Simple Soft Sandwich Bread (6-Ingredients, No-Knead)
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Made with only 6 ingredients, this simple, no-knead soft sandwich bread is such a treat to have on hand for sandwiches of all kinds. No mixer is required — if you can whisk and stir, you can make this bread.

Several years ago, I published a recipe here for a simple sourdough sandwich bread recipe, and I have long wanted to add a yeasted version to my collection of bread recipes … here it is!
It’s a no-knead, 6-ingredient recipe that takes about 5 minutes to stir together. Thanks especially to my oldest daughter, who brings a turkey sandwich to school for lunch nearly every day and who has no reservations sharing her opinions, the recipe has gone through many iterations these past few months.
It started with the basic bread ingredients: flour, water, salt, and yeast. In an effort to make it softer for sandwiches, I added some olive oil. When my daughter told me the bread didn’t hold up very well — that it began breaking down by lunch time — I began researching. First I added honey, then I added milk, then I took away the honey, and finally I swapped in melted butter for the olive oil.
The loaves made with a mix of water and milk, butter and no olive oil, and no sweetener at all tasted the most like the sandwich bread I was after: soft but sturdy and well seasoned but not sweet.
Depending on your timeline, you can use more or less yeast — I’ve been in the habit of using 1/2 teaspoon (2 grams) and employing a long, slow overnight rise, but if you need to speed up your timeline, there are notes in the recipe on how to do so.
As always, I am here if you have any questions. Hope you love it 🍞🍞
How to Make Soft-Sandwich Bread, Step by Step
First gather your ingredients: bread flour, salt, instant yeast, water, milk, and butter. (See notes in the recipe for using other flours.)

Ideally, you will measure everything with a scale. I love my dual-platform Ooni scale for its precision, especially when measuring smaller quantities of salt and yeast.

Place the flour, salt, and yeast in a bowl:

Whisk until combined:

Add the water, milk, and melted butter:

Stir with a spatula until you have a shaggy, sticky dough ball — this is an 80% hydration dough and the dough will feel sticky upon mixing… this is right!

Cover the bowl and let rest for at least 30 minutes or as long as an hour; then use a wet hand to stretch and fold the dough into a cohesive mass. Here’s a quick video:
After the stretches and folds, the dough will transform from being sticky and shaggy to smooth and cohesive:

Drizzle lightly with olive oil, cover the bowl, and let rise …

… until the dough doubles in volume:

Deflate it:

Then turn the dough out onto a floured work surface:

Pat the dough into a rectangle roughly 8 inches wide — the length isn’t as important, but keeping the width to 8 inches will allow the coiled dough to fit into its loaf pan.

Coil up the dough:

Here’s some video guidance:
Transfer the coil to a greased loaf pan:

Let the dough rise until it crowns the rim of the pan:

Then bake at 375ºF for 45 minutes:

Turn out onto a cooling rack and let cool completely before slicing:




Such a treat to have on hand:

