This is the BEST easy homemade bread recipe that’s simple to make with super soft and tender results. A slice of this fluffy white bread is perfect for sandwiches and freezes well.

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Easy Bread Recipe
There really is nothing better than a warm slice of homemade bread with butter and strawberry jam on top. I learned to make this bread recipe when I was 12 and have been making it ever since. The evaporated milk is the secret. It adds the best flavor and that perfectly tender texture.
Don’t let yeast intimidate you, this bread is foolproof. There’s nothing better than a warm loaf of homemade bread with dinner, or sliced for a sandwich at lunch. Once you’ve made this one, try my homemade French bread, artisan bread, sourdough bread, or no knead bread, too.
“I tried various recipes when I decided to make homemade bread for my family instead of buying it from the store. This one is by far the best! The loaves are soft and fluffy every time. The whole family enjoys it and my kids say it tastes better than store bought. I use regular milk and it turns out perfect.”
Ingredients

Find the full printable recipe with specific measurements below.
- Warm water: The water temperature is key. If it’s too hot, it will kill the yeast. I like to keep it around 105°F.
- Active dry yeast: You’ll need about 2 1/2 teaspoons for two loaves. Check the expiration date, old yeast won’t rise. This recipe uses commercial yeast, not sourdough starter.
- Granulated sugar: This adds the perfect sweetness.
- Butter: The butter adds the perfect flavor.
- Salt: The salt will bring all the flavors together.
- Evaporated milk: This is the secret ingredient that really adds the perfect flavor and tenderness. You can substitute with 2% or whole milk if needed.
- Flour: I’ve made this recipe with bread and all-purpose flour, both will work well. Be careful not to add too much, add slowly at the end.
Variations
- Cinnamon swirl bread: Your family will love the cinnamon sugar swirl!
- Raisin bread: Follow the cinnamon swirl bread instructions and add up to 2 cups raisins.
- Whole wheat flour bread: I love to make this variation to use with avocado toast.
- Homemade bread bowls: These are perfect for soup, dips and more!
How To Make Homemade Bread
Follow these step by step instructions and tips on how to form your homemade bread for best results.

- Proof the yeast: Let the yeast bubble up in warm water. You want the yeast mixture to be foamy and dissolved before you add to the flour.
- Mix together: Add a little more flour and keep mixing until the dough comes off the edge of the mixer. You know it’s done when your finger no longer sticks to the dough.
- First rise: While you’re letting the dough rise, cover the bowl with a warm towel and set by a window. You can also turn the oven to 175°F and then turn it off. Then place the bowl inside the oven and let it rise there. Make sure the dough has doubled in size before touching it.
- Shape the dough: When the dough is ready to be formed, punch the dough and then cut in half to make two loaves on a lightly floured surface. Press the dough down removing any air bubbles and start kneading for a couple minutes. Form a loaf and tuck the ends under.
- Second rise: Stick the two loves in bread pans and then let the dough rise until it has doubled in size or formed the perfect size bread.
- Bake: Then it’s ready to bake! Bake until golden brown and then butter the tops.

Expert Tips
- Weather affects the dough: Humidity can make dough sticky. Add flour 1/4 cup at a time until it no longer sticks to the mixer or your finger.
- Temperature affects the rise: A cool house slows the rise. In winter I warm the oven 2-3 minutes, turn it off, and let the dough rise inside.
- Use a thermometer: A thermometer takes the guesswork out of the water temp. It should feel like warm bath water, around 105°F.
- A stand mixer helps: You can knead by hand, but a stand mixer with a dough hook saves real time and effort.
- Cover with a towel: Use a flour sack towel over the bowl while the dough rises.
- Bread pans: Makes two loaves, so you’ll need two 8×4″ bread pans. Ceramic, glass, or cast iron work too. For one loaf, halve the ingredients.
- Bread machine: I haven’t tried it, but readers have had success. Follow your machine’s directions for ingredient order, and adjust for instant yeast. Cut ingredients in half to make one loaf.

