The Best Homemade White Bread
The Best Homemade White Bread. Bread baking is on the rise because nothing says home baked comfort food goodness like a perfectly baked crusty loaf of homemade bread, fresh from the oven. This recipe is well over 40 years old and turns out perfectly every time.

New! Updates on using bread flour and cold proofing overnight have been added to the recipe notes.
Originally published January 2008.
When I think of Newfoundland baking, the first thing that comes to mind is homemade bread rising high above large bread pans in 2 or 3 bun loaves. As a child of the 60's and 70's in Newfoundland, it was still the rule rather than the exception to find homemade bread in many homes.
The women in my extended family all still made homemade bread during my childhood.
With freezers in most homes by that point, though, daily bread baking was no longer necessary. Still many baked at least once or twice a week.

Who made the best homemade white bread?
Debates within the family were common on the topic of who made the best bread. A good deal of pride was taken in the ability to turn out a good batch.
...I always liked my moms twin sister, Aunt Moo's (Muriel), the best. 😉
Some senior ladies with large families of 10 or more children have told me numerous stories over the years. Stories of baking large batches of 8, 10, 12 or more loaves every day. Plus
twice on Saturdays so as to avoid baking on a Sunday.
It was hard work back then keeping all of those kids fed. I don't think most would be up to the task these days.

Nan's Homemade White Bread loaves were huge!
The loaves seemed much larger in those days and not just because I was much smaller! I've seen some pretty big bread pans used in my time.
I remember it was necessary to trim the side off a slice of Nan Morgan's bread just to get it in her drop down side toaster. That's the old fashioned kind that only toasted on one side and you had to turn the slice over to toast the other side.
Coming from a large family myself, the second side was almost never toasted. That's because it would have taken too long to make toast for all of our tribe.
I must have been about 10 before I had bread toasted on both sides. LOL!

One of the things we all enjoyed back when I was growing up was thick slices of fresh bread topped with jam and Fussels canned cream. Now that I think of it, that was very much like what the British do with scones.
Nowadays I sometimes make Homemade Clotted Cream which is just amazing too!

I still adore it to this day. Most recently I had it with our Partridgeberry Apple Jam. It definitely brought me strait back to childhood.
Keeping a tradition alive.
It is now much more of a rarity to find families who bake bread on a regular basis. However, I have tried to keep that tradition as part of my own family life.

I have been baking bread with my own children since they have been able to stand on chairs at the table and knead their own little balls of dough.
They still love making it and my son in particular cannot go more than a few days without his fix of homemade bread. Although we try to encourage more whole grain varieties these days. Still, he'd take plain homemade white bread over any other kind.

Homemade White Bread in smaller batches.
These days we make much smaller batches in much smaller bread pans, usually no more than a couple of loaves at a time. Often, I now prefer to use disposable aluminum loaf pans that make more toaster friendly sized slices.
Recently I've acquired some very nice narrower, longer pans that make ideal sized slices. It much less likely to over bake your bread in aluminum pans as they do not carry the heat as much as heavier pans.

Recently, I received an email request for a good basic homemade bread recipe from a young Newfoundlander living in Alberta. She wanted a recipe for "real Newfoundland Homemade bread."
I don't know that such a thing definitively exists. But, I can give you the recipe that I have been using myself with slight evolutions for over 30 years.
So go make bread and share it. You're bound to make someone happy.

Don't forget the toutons!!
There is no way to talk about making homemade bread in Newfoundland without mentioning one thing. The joys of one of the province's favourites, Toutons!
If you've never tried these pan fried pieces of leftover bread dough, you are in for a serious treat. I talk all about Toutons in this post.

Measuring flour correctly.
It is easy to over measure flour for any recipe by as much as 30% or more as you can see in the photo below. Both are one cup of flour but one weighs much more. Read more on how to avoid this common baking pitfall in our post on How to Measure Flour Correctly.

