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
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
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
154 Comments on “Simple Soft Sandwich Bread (6-Ingredients, No-Knead)”
Good morning
If I was to use the overnight method for simple sandwich loaf (using 2 gm of yeast) at which point do I stop the process and refrigerate- after the first mix or after the 30 min wait and fold and slap procedure? Thank you
Nancy
Belwood Ontario Canada 🇨🇦
Hi Nancy! I do the first rise at room temperature — my kitchen is cool. Are you concerned about the milk in the dough being at room temperature for that length of time? I was, too, initially, but I consulted a number of my bread books and found lots of recipes that called for a long slow rise at room temperature that included milk. I have not had any issues.
If however you want to use the fridge as a tool to slow down the first rise, you can place the dough in the fridge at any point of the process, first rise or second. Let me know if you have any more questions!
I grind Spelt berries. Will this work for sandwich and toast or do you have something else I can use? I also would like to know using a scale the weight of the berries to mill. Hopefully you have something for me.Thanks
Hi Jeannie! I don’t have a mill, so I’m not sure how to advise on the weight of the berries pre milling. I would just mill enough to yield 500 grams of flour.
I also am not sure how using 100% freshly milled flour will work here as I have not experimented. I have used 100% Cairnspring Mills Glacier Peak bread flour, which is stone-milled and freshly milled, but again, this is different than 100% freshly milled at home flour. I think it might just take some trial and error on your part: you might need to use a mix of your freshly milled flour and some commercial bread flour; you may need to adjust the water amount. I’m not sure how “thirsty” your freshly milled flour is.
Hi Ali, can’t wait to try this recipe. I have two questions about the long rise. Should it take place at room temp or be refrigerated? And should it be covered with a tea towel? Thanks.
Hi! It should be a room temperature rise. My kitchen is cool, and it takes roughly 10 hours to double. And yes, it should be covered. The second rise is also at room temperature. I slick the dough with oil, so I do not cover it, but if you are at all worried about the dough drying out, you can cover it.
Have you tried this in a Pain de Pie pan? It sounds like it might work?
Hi! I have not… what are the dimensions of the pan you have? And is it lidded?
I’ve been waiting for this recipe! Thank you so much for sharing it. I plan on mixing up the dough tonight.
Hooray! Hope you love it Melissa 🙂
Thanks, Ali, putting this on my to-try list!
Do you have a favorite bread slicing knife you’d recommend? Or any slicing tips? Most of the time I make a squished mess with even my sharpest knife.
Hi! And yes. Actually, my mom sent me this knife recently and it is very sharp and reasonably priced. I will add it to the post, too. On a completely cooled loaf of bread, I can get 14 really nice, thin slices of bread using it. I will confess I am in the market for a bread slicer because I am resolved to never buy sandwich bread again… that’s my goal for 2025 🙂
Hi Ali!
Eager to try this. My husband is curious how it differs from your Mother’s Peasant bread (other than shape). He makes and loves that bread. We usually toast it. Is that the difference?
By the way, that offset serrated bread knife is great for chopping chocolate, too.
Hi! I’m so happy to hear this 🙂 I love the peasant bread toasted and I love the peasant bread for sandwiches, too, especially when the sandwiches are made immediately. I don’t think the peasant bread is great for sandwiches that need to be wrapped and packed for several hours — the bread breaks down.
This bread lower in hydration than the peaant bread — 80% hydration vs 88%.
This bread is made with a mix of water and milk. This bread has the addition of melted butter, too, and no sweetener at all (though the milk will lend a subtle sweetness).
I find it hold up better for sandwiches that need to be wrapped and stored for several hours. The texture is soft, but you know how the peasant bread is almost spongy? The texture of this bread is not.
Hope that helps. Similar breads in spirit and if you are in the market for sandwich bread, go for it, but otherwise, the peasant bread is an excellent choice for toast and for warming and eating with dinner.
That is such a helpful explanation! Thank you so much. Making this new bread and the Simple Brown(ish) Bread very soon. Video help is SO good. 😘
My pleasure!
Hi! This looks amazing, can you use an AP flour like King Arthur or do you really need bread flour?
Yes, go for it! Bread flour might give you a little more loft, but ap flour will work beautifully. Just remember the dough is wet and sticky — it’s 80% hydration — and using ap flour might make for an even slightly stickier dough initially… but it firms up as it rises, and it is not unmanageable once it’s time to roll up. Go for it 🙂
Hi Ali,
I’m dairy free. I’m wondering if you think soy milk and vegan margarine will work for this bread?
Thank you,
Ann Marie
Hi Ann! I do think those options will work. Having not experimented with them, I can’t say how the bread will hold up for sandwiches several days after baking, but I think they will work in terms of achieving the initial flavor and texture.
We love the texture of this loaf, used almond milk & CountryCrock plant butter for our VG daughter. Easy to cut and perfect height.