Ways to Use Homemade Bread
Use your bread in some of these favorite recipes!
- To make a buttery grilled cheese sandwich.
- Toasted with chicken salad or egg salad on top.
- For breakfast as french toast or french toast sticks.
If you have leftover bread that has gone a little hard, don’t pitch it! It’s perfect for making homemade croutons, breadcrumbs, crockpot stuffing or overnight French toast casserole. It’s a great way to stretch the bread even further.

Love homemade bread recipes? Try these other favorites such as naan bread, dinner rolls or these easy breadsticks!
More Homemade Bread Recipes

Homemade Bread Recipe
Video
Equipment
- 2 8×4-inch bread pans
Ingredients
Proofing Yeast
- 2 ½ teaspoons active dry yeast
- ½ Tablespoon granulated sugar
- 2 cups warm water , at 105°F
Bread
- ¼ cup (57 g) melted butter , plus 1 Tablespoon for brushing on top
- ¼ cup (50 g) granulated sugar
- ½ cup (133 g) evaporated milk , or room temp milk
- 2 teaspoons salt , or 1 Tablespoon kosher salt
- 6-7 cups (850 g) bread flour , or all-purpose flour
- 1 Tablespoon butter
For serving: Butter and Jam
Instructions
Proofing the Yeast
- In a small bowl, add the yeast and sugar. Pour the warm water over the yeast mixture and let it sit 5 to 10 minutes, or until nice and bubbly. If it doesn't foam, toss it and start over. The water was either too hot or the yeast was not fresh (check the expiration date to be sure it isn't old).
Bread
- In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment, mix together the butter, sugar, evaporated milk, and salt on medium low. Mix in the yeast mixture just until combined.
- Swap out the paddle attachment for a dough hook. With the mixer on low, add 3 cups flour until combined. Add 1 cup flour at a time and stir until combined. After adding a total of 6 cups flour, add 1/4 cup flour at a time until the dough is no longer sticking to the sides. Then knead 3-5 minutes. It’s ready when the dough is soft and no longer sticky.
- Lightly coat the ball of dough and the sides of the bowl with cooking spray or a little oil to prevent sticking. Cover the bowl with a warm towel. Set by a window and let rise 1 hour, or until doubled in size. When it has risen over the bowl, punch it down, and transfer to a floured surface.
- Spray 2 8×4-inch bread pans with nonstick cooking spray.
- Knead the dough 2 to 3 minutes. Cut into 2 equal pieces. Using a rolling pin, roll one piece into a rectangle. Starting at the shorter side, roll the dough up and tuck the ends under. Place into a bread pan. Repeat with the remaining piece.
- Preheat oven to 375°F and place the rack in the middle of the oven.
- Let the loaves rise until double in size, about 45 minutes, while oven preheats. Bake 25 to 35 minutes, or until golden on top and cooked through to 185°F in the center. If the tops are browning too fast, tent the top with foil.
- Remove from the pans to a cooling rack. Brush the tops with butter. Slice once slightly cooled. Enjoy with butter and jam, if desired.
Last step: Please leave a comment and rating after you make the recipe.
Notes
Nutrition
Nutrition provided is an estimate. It will vary based on specific ingredients used.

