Milk Bread is the most favorite bread in Korea, Japan and many Asian countries. This buttery milk bread is pillowy soft, light, delicious and totally addicting!! It comes out just like my original recipe but now you can make the same in the bread machine!
This Milk Bread recipe has been one of my top most popular recipes ever since I shared it on my blog a couple of years ago. This bread originates in Japan and so it’s often called Japanese Milk Bread or Hokkaido Milk Bread but it’s now become so popular in many Asian countries including Korea. In Korea, it’s called Uyu Sikppang 우유식빵. Uyu means milk in Korean and is definitely a big part of Korean cuisine as Koreans just love this bread.
I have been asked a few times by many readers if one could make the milk bread in the bread machine and I wasn’t sure because I didn’t have a bread machine back then. 😝 So I bought one last year saying I was going to develop a recipe but just never got around to it until now. To those of you who asked, here it is!! Whew!! I almost gave up on this one because it just wasn’t giving me as good bread as my oven recipe but I prevailed!! HAHA!
NOTE – Every bread machine is different and your machine may not even have a custom programming feature. Unfortunately, I cannot create a recipe that works for all machines and you may have to figure out what you can do with your machine. But please don’t hesitate to ask questions on my FB page or in my FB group and we can try to solve it together.
How is milk bread different from other breads?
1. Milk bread is more moist, buttery, very slightly sweet and VERY light. It also uses a starter called Tangzhong which allows the bread to hold more moisture than the common bread recipe and thus you will have a more moist bread. You can get around this by using dry milk powder if you don’t want to go through the extra step of making the starter.
2. In between steps of rising, you roll the dough resulting in a bread that has a feathery and stringy texture. Not at all crumbly as most sandwich breads are. So because of that, this bread works well as toasts or for PB&J sandwiches or egg salad sandwiches.
BTW, here’s a quick video of how fluffy and amazing the bread is – fresh out of the breadmaker!
Baking Milk Bread in Bread Machine
The machine I use is Zojirushi Home Bakery Supreme Breadmaker BB-CEC20. I chose this machine because it has customizable functions for kneading, rise and baking. Also a 2 lb loaf capacity plus great reviews! If you need one, you can buy it from my amazon store HERE. (FYI, I make a small commission if you buy, thank you!)
There are a few things that are different when baking milk bread in the bread machine –
- Add WET ingredients -> then DRY ingredients on top of the liquid when adding ingredients in the pan. Not a must for all machines but this ensures the most successful result.
- Because each bread machine is different, you may have to adjust the recipe to your situation. You need 3 cycles for this recipe. If you don’t have custom rise or dough capability, I suggest you make the dough and do rising on your counter or in your oven – just follow my original milk bread recipe HERE. And then just bake in your breadmaker.
- Different baking pan sizes – bread machines have different shapes and sizes so that’s another thing you will have to think about. Just for reference a pullman loaf pan is about 7.75″ x 4.25″ while my Zojirushi bread maker’s pan is 8.75″ x 5″. This recipe will bake well in both of these sizes but of course, the bread will come out less tall in wider pans. If you have a taller but smaller 1 lb bread machine, you need to 1/2 the dough in your final baking step. Refrigerate leftover dough
Here’s an overview of the 3 cycles needed in making this bread in your machine:
- Basic Dough cycle (1h 50 min) – My cycle does – preheating (20~30 min) -> 20 min kneading -> 45 min rising -> stir down or punch down -> 22 min 2nd rising.
- Simple Rise (20-30 min) – let the dough balls rise in bread machine for 30 min, OR let it rise in 2 separate bowls on warm counter or 100 F proof temp in oven for 20 min.
- Bread Baking cycle (1h 50 min)- 1 hr rising -> 50 min baking. Hopefully you have a way to mimic what I did here or you can just stop the dough after kneading and then use the oven to prove by following my original milk bread recipe by proving for 40 – 60min until dough has doubled in size.
FROM JINJOO!
