Bread machine English muffin bread with a toasty, nooks-and-crannies texture. It’s made with simple pantry ingredients and perfect for breakfast or brunch.
If you love the toasty, slightly chewy texture of an English muffin, this bread delivers that same breakfast vibe in an easy bread machine loaf. It’s a simple pantry-staple recipe you can set and forget, and it slices beautifully for morning toast, sandwiches, and quick snacks.
Why This Recipe Works
- Uses bread flour for structure and that satisfying chew
- Nonfat dry milk supports browning and a softer crumb
- A small amount of baking soda helps create the signature English-muffin-like flavor and texture
- The basic/white bread cycle keeps the method simple and consistent
- The loaf is designed to be a great toaster bread (even if the top dips slightly)
Ingredient Substitutions
For hard-to-find items or swaps:
- Nonfat dry milk:
- Substitute: instant milk powder, whole milk powder, or buttermilk powder
- If skipping milk powder: replace some/all water with milk (texture and browning may change slightly)
- Bread flour:
- Substitute: all-purpose flour + vital wheat gluten (best texture match)
- Or use all-purpose flour alone (loaf may be a bit less chewy/structured)
- Yeast:
- Bread machine yeast, instant yeast, or active dry yeast all work (performance varies slightly).
- If using active dry, results are usually fine in most machines, especially if your machine has a warm proof stage.
- Sugar:
- Substitute: honey or maple syrup (may slightly change crumb and browning)
Ingredients (and What Each One Does)
** You can find the full recipe ingredients and instructions on the printable recipe card below.
- Water: Hydrates flour and activates yeast to build the dough structure
- Sugar: Feeds yeast and improves browning and flavor
- Salt: Controls yeast activity and strengthens dough structure
- Baking soda: Helps create that English-muffin-like flavor/texture
- Bread flour: Higher protein for chew and better rise/structure
- Nonfat dry milk: Improves softness, flavor, and browning
- Yeast: Leavens the bread and builds the loaf. I use Bread Machine [paid link] Yeast.
How to Make Bread Machine English Muffin Bread
** You can find the full recipe ingredients and instructions on the printable recipe card below.
- Add ingredients to your bread machine [paid link] pan in the order recommended by your manufacturer (many machines prefer liquids first, then dry ingredients, and yeast last).
- Choose the Basic/White cycle and start the machine.
- Check the dough early in the mix to ensure it forms a smooth, elastic ball (not too wet or too dry).
- Once baked, remove the loaf and cool before slicing for the best texture.
Recipe Tips and Tricks
- Expect the top to possibly dip: this is normal for this style and noted in the recipe.
- If the dough looks too dry during mixing, add water a teaspoon at a time.
- If the dough looks too wet, add flour a tablespoon at a time.
- Cool fully before slicing to prevent a gummy interior.
- For the best “English muffin” vibe, toast slices before serving.
Recipe Variations
- Cinnamon Toast Version: Add cinnamon (and optional raisins) for breakfast toast.
- Honey Version: Swap sugar for honey for a warmer, slightly richer flavor.
- Cheddar Herb Toast Bread: Add shredded cheddar and dried herbs for savory slices.
- Whole Wheat Blend: Replace a portion of bread flour with whole wheat flour (start small for best rise).
Serving Suggestions
- Toasted with butter and jam
- With eggs and breakfast sausage or bacon
- As a base for breakfast sandwiches
- Alongside soup or chili as a dunk-and-swipe bread
A New Life for Leftovers
- French toast (great for slightly dry slices)
- Toasted croutons for salads or soups
- Bread pudding (sweet or savory)
- Grilled sandwiches with melty cheese
Storage
- Room temperature: Store cooled bread in a bag or airtight container for 2–3 days.
- Refrigerator: Not ideal (can dry bread out faster), but acceptable if your kitchen is very warm/humid.
- Freezer: Slice, wrap well, and freeze up to 3 months. Toast slices straight from frozen.
People Often Ask (FAQs)
Why did my loaf sink on top?
This recipe notes that a sunken top can happen and still be normal for the intended texture. Make sure measurements are accurate and avoid excess liquid.
What cycle should I use?
Use the Basic/White cycle (as called out in the original recipe).
Can I use all-purpose flour instead of bread flour?
Yes, but you may lose some chew and structure. Bread flour is best for the classic texture.
Can I use instant yeast or active dry yeast?
Yes. Results vary slightly by machine and climate, but both commonly work well in bread machines.
Why is my bread gummy inside?
Most often: slicing too soon, too much liquid, or underbaking (less common in machines). Cool completely before slicing.
Final Thoughts
This bread machine [paid link] English muffin bread is a practical, pantry-staple loaf that turns everyday toast into something a little more special. It’s easy to run on the basic cycle, reliable for breakfast, and perfect for anyone who loves that classic English muffin style in sliceable form.
Bread Machine English Muffin Bread
Ingredients
1-1/2 lb Loaf size
- water: 1 1/2 cups
- sugar: 1 tbs.
- salt: 1 tsp.
- baking soda: 1/2 tsp.
- bread flour: 3 1/2 cups
- nonfat dry milk: 1/4 cup
- yeast: 2 tsp.
Instructions
- Add ingredients to your bread machine [paid link] pan in the order recommended by your manufacturer (many machines prefer liquids first, then dry, yeast last).
- Choose the Basic/White cycle and start the machine. Loaf size 1.5 lbs
- Check the dough early in the mix to ensure it forms a smooth, elastic ball (not too wet or too dry).
- Once baked, remove the loaf and cool before slicing for the best texture.
More Recipes You’ll Love
If you loved this Bread Machine [paid link] English Muffin Bread, you might also enjoy more recipes from our Bread Machine / Breakfast Collection. Looking for even more ideas? Browse our full set of recipe group boards to find your next favorite meal.
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I’m so glad to see your emails back in my inbox! You’ve been away for so long.
I’m a lazy baker and so I immediately tried this in my bread maker. My recipe came out a little more dense than the picture shows with fewer nooks and crannies but it was still a very good bread for toasting. What can I do to have more nooks and crannies?
Sounds like maybe less packed flour diring measuring or add some additional baking soda (+1/2 tsp), baking soda is what gives it the nooks and crannies.
What size bread…one or one and a half pound?
Hi Uma,
It’s a large 1.5 lb loaf starting with 3.5 cups of flour.