Holly
I made a batch of this bread today, one half i made a loaf,the other half I made a pan of dinner rolls.. dinner rolls only had to bake for 15 min. The finished product turned out amazing ! Thank you so much.. <3
B
Hi. I’ve never made bread before. Sorry if this question sounds silly. Is it 375 degrees Celsius or Fahrenheit?
I Heart Naptime
Fahrenheit :)
Sian Leitz
Have you ever just let your dough rise in your KitchenAid mixer Bowl?
I Heart Naptime
I do the first rise in the KitchenAid mixer bowl. :)
Sian
I love this bread! It is amazing! I love it so much that I share it with others and therefore I have to make it often. :-)
With that said, I had a question. I have a KitchenAid Pro 5-quart mixer. Do you think it would be able to handle two batches of the bread at one time? I asked, because I have noticed in your other recipes that you also use a KitchenAid mixer. I wondered if you had ever tried a double batch.
I Heart Naptime
I haven’t! I would be concerned that it would get too full… if you try, let me know how it works out!
Aimee
Is there a way to make this into a roll recipe?
I Heart Naptime
Instead of shaping it in bread pans, you can shape it into rolls! Cook until done – I’d start checking around 20 minutes or so. :)
Joyce Bunncant
Can’t wait!
Cathyann
Love your bread recipe it looks very easy to make by hand since I don’t have a mixer, definitely will try soon
Silvia
Thank you so much for the recipe. Great instructions. First time making any kind of bread at all and it turned out sooooo fantastic!!! Definitely a keeper, specially since hubby loved it.
Mykel Severson
So you don’t knead this bread? Just mix and let it raise??
I Heart Naptime
Correct!
DreaD
OMG thank you for this recipe. My husband and I were craving homemade bread this past weekend and I just had the motivations n to make some last night. BEST recipe ever!!! My mom made a beautiful homemade bread when I was a child but now that I’m grown up..always wanted to learn how t make it myself. Love love this recipe. I’ve marked it as one of my favorites
MARY DUMONT
Thank you thank you. Love this bread. My bread always fell apart this holds and the taste is amazing.
Kathi
I love bread!
Amanda G
Could this be made without the added sugar? I tend to not like bread that has any sweetness to it (like Hawaiian rolls… Ick!). I’d like to try this, but I know I won’t like it if it tastes sweet.
I Heart Naptime
Hi Amanda!
I haven’t tried it without the added sugar – you can certainly try, but it’s possible that the chemistry of the bread would be thrown off (especially since it helps feed the yeast).
Rina tanedo
?
Jerry
My wife and several members cannot eat wheat products as they are allergic.
I was wondering this recipe would work if we substituted “Bob’s Red Mill one to one Gf flour One to One flour”?
We see so many awesome recipes out there and she never gets to eat them anymore. This looked like on of the easiest recipes out there and the best I’ve seen in a long time. I’m hoping it’ll work but as you know all gf flours are insanely expensive.
Please let me know. It’d be nice if all recipes had gf versions next to them but I know that is not going to happen. I haven’t found one true good airy moist bread gf recipe on any other site or book. We’ve tried several.
Thank you, I look forward to your response.
I Heart Naptime
Hi Jerry, I’m Laura, the community manager, I have a sever wheat allergy and have been gluten-free for over 12 years. I can tell you, substituting gluten-free flour in this recipe will NOT work. Yeasted gluten-free baked items are a completely different chemistry than yeasted items using wheat.
I’m not familiar with Bob’s Red flour that you speak of (because they put things in the flour that my kids are allergic to), so I cannot speak the chemistry of that. I use King Arther Flour Gluten-Free Multi-Purpose Flour (it must be multi-purpose, not the all purpose). It’s equal cup for cup in baked items (that do not contain yeast).
For cakes and muffins, I add one teaspoon of xantham gum for every cup of flour. For brownies and cookies, I add one-half a teaspoon of xantham gum for every cup of flour.
Here’s a quick list of recipes I can guarantee will work using this method:
http://www.iheartnaptime.net/apple-muffins/
http://www.iheartnaptime.net/cranberry-orange-chocolate-chip-bread/
http://www.iheartnaptime.net/cream-cheese-filled-pumpkin-bread/
http://www.iheartnaptime.net/apricot-yogurt-muffins/
http://www.iheartnaptime.net/orange-muffins/
KELE DOBSON
I have milnot milk on hand, it’s a ‘filled’ evaporated milk. Will that work rather than the regular evaporated milk? I’d rather not go to the store if I don’t need to.
I Heart Naptime
I’m afraid I don’t know what that is, so I cannot say definitely if it would work. The chemistry of it sounds different than evaporated milk.
maryann demuynck
Will this recipe work in bread machine if cut in half?
I Heart Naptime
I haven’t tried, but I can’t think of any reason why not!
As anyone tried before?
Gem
No egg? ? Just curious what will hold the bread together?
I Heart Naptime
The yeast! :)
Most yeasted breads do no contain eggs.