Use These Bread Machine Tips and Tricks for Your Best Loaf Yet (2024)

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When your bread machine does the mixing, kneading, and baking, it's a breeze to make homemade breads. Follow these tips to get beautiful loaves in no time.

By

Sheena Chihak, RD

Use These Bread Machine Tips and Tricks for Your Best Loaf Yet (1)

Sheena Chihak, RD

Sheena Chihak is a registered dietitian, former food editor and current edit lead for BHG with over 17 years of writing and editing experience for both print and digital.

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Updated on August 2, 2022

Fact checked by

Marcus Reeves

Use These Bread Machine Tips and Tricks for Your Best Loaf Yet (2)

Fact checked byMarcus Reeves

Marcus Reeves is an experienced writer, publisher, and fact-checker. He began his writing career reporting for The Source magazine. His writing has appeared in The New York Times, Playboy, The Washington Post, and Rolling Stone, among other publications. His book Somebody Scream: Rap Music's Rise to Prominence in the Aftershock of Black Power was nominated for a Zora Neale Hurston Award. He is an adjunct instructor at New York University, where he teaches writing and communications. Marcus received a Bachelor of Arts degree from Rutgers University in New Brunswick, New Jersey.

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There's nothing quite like the smell of homemade bread filling your house. Sure, the whole process of kneading dough can be considered therapeutic, but what if you don't have the time to go through all the steps? Or maybe you've struggled to work with yeast to get that proper rise on that French bread recipe. No matter where you are in your bread-making journey, knowing how to make bread in a bread maker is a bit different than making simply following a regular bread recipe (though you can convert your favorite recipe to fit your machine!). We've gathered some useful info on how to get the hang of using a bread maker as well as bread machine tips for beginners to get started.

Making Bread in a Bread Machine

First and foremost, you want to get to know your specific bread machine. There are a ton of different brands that make bread machines and the newest models have a lot more tech-savvy settings than the one's from the '80s. So while it may not be the most exciting literature, go ahead and take time to read the owner's manual. This way you'll be familiar with the cycles and settings. Here are some examples of settings you might see on popular bread makers.

  • Basic: Use this all-purpose setting for most breads.
  • French: For lighter breads that use fine flour and will have a crispy exterior.
  • Gluten-Free: Since it's made with different flours, this setting is useful to get the best texture.
  • Dough: When you plan to shape, rise, and bake the bread (think pizza or cinnamon rolls) in your regular oven, choose this option. It mixes and kneads the dough and usually allows it to rise once before the cycle is complete.
  • Express: In a hurry? Amazingly, a lot of models can get your bread ready in as little as an hour from start to finish.
  • Timed-Bake or Delay Time: This setting allows you to add the ingredients to the machine but process them at a later time. Since the ingredients will be standing in the bread machine for a while, avoid using this setting for recipes that call for fresh milk, eggs, cheese, and other perishable ingredients.

Use These Bread Machine Tips and Tricks for Your Best Loaf Yet (4)

Select a Loaf Size

Often bread machine recipes list ingredient amounts for 1½-pound and 2-pound loaves. Check your owner's manual for pan capacity to select a loaf size.

  • For a 1½-pound loaf, the bread machine pan must have a capacity of 10 cups or more.
  • For a 2-pound loaf, the bread machine pan must have a capacity of 12 cups or more.

Adding Ingredients to the Bread Machine

Manufacturers usually recommend adding the liquids first, followed by dry ingredients, with the yeast going in last. This keeps the yeast away from the liquid ingredients until kneading begins. Add the ingredients according to the manufacturer's directions, even if the recipe you are using shows adding them in a different order. Select the cycle or setting listed in the recipe or according to the manufacturer's directions.

Checking the Dough

Take a peek at the dough consistency (it's totally safe to open the lid) after about the first 10 minutes of kneading. Bread dough with the correct amount of flour and liquid will form a smooth ball.

  • If the dough looks dry and crumbly or forms two or more balls, add additional liquid, 1 teaspoon at a time, until one smooth ball forms.
  • If the dough has too much moisture and does not form a ball, add additional bread flour, 1 tablespoon at a time, until a ball forms.

Keep Your Bread Fresh as Long as Possible with These Storage Tips

Bread Making Machine Tips

Based on the results of different recipes and bread machine models, here are the Better Homes & Gardens Test Kitchen's pointers for reliable results:

  • Use bread flour unless specified otherwise. The high-protein flour is specially formulated for bread baking.
  • Bring your flour to room temperature if stored in the refrigerator or freezer.
  • For breads containing whole grain flour (especially rye flour) consider adding gluten flour. This improves the texture of the loaf. Look for gluten flour at a supermarket or health food market.
  • Add the salt listed in the recipe. Salt controls the growth of yeast, which affects the rising of the dough. For those on a low sodium diet, experiment with reducing the salt a little at a time.
  • Yeast feeds on the sugar in the bread dough, producing carbon dioxide gas that makes the dough rise. The yeast needs to be fresh to work properly, so use it before the expiration date. Store yeast packages in a cool, dry place, and opened jars of yeast tightly covered in the refrigerator to ensure freshness until the expiration date on the package.
  • Keep cleanup easy by spraying the kneading paddle of the bread machine with nonstick cooking spray before adding the ingredients.
  • Immediately after removing the baked bread, fill the machine's pan with hot soapy water. (Do not immerse the pan in water.) Soak the kneading paddle separately if it comes out with the loaf of bread. Many parts are dishwasher safe, but check the manufacturer's instructions before you run it through a cycle.