Simple Soft Sandwich Bread (6-Ingredients, No-Knead)
- Total Time: 5 to 24 hours
- Yield: 1 loaf 1x
Description
Made with only 6 ingredients, this simple, no-knead soft sandwich bread is such a treat to have on hand for sandwiches of all kinds. No mixer is required — if you can whisk and stir, you can make this bread.
Notes:
- As always, for best results use a scale to measure. I love this Ooni scale for its precision, especially when measuring smaller quantities of salt and yeast.
- Pan: A 9×5-inch loaf pan is ideal for this recipe. I love this USA pan.
- Salt: The rule of thumb with bread is that the weight of the salt should be 2 to 3% the weight of the flour. For this recipe that is 10 to 15 grams. I always use 15 grams of salt, and I do not find the bread to be too salty, but, as you know, I have a high salt tolerance. Use an amount appropriate to your tastes and preferences. Finally, I always use Diamond Crystal kosher salt, but you can use fine sea salt or whatever salt you like.
- Flour: I conducted most of my experiments with King Arthur Bread Flour. I also have made many loaves using 100% Petra 0102 as well as 100% Cairnspring Mills Glacier Peak bread flour.
- Yeast: SAF instant yeast is my preference. If you are using active dry yeast, sprinkle it over the water and let it bloom for 15 minutes before proceeding.
Timing:
- You can make this bread employing a long slow rise if you use 2 grams (1/2 teaspoon) of instant yeast or you can make it quickly if you use 8 grams (2 teaspoons).
- If you use 2 grams, the first rise will take 8 to 10 hours — this is what I usually do. I like to mix the dough at night, let it rise until I’m ready to tend to it in the morning; then proceed. The second rise will take 2 to 3 hours: wait until the dough crowns the rim of the pan before proceeding.
- If you use 8 grams, the first rise will take 2 to 3 hours and the second rise will take 1 to 2 hours.
Ingredients
Please read all notes above before proceeding:
- 500 grams (about 4 cups) bread flour, plus more for dusting
- 2 to 8 grams (1/2 teaspoon to 2 teaspoons) instant yeast
- 10 to 15 grams salt
- 200 grams (about 3/4 cup + 1 tablespoon) cold or room temperature water
- 200 grams (about 3/4 cup + 1 tablespoon) milk, 2% or whole
- 57 grams (4 tablespoons) melted butter, salted or unsalted
- softened butter or olive oil for greasing
Instructions
- Mix the dough: In a large bowl, whisk together the flour, salt, and yeast. Add the water, milk, and melted butter. Using a spatula, stir until you have a sticky, shaggy dough ball — this is an 80% hydration dough, and the dough will feel sticky upon mixing… this is right! Cover the bowl and let the dough rest for at least 30 minutes or as long as an hour.
- Stretch and fold: Fill a small bowl with water. Using a wet hand, stretch and fold the dough by grabbing an edge and pulling it up and towards the center. Repeat this stretching and folding process, moving your hand around the edge of the dough with every set of stretches and folds. As you stretch and fold, you should feel the dough transform from being sticky and shaggy to smooth and cohesive. (Note: you also will likely feel little bits of the butter solidifying — this is OK.) See the video above for guidance.
- Let it rise: Drizzle the dough lightly with olive oil and rub to coat. Cover the bowl and let the dough rise at room temperature until it has doubled in volume: depending on how much yeast you are using, this could take as long as 10 hours (if using 2 grams of yeast) or 2 to 3 hours (if using 8 grams of yeast).
- Prepare a loaf pan: grease a 9×5-inch loaf pan with softened butter or brush with olive oil — if you are at all worried about your dough sticking to your pan, grease it with butter. If you are using a USA pan or nonstick pan, you can get away with using olive oil alone. Brush the pan with 2 teaspoons of olive oil. For ease, I have been using olive oil alone, and it works beautifully.
- Coil up your dough: Deflate the dough using your hand or a flexible bench scraper, then turn the dough out onto a lightly floured work surface. Pat it into a rectangle roughly 8 by 16 inches (Note: the length isn’t as important as the width: don’t go much wider than 8 inches or you will have to squish it into your loaf pan). Starting at the small end, roll the dough into a tight coil. Transfer it to your prepared pan. Pour 1 teaspoon of olive oil over the surface and rub to coat.
- Final rise: Let the dough rise until it crowns the rim of your pan: this can take as long as 3 hours (if using 2 grams of yeast) or 1 hour (if using 8 grams). When your dough begins approaching the rim, preheat your oven to 375ºF.
- Bake it: Bake for 45 minutes.
- Turn out onto a cooling rack and let cool completely (if you have the patience) before slicing — it is much easier to slice the bread into thin, uniform slices when the bread has cooled completely.
- Store the bread in an airtight bag or vessel at room temperature for 3 to 4 days or freeze for up to 6 months.
- Prep Time: 20 minutes
- Cook Time: 45 minutes
- Category: Bread
- Method: no-knead
- Cuisine: American
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369 Comments on “Simple Soft Sandwich Bread (6-Ingredients, No-Knead)”
Good morning! I used Caputo OO flower and Caputo dry yeast. My bread did not double in size. Do you have any guidance for me?
Hi! Did you use a scale to measure? Caputo 00 flour is better for pizza — it’s known for the extensible gluten structure it creates in dough as opposed to the elastic (think vertical spring) gluten structure it creates. Is the dry yeast instant yeast? Did you see any rise? You may have better luck if you “bloom” the yeast over the wet ingredients.
Hello!! My dough has risen to double now but i wont have time till the next day to coil and place it in the loaf pan for more rising and then baking. Will the bread be ok if i let it rise overnight at room temp and finish it tomorrow? You probably wont get back to me in time so i guess I will just have to wing it and see what happens- But i will appreciate your feedback regardless. Thank you!!
Hi! I am likely too later here. Next time, I would deflate the dough in the bowl, cover it, then transfer it to the fridge. You can pick up with the coiling and transfer to the loaf pan the next day — the dough will take longer to rise in the loaf pan due to the cold temp, but otherwise the process is the same.
Just want to post my experience with Caputo and other 00 flours that I use for my breads. It took a few tries but can make excellent bread without the reaction to gluten that I get from my countries flour.
I use a little less flour, and also 3-4 stretch and folds to get it strong enough to perform well.
The hydration is different so I go by feel when hand mixing and always make sure my yeast is good and active. Hope this helps!!!
Making my loaf now and am excited about this recipe, will rate after I eat it lol