This’ll be our new weekly loaf
I’m a big fan of a lot of your recipes. Thanks Ali, happy Sunday
Be inspired, always.
Thank you for sharing these vegan substitutions Felina! So helpful others looking to make this dairy free 🙂
This soft bread turned out well. The taste is perfect and the crumb has a nice combo of soft and chewy. I weighed everything precisely and did the fast version with one 8 oz packet of instant yeast. My dough overfilled the 5×9 loaf pan so when it rose, it hung over the edges. I found the stretch and fold not so easy to do and my dough wasn’t as dry looking as Ali’s. Overall, I’m pleased and will make this again.
This soft bread turned out well. The taste is perfect and the crumb has a nice combo of soft and chewy. I weighed everything precisely and did the fast version with one 8 oz packet of instant yeast. My dough overfilled the 5×9 loaf pan so when it rose, it hung over the edges. I found the stretch and fold not so easy to do and my dough wasn’t as dry looking as Ali’s. Overall, I’m pleased and will make this again.
Hi William! Great to hear the bread turned out well. Question for you: What type of flour are you using?
It was King Arthur and I think it was KA Bread Flour. My dough was very wet and not nice and neat like when you folded yours. Maybe it should have rested longer? I think it rested less than an hour…
A longer rest might have helped. If time permits next time, try for an hour. But it is definitely a wet and sticky dough, and it’s possible environmental factors (if you live in a humid area, for instance) could be affecting your dough as well.
I made this today with quick rise and 8 grams of yeast. It came together easily and looks, smells, and tastes delicious. It is soft yet sturdy for sandwiches, as advertised!
I am an experienced bread baker, and I weighed all of the ingredients. My trouble spot was using the fold-and-slap step: My dough never came together as such a nice, neat-looking ball dough as in the video (still wettish and shaggy looking), but it was all good in the end. The bread rose, shaped easily with the coil method, and baked up nicely.
So nice to hear this, Judi! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes. I’m glad the bread turned out well despite the dough being uncooperative at the stretch-and-fold phase. It’s definitely wet and shaggy, and perhaps given your flour/environment, the flour hadn’t absorbed the liquid enough yet to allow the slap-and-folds to successfully transform the dough. At least we know it’s forgiving!
That makes sense about the water absorption. Since I had my pellet stove running, my kitchen was quite toasty, so the dough rose quickly through all stages and probably didn’t have time to absorb the water. But still, the loaf looked nice and tasted even better. It will be my go-to white sandwich bread recipe.
Great to hear, Judi!
Hi Ali! I just made this today (started at 9 am and baked around 5pm) and sliced at 9pm as my daughter wanted a pre-bedtime snack. It is so soft and lovely! She had 2 slices with jam and I could hear her satisfied “yums”! Thank you for such an easy sandwich bread recipe! I used 3 grams instant yeast, added around 30g of sourdough discard and 15 grams of sugar as my kids like it a bit sweet. I did perform more folds (3x 30 minute intervals) and my bulk took only 4 hours. I refrigerated after I shaped it before baking.
So nice to read all of this, Tweety 🙂 Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes. Love that you were able to incorporate some sourdough discard into the dough and love that you your daughter approved 💕💕💕
Have not made this yet but it’s on my list.
You state:
Pat the dough into a rectangle roughly 8-inches in diameter — the length isn’t as important, but keeping the width to 8 inches will allow the coiled dough to fit into its loaf pan.
Suggest changing diameter to width, since you’re going with rectangle and not circle.
Edited! Thank you so much… diameter makes no sense 🙂
can you help calculate the amounts of ingredients for 4×13 pullman pan with lid, please?
Hi Olga! See Shelley’s comments below. She scaled the recipe up based on another recipe… I would give those measurements a go.
Another great recipe as always! I did the quick rise as my small humans distracted me from putting the dough together Saturday night and I wanted to try it today. Came out fantastic! Will try the slow rise next week (or sooner) once we get through this loaf. Will definitely be something I make on repeat! I love the sourdough version so was super excited to try this. I used half King Arthur bread flour and half Cairnspring Mills trailblazer bread flour. Perfection!
So nice to hear this, Kristen! Small humans are adorably distracting … so glad the quick-rise method worked well for you. Thanks for writing and sharing your notes, especially about the Cairnspring Mills flour!
This recipe is utter perfection! Your two embedded videos were so helpful! I followed the recipe exactly, using 8g of yeast and 15g for salt and I couldn’t be happier.
I can see this turning into a weekly recipe for me. I’ve always wanted to make my families sandwich bread.
Thank you!
So nice to hear this Lindsay! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes 🙂 It is such a good feeling being in a routine of making the sandwich bread for my family … hope you find your rhythm!