Chef’s Tips
- Tangzhong OR Dry Milk Power – to make this lovely feathery light and fluffy milk bread, you either need to make and add Tangzhong or use dry milk powder. The milk powder helps the bread to rise higher and easily. I tested both ways and they come out equally yummy! The recipe below uses milk powder but if you want to, you can just use Tangzhong instead and reduce the liquid accordingly. Basically, take out 1/4 cup water and 1/4 cup milk and 22g flour and make Tangzhong with it. Then, add the Tangzhong with the wet ingredient and make the dough and the rest the same as in the recipe. Check my original OVEN Milk Bread recipe for more info on how to make Tangzhong.
- Make sure liquid and butter is not cold – yeast needs a warm environment to become active so either warm up your liquid before adding to machine or use the preheat function to ensure things are warmed up first
- Instant Yeast vs Active Dry Yeast – If possible, use Instant Yeast because Active Dry Yeast needs to be activated in warm water first and takes a bit longer to rise when compared to instant yeast. I usually use SAF Instant Yeast but you can use any brand. You can read more about the different yeasts HERE.
What is Dry Milk Powder?
- What is dry milk powder? Do I have to use dry milk powder?
- Dry milk powder is an ingredient used in baking to help the bread rise higher. The brand I use is King Arthur’s Baker’s Special Dry Milk powder. This is NOT the same as ‘instant’ dry milk powder. This helps your bread or any yeasted recipe rise higher. If you want the same feathery light bread as my regular milk bread without the Tangzhong, then YES, you need to use it. OR..you can always make Tangzhong instead of using dry milk as in my regular recipe and just add to dough ingredients and use the dough cycle to make and prove the dough. I’ve tested this in my bread machine and that works fine too.
Ingredients for breadmaker Milk Bread
WET ingredients
- 3/4 cup 2% milk (plus a little extra for top of loaf)
- 1/4 cup water
- 60g unsalted butter
- 1 egg
DRY ingredients
- 365g bread flour (2 3/4 cup)
- 50g sugar
- 7g instant yeast
- 1 tsp fine sea salt
- 2 Tbs dry milk powder (for baking)
- 1/2 Tbsp unsalted butter (for pan)
Step-by-Step Instructions
- This recipe assumes your breadmaker has a dough cycle. If your machine doesn’t have one, you may want to make the dough following instructions in my original Milk bread recipe and then you can still bake it in your machine.
- Melt butter in the microwave until it’s fully melted (50% power 20-25 sec in microwave).
- Warm up your milk (to bath water temperature) and use room temp water and eggs – especially if you don’t have a preheat function within your dough cycle.
- Add all the wet ingredients (milk, water, melted butter, egg) + SALT into the bread pan. You can add salt with your dry ingredients but I like to add the salt in this step to ensure it doesn’t inhibit the yeast in anyway.
- Mix DRY ingredients – mix flour and sugar first in a bowl and then add to pan on top of the wet ingrdients.
- Make a little well (or a divot) in the middle of the dry ingredients and add yeast inside the well and also add milk powder (I usually add it in the corner of the pan).
- Put the bread pan in the machine with all the ingredients in and start a full Basic Dough cycle. See above for details of my machine’s dough cycle – it basically takes 1 hr 50 min total of preheating and proving 2 times. If you don’t have a dough cycle, you can use just make the dough with a stand mixer by following steps in my regular milk bread recipe.
- After the dough cycle is complete and finished proving, your dough should look something like the bottom pic in the picture above. Top pic is how the dough looks like at the start of the kneading process.
- When the dough is done proving (1 in pic), punch it down (2) and then take the dough out of the pan onto a granite or wood cutting board (4) and divide into 2 equal size dough (5). Sprinkle some flour on the surface and knead each dough a few times then shaping it tightly into a ball (7). IF you have custom rise function THEN nestle each dough ball back in the bread pan next to each other (8) and let the dough balls rise in the machine for 30 min. IF there’s NO custom rise function in your machine, you can put each dough ball into separate bowls, cover with plastic wrap or towel and let it rise in warm location or 100℉ oven. Below pic is when the dough balls have finished proving in the machine.
- Once the dough has risen, transfer the dough one at a time on a smooth surface (granite or marble works well), sprinkle surface very lightly with flour and also coat the rolling pin lightlly with flour. Roll out one dough ball into a thick rectangle about 12 inches long and 4-5 inches wide. The dough will be quite sticky so it may stick to counter or the rolling pin, it’s ok, just sprinkle a bit more flour and it should work then. Roll the top of the dough (3 inches) down and then fold the bottom up about the same amount, resulting in a square-like dough shape. Roll it into a log, starting from one end of the square until you have a roll all rolled up. If you would like to see a video of how it’s done, you can see it at the end of the instructions.
