Homemade Italian bread is actually very easy to make and tastes delicious! While you could buy a loaf of Italian bread from the grocery store, baking bread is fun and satisfying. Warm, toasty bread from the oven is pure comfort food.
I love my 1963 homemade white bread for sandwiches and everything peasant bread for snacking, but this Italian loaf is perfect with a bowl of spaghetti, or alongside a plate of my crockpot roast beef!
Italian Bread Recipe
There’s a definite difference between French bread and Italian bread. Most of the general population either doesn’t know or simply doesn’t care, but there are differences nonetheless.
Basically though, French bread only uses flour, yeast, salt, and water. In fact, French law states that added oils or fats are prohibited. A French loaf is usually long and thin, while an Italian loaf is shorter and wider.
Expert Tips & FAQs
In this section I like to provide tips and recommendations about the different ingredients used. I also try to answer questions about substitutions. You will find the full list of ingredients with measurements in the printable recipe card at the end of this post.
- You can use the packets of active dry yeast available at any grocery store. I bake a lot of bread, so I prefer to by SAF instant yeast in larger packages.
- When a bread recipe calls for warm water, the temperature should be around 110 degrees F. If the water is too hot it will kill the yeast, and too cold will delay the rise process.
- You’ll also use hot water in this recipe, but since you are mixing it with other ingredients before adding the yeast mixture it will be fine. You want hot tap water, not boiling water.
- This recipe calls for vegetable oil, but olive oil can also be used.
- We are using all-purpose flour, white not wheat, to make this bread.
You can freeze the dough for up to 3 months. If kept in the fridge, the yeast will continue to grow, even if it’s slowly. This can be done for about a day, but I wouldn’t do it much longer than that. Wrap the dough tightly in plastic wrap and store in freezer bags. When ready to bake, remove from the freezer and thaw at room temperature. It will take about 4 hours to thaw. Then bake according to the recipe.
Helpful kitchen tools:
- Mixing bowls
- Stand mixer or hand mixer
- Baking sheets
- Wire cooling rack
- Pastry brush
- Rolling pin
- Bread knife
Bread Machine instructions are at the end!
How to Make Italian Bread
- Dissolve yeast, 1/2 cup warm water, and 1/2 teaspoon granulated sugar in a small bowl.
A NOTE ABOUT YEAST: You can use either active dry yeast or instant yeast. If you use active dry yeast it needs to be proofed in order for it to be reactivated. Instant dry yeast doesn’t need proofing. Active dry yeast must be reactivated by proofing in warm water, or the bread won’t rise properly. This process is to “prove” that the yeast is still alive.
- In a large bowl or stand mixer, combine 2 cups hot water, 3 tablespoons granulated sugar, the salt, and the oil. Add 3 cups of flour to the mixture in this large bowl/mixer and mix well.
- Stir in yeast mixture.
- Add 2 – 3 cups more flour and mix until well blended. (At this point your dough will still be quite sticky).
- Leave in bowl, cover with a towel and let rise for 1 hour. (If using a mixer, remove the bowl from the mixer and cover it with a towel. Otherwise your paddle attachment or dough hook will get covered in dough when it rises).
- Divide dough into 2 (or 3 if you want smaller loaves) pieces.
NOTE: This dough does not require kneading.
- Roll out each piece on a floured surface into the length desired then roll up length wise like a jelly roll.
- Put on a greased cookie sheet, sealed side down, and tuck the ends under. Slash the top diagonally across the top every couple of inches with a sharp knife.
- Cover and let loaves rise 30 more minutes.
- While loaves are rising, preheat oven to 400 degrees Fahrenheit.
- Whisk the egg white and brush over the top of loaves.
- Bake for 25 – 30 minutes.
How to Make Italian Bread in a Bread Machine
Several people have asked if this Italian bread can be prepared in a bread machine. We were able to test it successfully and have provided the instructions below. Please note, the preparation of the dough is in the bread machine, but you will still remove the dough, form a loaf, and bake it in your conventional oven.
- Using the printable recipe below, cut the ingredients in half, and eliminate the water and sugar step used for proofing the yeast.
- Put 1 cup of water (110 F) and 1/4 cup oil in the bread machine bucket (make sure the paddle is on).
- Add 4 1/2 teaspoons sugar and 1 1/2 teaspoons salt.
- Gently add 3 cups flour over the water mixture so that it is all covered.
- Place 2 1/4 teaspoons (one packet) of yeast on top of flour with nothing else touching it.
- Place bucket in bread machine and enter dough cycle.
- When it beeps, take out and roll dough, adding more flour if needed.
- Roll up (follow instructions in printable recipe for forming loaf) and place on baking sheet, add slashes to top, and cover with towel to let rise (again, according to recipe).
- Brush with egg white and bake at 400 F (see recipe instructions below).
How to Enjoy this Italian Bread
There are plenty of dinners that we like to eat this homemade bread with, and they aren’t all Italian meals! I’ve been known to sop up the juices of my favorite pork sirloin roast using a hunk of this bread.
