Milk Bread (Soft and Fluffy Asian Style)

User Reviews

5.0

132 reviews
Excellent
  • Prep Time

    30 mins

  • Cook Time

    1 hr

  • Additional Time

    3 hrs

  • Total Time

    4 hrs 30 mins

  • Servings

    1 loaf

  • Calories

    2156 kcal

  • Course

    Breakfast, Snacks

  • Cuisine

    Asian, Japanese, Korean

Milk Bread (Soft and Fluffy Asian Style)

Also called Japanese Milk Bread, this milk bread is made very differently and is very moist and also has a light, fluffy and slightly chewy texture.

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Ingredients

Servings

Starter

  • 22 g unbleached bread flour (22g = 2.5 Tbsp)
  • ¼ cup water
  • ¼ cup 2% low fat milk (can also use whole milk)

Dough

  • 330 g unbleached bread flour (330g = 2 ½ cups)
  • 7 g instant yeast (7g = 1 packet = 2 tsp)
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 50 g sugar (50g = 3.5 Tbsp)
  • ½ cup 2% low fat milk (warmed, plus a little extra for top of loaf)
  • 1 egg
  • 60 g unsalted butter (room temp, cut into small pieces 60g = 4 Tbsp)
  • 1 Tbsp unsalted butter (for bowls and pan)
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Instructions

  1. Bring egg and butter to room temperature or soften butter in the microwave (like 30 sec at 30% power for 4 Tbs).

Make Starter

  1. In a small sauce pot, add flour, milk, water and whisk. Turn heat to medium and cook for  2-3 minutes for this minimum amount (longer if you are making more than 1 loaf). For the first 1-2 minutes, check every 10-15 seconds and whisk. After 2 minutes, as it starts to thicken, whisk constantly until everything is cooked and thickened. When it is done, whisking should leave tracks on the bottom of the pot and hold its shape like below.

Make Dough

  1. In a stand mixer bowl (using a dough hook), add flour, sugar, yeast, salt. Mix the dry ingredients with the dough hook for a few seconds until they are evenly combined. When done, I also like to use my hands to mix again just to make sure things are evenly mixed including the bottom of the bowl.
  2. Warm up milk in a pot or in the microwave - until it feels like very warm bath water (110° F/43° C).
  3. To mixer bowl with dry ingredients, add warm milk, starter and egg. Turn the mixer on low speed and knead for 5 minutes.
  4. Butter your loaf pan and butter two bowls where the dough will be proved. One should be large enough to hold more than double size of the dough.
  5. Add softened butter to the dough from 5 and knead for 10 - 11 minutes.  First at medium-low speed for a couple of minutes and then at medium speed until dough becomes smooth and stretchy but a little tacky. See video.

Prove Dough

  1. Transfer the dough with your hands to the buttered bowl from 6. See how smooth it looks in the mixing bowl but also how sticky it is - sticking to the side of the bowl.
  2. Shape it a bit with your hands to make it into a ball. Cover with a plastic wrap or with a kitchen towel and let it rise in a warm location for 40 to 60 minutes or until it has doubled in size. Here's before -
  3. And after it has proved
  4. Uncover the dough and punch it down with your fist. Divide dough in two and scoop out half of the dough. Form the dough lightly into a ball and then put it into the 2nd bowl. Scoop out the remaining dough and form it into a ball again with the seam side down and put it back in the bowl.
  5. Cover both bowls with dough with a plastic wrap or kitchen towel and let it rise again (in a warm location) for 15 - 17 minutes. 
  6. Once dough has risen, transfer one dough on a smooth surface (granite or marble works well), sprinkle surface very lightly with flour and also the rolling pin. This is how it looks when properly proved and pulled from the sides.
  7. Roll out one dough ball into a thick rectangle (or oval) about 12 inches long and 4-5 inches wide.
  8. Fold or roll the top of the dough (like 3 inches) down and then fold the bottom up about the same amount, resulting in a square-like dough shape. Then roll it into a log, starting from the right edge of the square. Pick up the log and nestle it down near one end of the loaf pan. REPEAT with the other dough ball and place it at the other end of the loaf pan. 
  9. Cover the loaf pan and let it rise again for 30 to 40 minutes until the dough is visible above the edge of the pan and the 2 dough logs have fully filled up the pan.
  10. Heat oven to 350°F/175° C.

Bake - at 350°F/175° C.

  1. Optionally, brush the tops lightly with milk (for shine) and bake on the bottom shelf of the oven (you probably will need to take out a shelf since this bread will rise quite a  bit during baking) until golden brown about 32-35 minutes. Bake a little longer if you pierce it with a toothpick (in the lowest part) and it doesn't come out clean.
  2. Let the milk bread cool in the pan for 10-15 minutes and then take the bread out of the pan onto a wire rack and let it cool for at least an hour or more before slicing because if you slice too soon when it's still warm, the bread may collapse!

Notes

  • With the latest shortage in yeast, I know many of you may only be able to get the non-instant Active Yeast (you are lucky if you can even get that!). In that case, you can use it but the non-instant kind have to be activated first in warm liquid. In the recipe below, in step 4, after warming up the milk, add the yeast to warm milk and let it activate.
  • Once yeast has activated (bubbles up) in the milk in about 5 minutes or so, you can add the milk to the dough. Also, you may want to increase the proving time by 10-15 minutes when using non-instant Active Yeast since they take longer.
  • With the latest shortage in yeast, I know many of you may only be able to get the non-instant Active Yeast (you are lucky if you can even get that!). In that case, you can use it but the non-instant kind have to be activated first in warm liquid. In the recipe below, in step 4, after warming up the milk, add the yeast to warm milk and let it activate. Once yeast has activated (bubbles up) in the milk in about 5 minutes or so, you can add the milk to the dough. Also, you may want to increase the proving time by 10-15 minutes when using non-instant Active Yeast since they take longer.
  • Some recipes will say Tangzhong starter should have pourable consistency with 1 to 5 dry to liquid ratio and I have tried those but it really doesn't work as well. This recipe has a 1 to 3.2 ratio which makes it thicker but it works!!
  • Use the same dough but divide into smaller dough balls and make pull-apart round rolls.
  • If you want a very soft crust, loosely cover the bread with foil or wrap while it cools.

Nutrition Information

Show Details
Calories 2156kcal (108%) Carbohydrates 317g (106%) Protein 57g (114%) Fat 72g (111%) Saturated Fat 42g (210%) Cholesterol 332mg (111%) Sodium 1263mg (53%) Potassium 723mg (21%) Fiber 10g (40%) Sugar 60g (120%) Vitamin A 2439IU (49%) Calcium 310mg (31%) Iron 4mg (22%)

Nutrition Facts

Serving: 1loaf

Amount Per Serving

Calories 2156 kcal

% Daily Value*

Calories 2156kcal 108%
Carbohydrates 317g 106%
Protein 57g 114%
Fat 72g 111%
Saturated Fat 42g 210%
Cholesterol 332mg 111%
Sodium 1263mg 53%
Potassium 723mg 15%
Fiber 10g 40%
Sugar 60g 120%
Vitamin A 2439IU 49%
Calcium 310mg 31%
Iron 4mg 22%

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet.

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5.0

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