2020 update on an often asked question.
Many people have asked about the shape of the loaves we bake here in Newfoundland. I do not have a definitive answer for the reason for a 3 bun loaf, although we mostly made 2 bun loaves when I as growing up.
I've been told there is a connection to the Holy Trinity, and was a way of blessing the loaf so that it would rise well. I know many traditional bakers who would make the sign of the cross over the bread when it was set out to rise. So, this does make sense to me.
Others say it's so that there will be more "love slices" or "kissing slices". Those are the slices cut from where the dough balls meet.
The crust on these slices is a little softer from being in that slightly sheltered crater between the individual loaf sections. In may families they were always the preferred slices. I know a few families where the kids always fought over them.
Whatever the reason, it seems to be a particular baking quirk from this part of the world. Try it. You may begin fighting for a "love slice " yourself.
Brunch lover?
You'll find dozens of other great recipes like this in our Breakfast & Brunch Category and even more ideas in our Muffins, Tea Buns & Scones Category.
Like this Homemade White Bread recipe?
You'll find many more locally inspired recipes in our Newfoundland Category.
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ive been making this bread for a couple months now I'm for Newfoundland born in Cornor brook moved to Niagara Falls Ontario when I was 2 and my nan used to make this every time I came back so this brings me back home a little bit thanks for this entry
Nice to bring you a memory of home. Enjoy and thanks for sharing.
I made this today and It's awesome. Wish I had found it years ago.
I'm a 36 year old mom of 2 boys and they want the home made bread all the time I makes regularly and makes 10 loaves usually at a time. .. I used a 7 lb bag of flour yeast ,oil, salt and sugar. turns out very fluffy and light weight
I'm the baby of 16 mom baked everyday...shorting. ..or butter. salt and a bit of sugar in her yeast..and I tell you now....mouth watering. she is passed now god love her before she never had the strength in her arms she taught me.....the first couple times I tried it never turned out cause I keep scaling the yeast even the crows couldn't get there beak though it....now it's almost just the way she taught me....thanks for the lovely site.from port au port nl.
Took my wife a couple tries to get it right, but she managed to take this recipe and replicate my Nan's bread. I waited in great anticipation while it was baking, and the smell of it took me back to lurking near the kitchen in my grandmother's house with a bunch of my cousins, trying to decide who was going to try and sneak a loaf off the counter when they came out of the oven.
Anyway, when it was finished baking, and cool enough to slice, my wife cut me off a thick slab. I toasted it over a bent-up wire coat hanger till both sides were a deep golden brown, slathered about 2 tbsp of butter on it, and took a bite.
Perfection. It made me so nostalgic for my childhood in Corner Brook, i actually shed a tear or two.
Now when the craving hits, she makes me a couple loafs and I take one up to my brother so we can both wallow in nostalgic bliss, eating stovetop-toasted Nan's Bread with butter.
That's a great compliment to the recipe. You're not the only ones to have had that model of toaster! 😉
I made this bread today...followed all directions and the loaves rose beautifully but when I put them in the oven, they both deflated some...not flat but they spread out to the side. I wonder what I did wrong...could the dough have been too soft. Maybe I should have added more flour? It's a great recipe tho...soft fluffy bread and tastes very good. I will definitely make it again and hopefully perfect it over time. Thanks for sharing 🙂
Dough may have been to soft to start with or you let it rise just a little too much.
This was so good that I made it Monday and now today Wednesday. I used bread flour and cooked for the whole 40 minutes. I wish I could post pictures !! Thx for a simple bread recipe. 10 outta 10.
Great to hear it was such a success!
Does anyone know the correct pan size (dimensions) used for this bread? I'd like to make it but I want to use the right size!
There's no real wrong size, just adjust the baking time if smaller than 9x5 pans.
Trying my hand for the first time making bread, I'm from Corner Brook but living in Alberta and have been craving some homemade bread from home so the next best thing is to try to make my own I'll keep ya posted on how it goes
Hope it turned out well.
I'must not sure what size pans to bake this in! Are they 8x4 or 9x5? I'd really like to make this but I'm not sure!!
You can make it in any size but my pans are 9x5
When making toutons from bread dough do they having to go through all the steps of the rising or do you just mix dough and freeze after mixing
You can freeze the dough after mixing but after thawing it should be made into touton shapes and allowed to rise in a warm kitchen for about a half hour or your touters may be too doughy and dense.
Made this recipe last week and made it again today! It came out just perfect! First time for me making bread and so proud of myself! My boyfriend loved it as well ! Thanks Barry! Love your recipes!
I miss my nanny's (from St . Mary's bay) bread . The first time I tried this recipe I forgot to let the buns rise a second time... and they still turned out great. I'm on my second batch now. 20 more minutes and I'll have the perfect batch. Thanks so much for the easy to follow instructions and an awesome truly delicious recipe! !! Touton's here I come 😆
So Glad you've had such success. There's nothing like the smell of baking bread to bring back the memories.
Barry, this bread looks like the bread I remember from my childhood in Little Hearts Ease. I lived with my grandparents and my Nanny baked bread 2 - 3 times a week. We were a crowd!!! I have tried and failed many times to recreate that bread and memory. So, now I am inspired again! I am making this either today or tomorrow and will let you know how it turns out. It looks so wonderful. I can already smell it! Thanks for the recipe!
We get such great feedback from people who have had success with this recipe Julia. I love it when they say that it reminds them of their mother's or grandmother's kitchen.
My grand mother baked bread in a wood oven in New Brunswick and I still remember the smells and texture. I followed the tradition snd made homemade bread all of my life, always seeking the perfect recipe. Last Fall, after years of thinking about it, I bought a wood fired oven and my bread was getting closer to grandmas'. Then I found this recipe and I am immediately transported to my childhood. Fantastic. The first piece needs only butter. The second piece is adorned with homemade creton in the tradition of the acadians. The last piece needs butter and jam or creamed honey. Heaven!
I have been craving homemade bread for the longest time. I made this the first time about two weeks ago. Its so close to my nans bread. I double the recipe and make bread twice a week. My family loves this bread.
So nice to be part of rekindling a family tradition.
My family and I LOVE this bread. Thanks for the good down home recipe.