I made 2 loaves today. I used 5g of yeast, and proofed it accordingly. Again, it’s perfect. One for me and one for my neighbor.
So nice to hear, Lindsay! Lucky neighbor 🙂 I have a batch rising. I am determined to not buy sandwich bread!
Hi Ali,
mostly make sourdough with very varying results.
Made this one to day using my USA pullman, without the lid, and was impressed with the outcome.
Only 4 hours to oven time.
Thanks
Dennis
Great to hear, Dennis! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes/experience 🙂
I loved this bread! I did the long overnight rise and it was perfect. For me, 15g of diamond crystal kosher salt was 4.5 t and perfect.
Thank you for this!! 2 things:
1- Your thoughts the flavor/texture on the overnight rise vs the quicker rise?
2- I have been searching for a go-to yeasted sandwich bread recipe for my 13-in Pullman pan (I’d prefer to make it without the lid). I made one recently that called for 670g of flour so I scaled your recipe up based on that. Would love to know if you think this would work, and I’ll report back once I make it!
670g flour
3/4 tsp or 1tbsp instant yeast
13 – 20g salt
268g water
268g milk
76g/5.5 tbsp melted butter
Hi Shlelley! I think the difference is very subtle and I’m not sure I would be able to detect a difference between a loaf made in 4-5 hours vs one made in 24 hours, but I do think the overnight rise is slightly better.
Your scaled up version is spot on! Would love to know how it turns out for you if you give it a go… someone else is asking about this, too 🙂
Also: how tall is your pullman pan?
Thanks! Pullman Pan is USA pan 13x4x4. After looking around online more I think using your recipe x1.5 might be better (750g flour) but I’ll let you know.
OK, keep me posted! I think I actually have one of those pans from many years ago… It’s not a USA Pan but I believe it’s the same dimensions… going to dig it out of the basement now 🙂
Hi Ali! I could hardly wait for you to post this bread recipe, and I’ve got a loaf in the oven now. I have a question – do you use a thermometer to determine if it’s done, or do you go by visual cues? Just looked at my loaf and it looks done, nice and golden brown. But I’m new to bread baking so I Googled internal temp for enriched bread and found I had another 15° to go till it reached the Google AI recommended 190-195°. Just wondering what your thoughts are on this.
Hi Carol! Great to hear 🙂 I find my sandwich bread loaves are consistently done after 45 minutes at 375F, so I rarely check the temperature with these, but I do check with other loaves when I am in doubt. I always try to get my breads to roughly 205ºF before removing.
Will evaporated milk work?
Hi Kathy! Yes, definitely, but my understanding is that you’ll need to dilute it first with water: mix 100 grams of it with 100 grams of water to get your 200 grams of milk.
Thank you for taking the time to develop this recipe. It’s a winner for sure! I doubled the recipe and baked it off yesterday morning. I just made myself a ham sandwich with it and it is delightful. The bread held up so well and is sturdy but soft. I adore this one.
So nice to hear this, Regina! Thank you for writing 🙂
Hi Ali I made this sandwich bread yesterday. It is absolutely perfect. Thanks for such a wonderful recipe.🌞
So nice to hear this, Patty! Thanks for writing 🙂
This bread turned out great! It was soft and delicious. I used the fast method this time. Weighed out all the ingredients and used the full amount of salt. The time for baking was right on. The videos were really helpful. Thanks for adding them. Your recipes and hints are so easy to follow. Can’t wait to try the overnight method. This may be our go-to sandwich bread.
So nice to hear this, Lisa! Thanks so much for writing and sharing all of this 🙂
Thank you for also including Fahrenheit in the recipe. I will definitely look forward to making this recipe!
If I want to make it whole wheat, what modifications should I make?
No modifications! Keep in mind the finished loaf will not be as lofty. You could try with 50% whole wheat and 50% bread flour, then add more or less whole wheat flour the next time around depending on your results.
Hello, I made this and it is a tasty bread. Do you think I could shape the dough into smaller rounds after the 1st first to make hoagie rolls and bake? Would it require different temperature?
thanks for your site and great bread recipes.
I think you could! I would keep the temperature the same. Because of the milk, a higher temperature might cause it to brown too quickly. Let me know if you give this a go! I’d love to know how the rolls turn out 🙂
My youngest son is a chef and our first sandwich was BLT’s with feta and a mayo mix that he created. The bread is outstanding and made these sandwiches all the better! Held up so well being lightly toasted and a perfect texture. We both agreed it will be a weekly staple as it’s so simple to make! Did the short rise for lack of time, but I plan on doing the longer rise from now on. Thank you, for this recipe!!
Great to hear, Sharon! Love reading all of this. The feta-mayo mix sounds outstanding! I just made the bread doing the fast rise and honestly, I’m not sure I could taste a difference between the slow vs slow ride in a blind taste test. Thanks for writing 💕