This recipe for Honey Whole Wheat Bread is the best sandwich bread recipe. I’ve been using it for so many years, and I get emails from readers quite often who tell me that this is the best Honey Whole Wheat Bread recipe. I first published this recipe back in 2012, but I’m bringing it to the forefront today so you don’t miss this perfect bread recipe!
Watch the video showing you how to make this Honey Whole Wheat Bread, then scroll to the bottom of this post and print out the recipe so you can bake it at home.
The story behind this Honey Whole Wheat Bread recipe:
Before food blogs were popular, I visited food blog forums- places on the internet where you can discuss recipes and food. It’s where I became “RecipeGirl,” really… since that just happened to be the name I chose for my identity on those forums. I learned so much from people in those forums- home cooks, emerging bloggers and cookbook authors too. If you posed a question on those forums, members would openly share feedback, give recommendations and share their great grandmother’s secret recipes. It was a fun place to be.
Sadly, the forums no longer exist. The bread I’m sharing today is a recipe that a gentleman named “Pete” on Cooking.com’s forum gave me many years ago. Pete gave me permission to share the recipe he had been using for 40+ years! We lost Pete a few years ago, but I’m happy to let his famous bread recipe live on! I’ve been using this recipe since he gave it to me, and it’s now my go-to, homemade Honey Whole Wheat Bread.
Let me just state for the record that I’m not a very experienced bread baker. I haven’t made a zillion different kinds of loaves, and I usually look to the experts for recipes and advice. But this guy Pete… he gave me a good recipe that is easy to follow.
Tips for Making the Best Honey Whole Wheat Bread:
- When I make bread, I always make sure I have freshly purchased flour (I used the bread flour in combination with whole wheat flour). It makes a difference. You can make the dough by hand if you want to (mix and knead yourself), but if you have a stand mixer with a dough hook… it will do all of the work for you!
- Use freshly purchased yeast too. There is no “proofing the yeast” in this recipe. Just mix, let it knead and then shape it into a round to let rise.
The round of dough is placed into a bowl, which is set in a warm place with a clean dishtowel on top. Just let it rise until it’s about doubled.
The dough is divided in half and rolled into rectangles.
Then, here’s the funny part: you roll it up just like you roll up cinnamon roll dough. No kiddin’.
Then you wiggle it into a 9×5-inch bread pan. Cover it again- warm place and let it rise…
…until it has risen about an inch above the pan. Then bake it!
This Honey Whole Wheat Bread is the best sandwich bread recipe. And since there tend to be so many preservatives in those commercial brands, you can feel good about eating this bread homemade and feeding it to your family too.
P.S. Don’t be afraid of trying to bake your own bread. As I mentioned before… I’m not a bread baker! Just follow the instructions and try it out. You’ll be surprised how easy it is!
Here are a few more bread recipes you might enjoy:
- White Sandwich Bread
- Delicious Gluten-Free Bread
- Homemade Bread Bowls
- Crockpot Bread Baking
- Cinnamon Swirl Bread
Honey Whole Wheat Bread
Ingredients
- 2 cups whole wheat flour
- 4 cups bread flour (more, as needed)
- 2 tablespoons granulated white sugar
- 1½ teaspoons salt
- Two .25-ounce packets active dry yeast
- 1/4 cup honey
- 1 2/3 cups water
- 2/3 cup 1% milk
- 1/4 cup (1/2 stick) unsalted butter
- additional flour, as needed
Instructions
- In a large mixing bowl, whisk together the the whole wheat flour, 4 cups bread flour, sugar, salt and yeast.
- In a medium bowl, combine honey, milk, water and butter, and heat to between 105 and 110 degrees in the microwave.
- Stir the liquids to melt the butter and add, all at once, to the dry ingredients in the mixer bowl.
- With the dough hook installed on your stand mixer, mix the dough. Add more bread flour by the tablespoon, as needed, until the dough comes together and clears the bowl. Mix for 5 minutes with the dough hook and remove to a lightly floured counter surface.
- Knead by hand until no longer sticky, adding flour as necessary. Form the dough into a large round and place in a large, greased bowl.
- Cover the bowl with plastic wrap or a clean dish towel, let rise in a warm place for 30 minutes (or until about doubled in size). Remove the dough from the bowl and divide it in half. Roll each half into a 10 x 12 rectangle and roll each up like a cigar. Pinch the seams. Roll on the counter-top to make a uniform log and place each roll in an oiled 9x5-inch bread pan seam-side up. Shake the roll to oil the bottom, turn the pan over, catch the dough and reinsert it into the pan, seam-side-down.
