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4.96 from 61 votes (7 ratings without comment)

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Recipe Rating




194 Comments

  1. 5 stars
    Hello Veena, I baked bread for the first time using this recipe. And I am so happy that it turned out wonderful.
    Thank you.

    1. Thank you, Vani. I am so happy to hear you have great success. Homemade bread is an addiction, your family will get used to it.

      1. 5 stars
        Made this bread this morning and it’s absolutely wonderful.

  2. 5 stars
    I’d been searching for a good sandwich loaf and this was what I needed. I bake bread both

    I have a question, though. I only made a single loaf to test the recipe, but now I want to make two loaves at a time, but not sure if it will be too much for my mixer. I have a Kitchenaid Ultra Power® Series 4.5-Quart Tilt-Head Stand Mixer from late 1990s/early 2000s. Do you know if I can make enough dough for two loaves with this type of mixer? Or should I just make one batch of the dough at a time to be on the safe side? Thank you!

    1. Hey Monica.
      I think you answered your own question. If it’s an older machine better be nice to it so it’s last longer.
      Personally, I’d do two batches rather than one in the mixer. You don’t need washing in between so it should go faster.
      My husband says I care about my stand mixer more than my hands because I’m always doing my dough by hand instead. But, its true.
      Sorry, not sure I helped much.

      1. Thank you so much for taking the time to respond, Veena.

        That was the conclusion my husband and I’d pretty much come to, as well. I would never be able to afford to replace it, so going to play it safe. (I’ve been making no-knead rustic boule for over 12 years, so fairly new to kneading bread with the stand mixer.)

        Kitchenaid’s website says it has a capacity for 4 loaves of bread dough. I’m just not seeing how that could be possible or even good for the machine. I’ve had my stand mixer for 20 years, and not sure how true this is, but I just now read on a baking forum that their coated dough hooks shouldn’t be used at higher speed than low, like 2. I’ve not been able to located where it says that in the specs for it on KA’s site, tho. I’ve been using it at around 4 to knead bread and pizza dough.

        BTW, I used the microwave as a proofing box method Southern Living had posted on YouTube with your recipe and it worked beautifully.

  3. 5 stars
    This is such a good soft bread but way too salty. I don’t know if it is a mistake In the recipe but I’d definitely reduce the salt by half at least. Besides that though – a fabulous textured sandwich bread! This is my new go to bread – only using less salt. Thank you!

    1. Thank you for the feedback Autumn. I have made it 2 tsp instead of 1 tbsp now. I think that should be fine now. I’m glad you enjoy this bread. We do love it in our home too.

  4. If I use a covered Pullman tin, do I follow the same temperature and time directions, or would they be like the instructions for the Pullman white bread recipe? I have the smaller 9 inch tin with cover.
    Thanks!

    1. Hey Sue, to use a Pullman pan you need to make sure the recipe is the right size for the right pan. For this recipe, a 9 inch Pullman loaf pan would work.
      And yes, like the white Pullman bread you will need to let it rise and then bake. I hope I have answered your question
      Thanks

    2. 5 stars
      Can I use the Pullman lid with this recipe?

      1. Not sure. I have not done that yet. It might be too much dough for the Pullman pan.