Now that you know how to use a bread machine, we're thinking it's probably your new favorite appliance. Wake up to the happy smell of fresh donuts. Make some loaves to go with delicious appetizer dips. Whip up some easy pizza dough to go with your favorite toppings. The opportunities are endless.

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Use These Bread Machine Tips and Tricks for Your Best Loaf Yet (2024)

FAQs

Use These Bread Machine Tips and Tricks for Your Best Loaf Yet? ›

No baking experience is necessary to use a bread maker, and most breads consist of just five main ingredients: flour, yeast, liquid, salt, and sweetener. Simply measure your ingredients and add them in the following order: liquids, dry ingredients, yeast.

What is the best order to put ingredients in a bread machine? ›

No baking experience is necessary to use a bread maker, and most breads consist of just five main ingredients: flour, yeast, liquid, salt, and sweetener. Simply measure your ingredients and add them in the following order: liquids, dry ingredients, yeast.

How do I make my bread rise more in my bread machine? ›

The Bread Brick – the bread rose a little, but not enough:
  1. Not enough liquid – Try increasing water or milk by one to two tablespoons.
  2. Too much salt – Try decreasing salt by ¼ teaspoon.
  3. Not enough sugar – Try increasing sugar by ½ teaspoon.
  4. Not enough yeast – Try increasing yeast by ¼ to ½ teaspoon.

Why are breadmakers no longer popular? ›

Some attribute the demise of the bread machine to the fact that cooks were just disappointed by their results. Lara Pizzorno, the author of Bread Machine Baking, chalked it up to food snobs who regarded the machine as “the electric equivalent of The Bridges of Madison County” in a 1996 article in The New York Times.

When to take paddles out of bread machine? ›

Tip 3: To prevent big rips and holes in the bottom of your loaf, take the paddles out of the bucket before the loaf bakes, just before its final rise.

Can I open my bread machine while baking? ›

The cycle could be too short for the recipe causing it to be baked prematurely. If that's not the case, maybe too much heat may have escaped from the bread machine as it was baking. You should never open the cover of your machine while it is on the bake cycle.

Should I proof yeast before adding to bread machine? ›

This activation process must be done before the yeast is mixed with any of the recipe's dry ingredients. Done by dissolving the yeast granules in warm water, it will begin to foam and grow if the yeast is still alive. This proofing process is vital to ensure that the recipe works properly with active dry yeast.

What is one drawback of using a bread machine? ›

One disadvantage of using a bread maker as opposed to your hands is that the paddles are typically fixed, meaning they remain in the dough when baking, often leaving a hole in the middle of the loaf.

Is it cheaper to use a bread maker or buy bread? ›

With generic white bread, homemade only saves you about $1.00 per loaf. But for fancier artisan breads, the savings jump to $3.00–5.00+ per loaf.

What is the best flour for bread machines? ›

Generally bread flour works much better because it's made from a harder wheat than the plain flour and so it has more gluten. More gluten means it will have a better texture when it rises and bakes.

Why is my bread so dense in my bread machine? ›

Underhydrated Dough- Hydration refers to the amount of water in your dough. Dough that is too wet has a hard time rising and often spreads out. Underhydrated dough is from too little water. This will make a dry dense loaf.

Should you remove bread from bread machine pan immediately? ›

Our top tips for using a bread machine are;

When the baking cycle is finished, remove the baking pan from the machine immediately to avoid condensation.

Why did my bread sink in the middle in my bread maker? ›

The wrong bread machine setting was used.

Different settings have different time lengths for mixing, kneading & baking. The wrong setting may give the dough too much time to rise (so the dough rises higher than expected). This may result in the dough collapsing in on itself.

Do you put water or flour in breadmaker first? ›

By putting the yeast in first and the water in after the flour, this ensures that the yeast does not become active too soon. The flour is acting as a barrier.

What is the sequence of bread making? ›

Bread making involves the following steps:
  1. Mixing Ingredients. Mixing has two functions: ...
  2. Rising (fermentation) Once the bread is mixed it is then left to rise (ferment). ...
  3. Kneading. ...
  4. Second Rising. ...
  5. Baking. ...
  6. Cooling.

When choosing bread what should be listed as the first ingredients? ›

To know what's truly in a bread labeled “whole grain,” take a look at the ingredients list. The first ingredient should be “whole-grain flour” or “whole wheat flour,” Salge Blake says. If it simply says “wheat flour,” that means it's made from the lower-fiber refined grain.

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