- Return the pan to a warm place, cover lightly with a clean dishtowel and let rise an additional 30 minutes or until at least 1 inch above the pan top. Bake in a preheated 400°F. oven for 25 minutes, or until the center of the bread tests 190 to 200 degrees. Remove the bread from the pans and let them cool on a rack.
Notes
- If you don't have a stand mixer, you can mix and then knead the bread by hand. It'll be a bit of a workout, but it's worth it.
- To create a nice, warm place for your loaves to rise, turn on oven for 60 seconds and then turn it off. Turn the oven light on too. The temperature should be just about right for your loaves to rise nicely. (don't forget to turn off the oven!)
- Want a buttery component to it? Brush butter onto the top of the loaf as soon as it comes out of the oven. Let it soak into the loaf, then remove the loaf from the pan to cool.
- If you do not plan to consume both loaves right away, they freeze beautifully. Wrap loaf with foil as soon as it comes out of the oven- just foil, nothing else- the wrapping-while-hot trick retains the moisture so when thawed it's very fresh tasting.
- Over-kneading and adding too much flour may result in a drier, denser loaf. Be careful.
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
I have never made bread before I gave this recipe a try, now my whole family is hooked! Even my extended family is asking for me to make them bread since it is so much better than store bread. We typically cannot finish an entire loaf so I have started cutting them in half after they have cooled and then freezing. Thank you for sharing this wonderful recipe Lori!
I got my issue figured out. My dough was too dry, I increased the liquid mixture in my dough and it worked out perfectly. I probably could’ve cut down on the flour as well.
I noticed the comment on the half loaf, I made this as a half recipe and had pretty good luck. I basically just used exactly half of the quantities in the ingredients.
Thank you so much for the recipe. I have been trying and trying to make my own bread. This is my 5th recipe I have tried and so far it’s the closest to sandwich bread that we have come up with. My husband really enjoyed it.. only one problem, when we got to the middle of the loaf there was a major hole in the bread. I rolled the dough out and rolled it like a cinnamon bun, could it be that i didn’t roll tight enough? Have you ever had that happen?
Not quite sure!
I made this last week and it turned out beautifully. We could eat that much bread in one week though and I don’t have the freezer space to store a second loaf. I tried cutting the recipe in half today but didn’t quite get that same beautiful loaf. Any suggestions for just making a half batch?
Hi Emily, I haven’t tried a half batch!
I made this today and while the overall appearance, taste and smell of the bread is wonderful I simply can not get the bread to rise enough to be useful as sandwich bread. The loaf had a second rise that was about 1 inch above the pan in the middle but seemed to shrink a bit when baking. I have tried for weeks now with different recipes to get a good load worthy of sandwich bread but can’t seem to get a good rise in the finished product.
I followed this recipe exactly and allowed about 2 hours for the final rise before baking. I have also tried all freshly purchased ingredients, including yeast.
What are some tips I could try to get a better rising bread?
Also, I heard that metal materials cause the yeast to deactivate which impact the rise of the bread, is there any truth to this?
Hi Jon,
I’m not sure why so much trouble- I make this bread regularly without trouble- I always use the glass pan.
When I learned how to make this recipe and the dough fell moving it into the oven, I learned I hadn’t kneaded the bread long enough or well enough. One YouTube video demonstrated
you can’t really overknead but without enough gluten strands built up from kneading, there’s no structure to support the dough and it falls, even after it rises 1 inch above the pan.
Made it. Tastes good. First rise went acourding to plan, but the second rise took 1.5 hourse. Did not like the way the loaves formed. The were over the top of the pan, but did not fill the pan completely liek in the image.
Also the bread seemed to shrink a bit while cooking instead of rising more.
Might try a different method for forming the loaves next time.
Looks good. I am going to make this today.
I made this yesterday. We loved it and so easy to make. No more grocery store bread for us.
I am going to make this recipe this weekend. It will be my second time making bread, the first one was a no-knead one that turned out pretty good. Since we are not really big bread eaters in my house and we only like honey wheat I wanted to try my hand at homemade that way I can do smaller loaves that won’t get wasted. Anyway…does it have to be Gold Metal flours or will any brand work? I am not sure if there is a difference in different brands of flour.
yes, any brand will work! GM is the brand that I choose to use most of the time.
I am so looking forward to making this! Looks amazing! Will it come out alright if I use regular flour instead of bread flour?
No- it won’t be the same. Use bread flour!