This Sally Lunn bread is a sweet and savory bread that comes together quickly and easily with a few special tricks in the dough. This is a bread dough that you do not need to knead on your countertop. It is sweet, easy, and tastes absolutely delicious with butter and homemade jam!It is the perfect bread that can be made in less time and still have the texture and flavor that we all love to eat. This bread is special from the start to the end! You will love how fun this is to make, and will see the difference between Sally Lunn bread and other homemade bread alike.

What is Sally Lunn Bread?

A Sally Lunn-type bread is a sweet bread similar to a brioche or a teacake. This recipe goes back centuries, to the 1700s when it is believed to have originated in the spa town of Bath in southwest England. However, details surrounding how it came to be are a bit unknown. One theory is that this recipe got its name from the title “Soleil et lune” which is French for “sun and moon”, representing the golden crust and fluffy white interior of the bread. The Sally Lunn Eating House in Bath, England claims the recipe was brought to the region in the late 1600s by a refugee named Solange Luyon, who became known as Sally Lunn. We aren’t sure which theory to believe, but we know this: Sally Lunn bread is scrumptious and we love it!

Sally Lunn Bread Ingredients

There are a few more ingredients compared to other homemade bread, but this is what makes this bread stand out and apart from the rest. It is simple to make with just the right amount of sweetness to make this bread even better! See the few ingredients and ways this Sally Lunn bread is a little different than your traditional homemade bread recipe.

Hot milk – It sounds different, but this recipe calls for warming the milk to about 120 degrees Fahrenheit. Place your liquid measuring cup in the microwave or heat on the stovetop until warm enough. You can use a meat or candy thermometer to check the temperature. Butter – In a saucepan, your butter will melt and break down in the milk and sugar. Sugar – Added in for sweetness and will be melted together in the liquid milk mixture. Salt – This helps the bread rise and gives it structure and blends the flavors together. Dry yeast – Use active dry yeast to help this Sally Lunn bread rise. Warm water – Mix this with the yeast to help activate the bread dough. Eggs – Eggs are a great agent that helps the dough rise and helps soak in the liquid, giving it that spongy texture. White flour – Bread needs flour in order to stretch the dough and add it for thickness.

How to Make Sally Lunn Bread

No need to knead this bread! It’s so easy to make. All you do is stir together ingredients, let it rise, then bake! You can even let it rise right in your baking pan, or transfer it from a bowl to a pan, whichever method you prefer.

Suggestions for this Recipe

This is buttery with a hint of sweet flavor and is soft and spongey. This is known to be a large bun or tea cake that is loved by all. Here are a few suggestions and tips to help make this sweet bread even better!

Baking pan – You will need to use an oversized/large loaf pan, like a Pullman loaf or tube pan. This is not the same normal bread dough and the dough will spill over. Use a special bread pan and not a regular loaf pan, unless you use less batter bread. Loaves – We always bake this recipe into a loaf, but you can bake them into roll form or mini bread loaves. Jam – Serve this bread with butter, honey, honey butter, and jam. We love this Fresh and Easy Strawberry Jam or this Raspberry Peach Freezer Jam recipe. Slicing bread – When slicing bread, use a serrated knife to make a clean and easy cut each time. French toast – Use this bread to make french bread. It is sweeter and thicker with sponge-like bread that is great for making french toast and soaking in the cinnamon flavor.

Storing and Freezing Homemade Sally Lunn Bread

Sally Lunn bread usually doesn’t last that long. If you are lucky enough to have leftovers, place the uncut or sliced bread into a ziplock bag or an airtight container for up to a week or if the bread begins to harden.

Freezing – Sally Lunn Bread freezes beautifully! Freeze tightly covered or in a freezer-safe bag and it’ll stay nice and fresh in the freezer for a couple of months. Frozen slices – For even more ease you can slice the loaf and then freeze it. Then all you have to do is pull out a couple of slices at a time, toast them up, and enjoy with a slather of butter and jam.

More of our Favorite Bread Recipes

Most of our meals just don’t feel complete without a side of warm, fluffy rolls or bread. Bread in general can be scary to make, but it really is a simple process for each recipe. Here are a few of our very favorite bread recipes to try!

How to Make Sally Lunn Bread

Honey Wheat Bread Recipe

Caramel Monkey Bread

Homemade Banana Bread

Irish Soda Bread

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