Milk & Honey Whole Wheat Bread
Milk & Honey Whole Wheat Bread is the perfect sandwich loaf. This easy whole wheat bread recipe makes a soft and slightly sweet bread that you’ll love.

Why you’ll love this recipe
With it’s soft texture, hint of honey and hearty whole wheat flavor, Milk & Honey Whole Wheat Bread tastes fantastic and will keep fresh for several days.
You can start the dough the night before and finish the bread in the morning to have fresh bread for lunch.
If you’ve got a sourdough starter, you can make Whole Wheat Sourdough Sandwich Bread.
Ingredients

Ingredient Notes
- Yeast – I prefer dry active yeast to rapid rise yeast for a slower rise time and better flavor.
- Bread Flour has a high protein content. Higher protein means better gluten development.
- Whole Wheat Flour does not have quite as much of the gluten forming properties of bread flour. Using a combination of whole wheat and bread flour makes a loaf that has great whole grain flavor, yet rises tall in the oven. You can adjust the proportion of wheat vs. bread flour to make a loaf to your liking.
- Milk – Scalding denatures (breaks down) proteins in the milk which can interfere with gluten development.
- Honey – Adds wonderful flavor, enhances browning and makes the crumb soft and slightly sweet.
- Salt – For flavor.
- Sesame Seeds – For crunch and flavor on the crust.
How to make Milk & Honey Whole Wheat Bread
See the recipe card for detailed measurements and instructions.

- Combine the water, yeast and some of the flour to form a “sponge”.
- Set it aside for 30-60 minutes.

- While the sponge is rising, scald the milk.
- Set the milk aside to cool to 100F.

- Add the rest of the ingredients to the sponge.
- The dough will start out quite rough and sticky.
- Continue kneading until the dough begins to gather on the hook and pulls away from the sides of the bowl.

- Place the dough in an oiled bowl, turning once to coat the dough. Cover and set aside in a warm spot.
- Allow the dough to double in volume before shaping.

- Pat the dough into a rectangle.
- Roll the dough to a log.
- Set it into a lightly greased loaf pan

- Cover the pan and set aside in a warm spot.
- The bread is ready to bake when it’s about doubled in volume and fills up the pan. If you poke the dough the dent should slowly fill-in. If the dough springs right back it’s not quite ready.

How to work ahead
- You can start your bread a day ahead. Start mixing the dough late in the afternoon or early evening.
- Make the dough up until the point that it goes into the pan.
- Cover the pan with plastic wrap and allow it to rise slowly in the refrigerator overnight.
- The next morning, take the loaf out of the refrigerator. It should have risen to fill the pan over night.
- Leave the loaf at room temperature while the oven preheats. If it hasn’t risen enough, give it a little extra time at room temperature to finish rising.
Storage
Whole Wheat Sandwich Bread stays fresh at room temperature for 2-3 days. The bread (sliced or whole) can be frozen for up to a month.

More great sandwich breads
If you love this recipe as much as I do, I’d really appreciate a 5-star review.
Milk & Honey Whole Wheat Bread
Ingredients
- 6 ounces warm water (¾ cup)
- 2 ¼ teaspoons dry yeast (1 packet)
- 10 ounces bread flour (2 cups, see note)
- 8 ounces whole milk (1 cup)
- 1 ½ ounces honey (2 tablespoons)
- 1 ½ teaspoons table salt
- 7 ½ ounces whole wheat flour (1 ½ cups)
- 1 egg for egg wash
- Sesame seeds for garnish (optional)
Instructions
- In the bowl of a stand mixer or in a large mixing bowl, combine 6 ounces warm water, 2 ¼ teaspoons dry yeast and ½ cup (2 ½ oz) of the bread flour to form a smooth batter. Cover the bowl and allow the mixture to rise for ½ hour. Warm 8 ounces whole milk until scalding hot then set it aside to cool until it is slightly warmer than body temperature.
- Add the scalded milk, 1 ½ ounces honey and 1 ½ teaspoons table salt to the sponge. Stir to combine.
- Add 7 ½ ounces whole wheat flour and another ½ cup of the bread flour. Stir until the batter looks like thick pancake batter. If using a stand mixer, switch to the dough hook.
- With the mixer running, add the rest of the bread flour, Knead until the dough gathers on the hook and clears the sides of the bowl, 4-5 minutes. If mixing by hand, add as much of the flour as you can in the bowl then finish kneading in the rest of the flour by hand.
- Dump the dough onto a lightly floured surface. Knead to form a smooth ball. If the dough is very sticky sprinkle a little more flour as you knead.
- Place the dough in an oiled bowl, turning once to coat the dough. Cover and set aside in a warm spot to rise for about 1-1 ½ hours until doubled in size.
- Preheat the oven to 350 °F. Grease a 9"x5" loaf pan with a very light film of vegetable oil or with baking spray.
- Turn the dough out onto a floured surface. Without kneading out the air, gently push the dough to a 9"x12" rectangle. Tightly roll the dough from top to bottom to form a log shape. As you roll pinch the ends of the dough to form a tight roll.
- Set the dough into the pan and cover with oiled plastic wrap. Set in a warm place and rise until the dough almost doubles in size, about 1 hour.
- Use a sharp knife or razor to cut a ½" deep slash down the center of the loaf. Brush the dough with egg wash and sprinkle with seeds.
- Bake about 30-35 minutes until golden brown and the interior temp is about 200 °F.
- Cool in the pan about 5 minutes before turning out onto a cooling rack. Cool to room temperature before slicing.
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I’ve just baked this bread a second time. The first time was a little chaotic – the kneading, baking time, etc all had to be adjusted as I had never baked whole wheat bread before but it came pretty decent.
This time around, everything went well – I overnight proved it and I just took it out of the oven. Waiting for it to cool down so I can have a slice (or two) for breakfast. Thanks for the recipe – it’s a keeper!
Wow! I have been making artisan sourdough for years and my family just wanted some sandwich bread. This turned out perfect! This is now my go to recipe. Excellent instructions and so tasty. Thank you!
Thanks! There’s also a Sourdough version of this bread. You might also like the Sourdough White Sandwich Bread too.
Love this bread! I just finished baking 2 loaves because making just one keeps me in the kitchen when I need to get out to the garden. How do I start it the night before to finish it before lunch? Thank you!
I would make the dough in the evening and let it go through the first rise. Shape the bread and put it into the pan. Cover the pan and refrigerate overnight. Remove from the fridge in the morning. It may already be risen by then and you can go ahead and bake. If it’s doesn’t rise enough in the fridge overnight leave it at room temp to finish rising and then bake. It should be done by lunch.
@Eileen Gray,
Thank you so much!
I make at least 3 loaves this bread every week. My family loves it❣️
Mine too!
Love this bread! I always make the sponge with everything except the bread flour and add it after the sponge has risen. Have not needed the full 2 cups of bread flour yet. Always comes out beautifully and tastes amazing!
I just made a loaf of this the other day and it was gone in no time.
Like many others, I had to add A LOT of extra bread flour and ultimately I gave up on the dough because I thought that I must have done something wrong despite being very careful about weighing the flour and following directions precisely. I wish I would have read these comments before tossing out the dough. 🙁
I gave this a second try with some modifications. Since my first dough was very wet and sticky even with the addition of extra flour, I started off the second batch with 1/2 C water rather than 3/4. I also used whole wheat flour for the sponge. I ended up with a great loaf!