- Lightly butter the sides of the bread pan (I didn’t bother washing the pan, just smeared some butter with my hands) and nestle the 2 logs down in the bread machine pan like above.
- Put pan back in the bread machine and for the FINAL TIME set it to rise for 1 hr or until the top of the dough is up about 70% height of the pan. Again, if you don’t have custom rise function, let dough rise in the pan at room temp or in 100℉ oven for 40 min.
- Let’s start baking! Bake for 50 min. Select the your crust preference. I usually set crust to medium. Optionally, for some shine, brush the top with some milk or egg whites before baking. Note that bread baked in the bread machine won’t have the same golden brown top like you get in the oven. BUT, believe me, the taste and texture is just as good as my original milk bread recipe!
Video on how to roll out Milk Bread dough
Here’s a picture of milk bread – freshly baked in the bread machine!
Enjoy the bread with some butter, jam and make some egg salad sandwiches with it!
XOXO,
JinJoo
If you liked this recipe, please leave me a comment and ☆☆☆☆☆ rating below!
Milk Bread Recipe for Bread Machine
Ingredients
Wet Ingredients + salt
- 3/4 cup 2% low fat milk (use preheat function or warm up milk)
- 1/4 cup water room temp
- 60 g unsalted butter 60g = 1/4 cup, melted
- 1 egg
- 1 tsp sea salt
Dry Ingredients
- 365 g unbleached bread flour 365g = 2 3/4 cups
- 50 g sugar 50g = 3.5 Tbsp
- 2 Tbsp milk powder
- 7 g instant yeast 7g = 1 packet = 2 tsp
For coating bowls and pan
- 1 Tbsp unsalted butter
Instructions
- Melt butter in the microwave until it's fully melted (50% power 20-25 sec in microwave).
- Warm up your milk (to bath water temperature) and use room temp water and eggs – especially if you don't have a preheat function within your dough cycle.
- Add all the wet ingredients (milk, water, melted butter, egg) + SALT into the bread pan. You can add salt with your dry ingredients but I like to add the salt in this step to ensure it doesn't inhibit the yeast in anyway.
- Mix DRY ingredients – mix flour and sugar first in a bowl and then add to pan on top of the wet ingrdients.
- Make a little well (or a divot) in the middle of the dry ingredients and add yeast inside the well and also add milk powder (I usually add it in the corner of the pan).
- Put the bread pan in the machine with all the ingredients in and start a full Basic Dough cycle. See above for details of my machine's dough cycle – it basically takes 1 hr 50 min total of preheating and proving twice. If you don't have a dough cycle, you can use a stand mixer by following steps in my regular milk bread recipe. After the dough cycle is complete and finished proving, your dough should look something like the bottom pic in the picture. Top pic is how the dough looks like at the start of the kneading process. So just be patient!
- When the dough is done (1), punch it down (2) and then take the dough out of the pan onto a granite or wood cutting board (4) and divide into 2 equal size dough (5). Sprinkle some flour on the surface and knead each dough a few times then shaping it tightly into a ball (7). IF you have custom rise function THEN nestle each dough ball back in the bread pan next to each other (8) and let the dough balls rise in the machine for 30 min. IF there's NO custom rise function in your machine, you can put each dough ball into separate bowls, cover with plastic wrap or towel and let it rise in warm location or 100℉ oven for 20 min.
- Once the dough has risen, transfer the dough one at a time on a smooth surface (granite or marble works well), sprinkle surface very lightly with flour and also coat the rolling pin lightlly with flour. Roll out one dough ball into a thick rectangle about 12 inches long and 4-5 inches wide. Roll the top of the dough (3 inches) down and then fold the bottom up about the same amount, resulting in a square-like dough shape. Roll it into a log, starting from one end of the square until you have a roll all rolled up.
- Lightly butter the sides of the bread pan and nestle the 2 logs down in the bread machine pan like above.
