’t reach the corners for a square shape, too much may cause the bread to explode in the pan during baking.
The smart choice? If you must buy one loaf pan, buy the Pullman sandwich loaf pan, so that you can make regular bread without the lid or Pullman sandwich bread with the lid. It is very important that you buy a good-quality pan. Nothing is worse than spending time on bread and having it stuck in the pan, or the lid does not work after one or two bakes. (often an issue with low-quality metal)
A good quality pan will last you for years and will be a pleasure to use over and over again. Here are three pans that I own and love very much: a 13 x 4 x 4 Pullman pan, a 9 x 4 x 4 Pullman pan, and this 8 x 4 x 4 Pullman pan can be used for this recipe.
Each Pullman pan will have its own guide for total dough weight.
16x4x4 about 1300 – 1400 grams
13x4x4 about 1100 – 1200 grams
9x4x4 about 750 – 850 grams
7x4x4 about 550 – 650 grams
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Love this recipe for my Pullman pan. I never used to use the lid on my pans before but now with these recipes I can. I have made the 13 and the 9-inch twice already and my family loved it. Thanks for the clear instructions.
Hey Rick, I’m sorry that the result was not as expected. But, I hope the loaves were tasty.
Just to help troubleshoot.
1. Yes, it is important to make sure the dough is in the right quantity. With this measure, many have had success so not sure why yours was more. Next time, measure and use the dough needed for the pan, then make dinner rolls or flatbread with the excess dough
2. Check the oven temperature. Sounds like the heat was high and the pressure pushed open the lids.
All the best
Thanks for the reply/suggestions. I will not exceed 1200 grams for the 13x4x4 loaf pans next time. Also I have checked the oven temperature of my electric range against a known accurate digital temperature source and clearly the oven temperature is not entirely accurate. First attempt at baseline 350F the temperature showed 380F. Checked again later and it was averaging 390F. So the 380F temperature for the recipe is much higher in my oven. I am in the process of calibrating temperature to try to match where it supposed to be. I’ve had this oven 10 years and had no idea. Oh, and yes the bread is very tasty. Thanks for the recipe!
Thank you Rich. Happy you enjoyed this recipe. Usually when your baked goods bake quicker than the recipe directions is a good indication that something is off with the oven.?
I love the texture and taste of the bread.
My only issue is that I have had problems with the 9x4x4 Pullman Pan lid popping open when baking. But, the bread is delicious. Will make again for sure.
I will check the measurements again. Thanks
Measured by weight, the loaf came out a LOT better. The crumb was lighter, and the flavor was still wonderful.
I’m working on a reduction of ingredients to achieve the 845g total and will be happy to forward my results.
Great recipe!
Thank you, Mark, I have reduced the dough now. I hope it works for you. Thanks
Your print recipe feature is not working. It only brings up the whole article again and not a printable recipe. Thank you.
Hey Tracy, I just tried and it works for me. Is there a particular browser you are using so I can troubleshoot. Thanks
Followed the recipe to a T. Not sure what happened , but I had to add a little more milk as the dough was dry. Otherwise it came out as expected. Very happy.
I used my bread maker for the dough rising and baked the bread in my Pullman loaf pan. This is the best and simplistic recipe ever. Very pleased and delishious
Thank you so much Patty
Fantastic recipe! Thanks, Veena.
This is my dream!!! I recently retired and am loving bread making. This is a recipe I can see using at least twice a week for family get togethers. Thank you so much for including all of the TIPS. Very helpful. I am looking forward to making more of your recipes.
Thank you Chris
Luv ur recipe.. bake it today, fantastic.. I just luv it.. will make it again.. today I just used water instead of milk.. soft and moist.. ??????
Thank you so much for the lovely feedback, Mazian. So happy you enjoyed this bread.
Can you use a non-dairy milk alternative? Like almond or oat milk?
Yes, of course, Lauren. I have tied with coconut milk and we loved it too.
Hi I don’t understand the 1x 2x 3x as it relates to the number of loaves. 1x reflects 2 loaves in the “adjust servings” option. When I choose 1x it shows 2 loaves on that section. When I select 2x it reflects 4 loaves. Does the 1x selection produce enough dough for 1 loaf or 2? Please clarify.
Cynthia, what size loaf pan do you need to make? I have given you the ingredients to make a 13-inch, 9-inch or 7-inch loaf. If you use the 2X you will get the ingredients for 2 x 13-inch loaves, etc.
I did this because people lept asking for specific loaf pan measurements. Thanks
this blew the lid off my pan several times. Where does it say use two pans?
Two pans for what? I do not use two pans. Just the lid over the loaf pan
Could I make the dough in a bread machine and then proof?
Yes, absolutely Britany.
Made this bread today and it was delicious! Great recipe, thanks for the pro tips.
The lid is what maintains the shape of the bread. The lid would come off in one of three instances.
1. too much dough – make sure to use the right amount of dough for the right pan.
2. the quality of the pan is not good – so the lid comes off when heated (metal expands)
3. the oven temperature is too high which causes pressure in the pan to force release.
I hope these help troubleshoot, Yasmin
XX
I loved using this recipe. I’m keeping it to use it again. the only constructive criticism I would offer is regarding the recipe amounts. the recipe declares that it shows the ingredients for two loaves. this is incorrect. I had to double the number of loaves to 4 loaves in order to get the ingredients for 2 loaves. thank you so much.
Hey Nancy, The dough only makes one loaf in the size of the ingredients you choose. For example, a 13-inch list makes a long 13-inch loof. However, as mentioned in the notes below the 13-inch dough can also make two small loves in 7-inch loaf pans.
If you are making 2 loaves from the 13 in recipe, at what point do you split it?
After the rise, Cynthia. Before you shape and proof. Divide. Shape, Proof, bake.