A big bowl of Italian Sausage Tomato Orzo Soup or my Cheddar Cheese Potato Soup screams for a piece of warm, buttered bread. It’s also amazing with this Zuppa Toscana for those Olive Garden fans out there! Another dinnertime favorite is this Chicken Cacciatore, and it’s great to have a hunk of bread for dipping into the sauce.
Try our new Crockpot Lasagna, it would be perfect with this bread!
Need more ideas? Find all my dinner recipes here!
What Our Readers Are Saying
Never baked bread before? Want to make sure before you invest the time and ingredients? Here’s just a small sampling of what our readers are saying about this recipe! You can find more reviews in the comments down below!
“I have made this twice and it is very tasty, good crust and soft inner not dense , very good flavor, I have been baking bread for 40 years, this is in the top five, Thanks.” ~ Thomas
“By far one of the best and easiest bread recipes I have come across!! Dough comes out perfect and is so easy to roll!! So glad I came across this recipe it’s a game changer.” ~ Tracy
“This bread was so, so delicious! I am proud of myself for going through with it. I was scared to do it and usually need video ( visual learner ) but went ahead and one of the two loaves is already gone! I wish I could attach a pic! I will make this over and over!” ~ Desiree
“I never post reviews… but after making this, I had to!!! I only had bread flour, so used that… but that was the only deviation. I followed the recipe exactly. The bread came out PERFECT! Crispy outside and moist inside. This is some of the best bread I’ve ever made. It will definitely be made again. Thank you!!” ~ Terri
“‘This is a million times better than store bought bread’
‘You have to make this every time we have pasta now’
‘Nom nom nom…’Feedback from my family after serving them this bread for dinner. Excellent recipe!” ~Dave
“OMG! I made this bread today and have to say this is the BEST bread I have ever made, and I’ve tried a lot of recipes! It was very light and fluffy yet just crispy enough on the crust. The only changes I made were I used bread flour and only used 2.5 tablespoons of the sugar instead of three. Thank you for sharing this! I am throwing away all my other bread recipes!” ~ Nadine
Homemade Italian Bread
IMPORTANT – There are often Frequently Asked Questions within the blog post that you may find helpful. Simply scroll back up to read them!
Print It Pin It Rate ItIngredients
- 1 ½ tablespoons active dry yeast 2 packets
- ½ cup warm water
- ½ teaspoon granulated sugar
- 2 cups hot water hot to the touch, not boiling
- 3 tablespoons granulated sugar
- 1 tablespoon salt
- ½ cup vegetable oil
- 5-6 cups all-purpose flour add more if needed to get to a pliable dough
- 1 large egg white for brushing on loaves
Before You Begin
- If your dough is still super sticky, you can add small amounts of flour until the dough just comes together.
- You can use the packets of active dry yeast available at any grocery store. I bake a lot of bread, so I prefer to by SAF instant yeast in larger packages. If you use active dry, just follow the instructions in the recipe and let it sit for a few minutes to proof (it will get a little foamy).
- When a bread recipe calls for warm water, the temperature should be around 110 degrees F. If the water is too hot it will kill the yeast, and too cold will delay the rise process.
- Use regular white granulated sugar for this recipe.
- In a separate step, you’ll also use hot water in this recipe. Since you are mixing it with other ingredients before adding the yeast mixture it will be fine. You want hot tap water, not boiling water.
- Regular everyday table salt is used, not Kosher or sea salt.
- This recipe calls for vegetable oil, but olive oil can also be used.
- We are using all-purpose flour, white not wheat, to make this bread.
Instructions
- Dissolve yeast, 1/2 cup warm water, and 1/2 teaspoon granulated sugar in a small bowl.
- In a large bowl or stand mixer, combine 2 cups hot water, 3 tablespoons granulated sugar, the salt, and the oil. Add 3 cups of flour to the mixture in this large bowl/mixer and mix well. Stir in yeast mixture.
- Add 2 – 3 cups more flour and mix until well blended. (At this point your dough will still be quite sticky). Leave in bowl, cover with a towel and let rise for 1 hour. (If using a mixer, remove the bowl from the mixer and cover. Otherwise your paddle attachment or dough hook will get covered in dough when it rises). NO KNEADING IS REQUIRED.
- After the rise, if the dough is too sticky to handle, add more flour until its workable. For some people this can be up to a cup or more! Just don't dry out the dough. Add by quarter cupfuls until its workable.
- Divide dough into 2 (or 3 if you want smaller loaves) pieces. Roll out each piece on a floured surface into the length desired then roll up lengthwise like a jelly roll. If it's still too sticky, add more flour until it's workable but not dry.
- Put on a greased cookie sheet, sealed side down, and tuck the ends under. Slash the top diagonally across the top every couple of inches with a sharp knife.
- Cover and let loaves rise 30 more minutes.
- While loaves are rising, preheat oven to 400 degrees Fahrenheit.