- Put pan back in the bread machine and set it to rise for 1 hr or until the top of the dough is up about 70% height of the pan. Again, if you don't have custom rise function, let dough rise in the pan at room temp or in 100℉ oven for 40 min.
- We are ready to start baking! Bake for 50 min. Select the crust to your preference. I usually set crust to medium. Optionally, for some shine, brush the top with some milk or egg whites before baking. Note that bread baked in the bread machine won't have the same golden brown top like you get in the oven. BUT, believe me, the taste and texture is just as good as my original milk bread recipe!
Equipment
- bread machine
- mixing bowls
- Rolling Pin
Tips & Notes:
- Tangzhong OR Dry Milk Power – to make this lovely feathery light and fluffy milk bread, you either need to make and add Tangzhong or use dry milk powder. The milk powder helps the bread to rise higher and easily. I tested both ways and they come out equally yummy! The recipe uses milk powder but you can just use Tangzhong instead and reduce the liquid accordingly. Basically, take out 1/4 cup water and 1/4 cup milk and 22g flour and make Tangzhong with it. Check my original Milk Bread recipe for more info.
- Make sure liquid and butter is not cold – yeast needs a warm environment to become active so either warm up your liquid before adding to machine or use the preheat function to ensure things are warmed up first.
- Instant Yeast vs Active Dry Yeast – If possible, use Instant Yeast because Active Dry Yeast needs to be activated in warm water first and takes a bit longer to rise when compared to instant yeast. I usually use SAF Instant Yeast but you can use any brand.
- NUTRITION – I calculated about 14 slices for 1 loaf and so the nutrition is per slice. if you want the calories for the whole loaf, just multiply the current values by 14.
Alexa says
I am in the process of making this recipe in my bread machine, using the basic white setting. I am wondering if I should take it out after baking for 50 minutes, or let the machine finish out the entire baking cycle for the selected setting?
JinJoo says
I am not sure what your baking cycle is exactly but if you can follow my recipe instructions closely that would be best. Thank you!
Alexa says
I ended up stopping it once it started looking golden on top and it is PERFECT! The best bread recipe I’ve tried yet! I added the ingredients as suggested, however did not remove the dough from the machine at all and let it do all the kneading and baking. It still turned out super fluffy and delicious!!
JinJoo says
OH wonderful!! I’m so happy to hear that – that’s good to know that you didn’t remove the dough and it came out still very fluffy! I do it because the rolling part gives you the signature stringy/layered texture but hey, if it comes out still delicious – I’m all for it! Thank you for sharing!!
Viv says
Hi JinJoo,
Firstly thanks so much for this recipe. All I did was put the ingredients in (per the steps you listed out) and the bread machine did the rest of the work. Success even after the first try – my family inhaled it all in just a couple of days.
I’m not sure if this might work but I was hoping to make this a tad “healthier” with the use of whole meal flour. Would you use approx half and half (150g wholemeal flour 215g bakers flour)? Or would you not recommend at all? I love the “milkiness” of this bread so hoping the taste wouldn’t be altered too much..
JinJoo says
Thank you for the great feedback! I would try using about 1/2 whole wheat and see how you like the soft milkiness of the bread. It will definitely be less fluffy but hoepfully still pretty good.
Ellie says
If I only have a 1 lb bread machine , should I divide the recipe in half?
JinJoo says
Yes, you should divide the dough in half and bake in 2 batches if you can. You can 1/2 the recipe but it will be hard since it uses 1 egg. Good luck!
Rowena says
Loved this recipe. Start to finish in the break maker. I added to the dry ingredients toasted sunflower seeds and dried cranberries! So delicious.
JinJoo says
Thank you soo much!! I haven’t tried adding sunflower seeds but glad to know it’s yummy that way too!
Shelia says
Excellent recipe, and easy to follow. I made rolls instead of a loaf of bread. Can I increase the sugar by 2 tablespoons without compromising the quality of the bread?
JinJoo says
Hi Shelia, Thank you so much! So sugar affects the fermentation of the yeast – providing more food for them. Adding more sugar may make the bread rise higher, maybe even a little too much. I haven’t tried making it with that much more sugar, I would maybe add 1 Tbs more and see how it goes. Good luck!