- Whisk the egg white and brush over the top of loaves.
- Bake for 25 – 30 minutes.
Nutrition
This recipe was originally published here on January 28, 2009
Amanda Davis
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Crystal says
My family absolutely loves this bread recipe! I’ve made this a dozen times and each time it’s gone within two days! Tonight I’m making it with out dinner but I’m shaping them as bread rolls instead!
Amanda Formaro says
Oh would love to hear how that goes with the rolls!
Lina says
I made this bread today for the 1st time and it was marvelous I could 8 in 4 made 1 name 1 poppy C1 sunflower sea and one sesame seed it was great thank you very much this recipe is the keeps.
Elaine says
Can I use bread flour instead of all purpose flour?
Amanda Formaro says
Yes that will be fine
Jill says
Found this recipe to be easy to follow. I found the dough to be sticky (as Amanda stated it would be) , but not unworkable. I had zero issue rolling out with small amount of flour on work surface. This recipe is easy and quick enough to have delicious homemade bread on the table for dinner! Appreciate the recipe!
Tracey says
Hubby said this is the best bread I’ve ever made! This recipe is a keeper. Thanks!
Cindy says
I made this tonight and want to thank you for a great recipe. This is the best Italian bread recipe I have tried.
No changes were made to the recipe and was surprised how easy the dough came together and was to work with. I was concerned as I am in Florida and due to the storm that we had it is so humid. Came out perfect, crusty on the outside with just a bit of chewy pull and soft inside..
I came across this recipe on a search and will certainly will be checking out more of your recipes.
Adrienne Serio says
This is very good, I will make again. I do agree that I had to add a bunch of flower to handle the dough and to keep a shape,
It is very good! Pretty easy to make as well! Thank you!
Christina Eschbaugh says
Wow my yeast went wild, I had to use an extra cup of flour it was so sticky. Couldnt believe how sticky it was, I decided to put Italian bread crumbs on the top. Looks good
Gina says
Dough was very very sticky. Added additional 1+ cup of flour. Still sticky. Think problem may be too much liquid 2 1/2 cups seems excessive. Did I miss read recipe?
Amanda Formaro says
You did not misread it, it’s correct. Bread making is different depending on where you live barometric pressure, etc. Adding more flour is the correct action :)
Joe T. says
Way to sticky to work after first rise. Use all 6 cup flour. And at least 1 and 1/2 more to be able to get this dough off of your work surface. Not sure I wold make this again.
Amanda Formaro says
If you read the recipe, it says that it will be sticky and you may need to add extra flour.
Tammy says
This ended up yummy, but I needed SO much more flour for it to even be manageable after the first rise. maybe it’s a PNW thing, but I used the recommended amount, then after the rise had to use a lot more before I could roll it at all. but, in the end it was still yummy.
Lori says
This bread was easy & delicious… my husband thought I bought it!
Herman says
Amanda, except for the huge quantity of yeast, this is a delicious bread. Using honey instead of granulated sugar for the yeast mixture, I prepared the dough for the first rise and left it alone for an hour. When I returned to the dough, it had risen to the top of my six quart mixer bowl, at least quadruple its original size and was somewhat too sticky for easy handling. I divided the dough in two and sprinkled it heavily with flour on a pizza peel as I rolled them to size. I had created two “Slinkys” which were almost impossible to pick up. From the peel to a cookie sheet was easy as I nudged the logs to roll of the peel. I believe the quantity of yeast created all the difficulties. Next time I will cut the amount down to one teaspoon to control the rise and the ensuing extremely soft texture.
Monique says
Wonderful recipe! I also found the dough very sticky but adding flour as needed did the trick! A keeper!
TINA says
Made this tonight and it was a hit with the family. Very easy to make! Will definitely add this to my break making rotation.
Emily says
My husband absolutely loves this bread! I shared the second loaf with my parents and he was super bummed when he found out haha. Will definitely make again! I had no problem with the recipe, it was perfect. Thank you!
Erica says
I made this bread today and thought this flour amount couldn’t be right because the dough was super wet; however, the bread actually came out perfect and delicious. My husband said it tasted better than anything he’s had in a restaurant or grocery store! This is definitely the best bread I have ever made! Since I’m a novice baker and had a hard time working the dough, I left in in two rounds.
Lora says
Can I cut in half and make only one. If not, the neighbors will enjoy the other, I’m sure.
Amanda Formaro says
Yes that should be fine. But I’m going to guess you will be disappointed that you didn’t make both ;)
Sandi says
I also had to add by kneading like 3 more cups of flour. Total was about 8 cups. It’s doing the 2nd rise now. I feel silly, never had this problem before and I do a lot of baking. I wonder if I could make it 1 cup of hot water instead of 2 cups. Thoughts?
Naomi says
Hey, Sandi! I had that same issue, too, actually! I just wound up adding more/enough flour until the dough came together and everything went really well from there. So yummy in the end!
Shawn says
Would this recipe make nice dinner rolls?