Easy Homemade French Bread that you can make for dinner even when you are short on time! I am known for my french bread recipe and give it out every year as Christmas gifts to friends and neighbors. I’ve had so many people over the years ask for a tutorial on how to make french bread so I hope this post helps everyone out!
A Funny History with This Homemade French Bread
When I became a Jones 26 years ago, it quickly became clear that I needed to learn to bake french bread like my mother-in-law. Her bread is the star of her kitchen and coveted by all who taste it. During a visit about a year after getting married, I absorbed as much of her technique as I could while she instructed me. She sent me home with her recipe in my pocket and I was very anxious to make it for my husband. Over the years, I’ve mastered this bread, and that recipe card is very worn and stained.
So imagine my surprise when a few years ago, in my kitchen in Minnesota, my mother-in-law looks at that same card and asks, “Where did you get this recipe? This isn’t my french bread recipe.” Now, I would never accuse my wonderful mother-in-law of anything sinister but can anyone say…. sabotage?
This easy french bread recipe is just dang amazing and it is what I deliver to all our friends every year for Christmas. I have made a few slight changes to the original recipe over the years I’ve been baking it because I wanted a chewier interior and a better crust.
How to Make Homemade French Bread
Many believe making homemade French bread is too difficult so they settle for mediocre grocery-store versions instead. Trust yourself. You’ll amaze yourself with the results!
Make the dough either by hand or with a stand mixer. Ingredients are very simple: water, sugar, yeast, kosher salt, oil, and bread flour.
Knead the dough until smooth or elastic, about 8 minutes in a stand mixer or 20 minutes by hand.
Proof the dough so it doubles in size, about 1-2 hours.
Bake the baguettes in a 375 degree oven for 20-25 minutes.
What Makes French Bread Different From Regular Bread
The main difference between French bread and regular sandwich bread is the flavor and texture. French bread is less sweet, has simpler ingredients, and comes in long baguettes. Those long loaves are crusty on the outside, with a tender center. On the other side, sandwich bread is tender and soft, both inside and out, with a much sweeter flavor.
What to Do With French Bread
There is never a lack of ways to use homemade French bread! Listed below are a few of my favorite uses of leftover loaves…on the rare occasion my family doesn’t devour all four loaves in one sitting!
Make French toast – it will be the best French toast you’ve ever had! To make it, cut the bread at a 45-degree angle into ½-inch slices, then dip them in a mixture of eggs and milk. Cook over medium heat in a greased skillet until golden brown, then flip and cook on the other side.
Make garlic bread – it will be the perfect side for almost any dinner! Slice the loaf horizontally in half down the length of the whole loaf. Generously butter each side and sprinkle with garlic powder and freshly grated Parmesan cheese. Put the loaf back together, wrap it in aluminum foil, and bake in a 350-degree oven for 10-15 minutes.
Make French bread pizza- for a quick and easy dinner! Slice the loaf horizontally in half down the length of the whole loaf and place them on a rimmed baking sheet. Top each half with pizza sauce, fresh Parmesan cheese, mozzarella cheese, and any toppings. Bake in a 350-degree oven for 15 minutes until hot and bubbly.
Make grilled sandwiches or paninis – homemade French bread is hearty enough for a panini press or a loaded grilled cheese sandwich. Spread the bread with some pesto, leftover protein, cheese, and veggies for an amazing dinner when time is short.
How to Form a Homemade French Bread Baguette
Each French bread baker will have a slightly different technique but there are a few key steps to get that classic baguette shape:
Evenly portion the dough into four pieces. Ideally, you do this with a food scale but for this homemade French bread, you can just eyeball it.
Flatten each portion of dough until it is about ½” thick. My portions of dough start off as rough triangle shapes because I cut the round ball of dough evenly into 4 pieces. I keep that triangular shape as I flatten the dough because it helps me shape good baguettes.
Form the baguettes by starting at the small corner of the triangular piece of dough. As you tuck the dough over on itself, firmly press down to create a tight loaf. See the photo below or the video for the visual. Think of it this way: tuck, press, tuck, press, tuck, press, etc.
Roll the baguettes on the counter with both hands. Gently stretch the baguettes to be longer then place them in the French bread pans.
Cut slits across the tops of each baguette with a very sharp knife or razor blade.
Anyone who has a history of bread-making knows that experience is what will give you the perfect loaf of bread. After making many batches, you learn what your dough should feel like and how to work with it, so keep at it and you will get better with each batch!
Homemade French Bread FAQs & Troubleshooting
Can all-purpose flour be used instead of bread flour?
The main question I get asked all the time about making homemade French bread is if the bread flour is important. Um….YOU BETCHA! That higher gluten content is what gives you a better crust as well as a chewier texture so just grab that bread flour next time instead of all-purpose and enjoy the end results.
Can Homemade French Bread be made on regular baking sheets?
If you don’t have french bread pans, you can form them on baking sheets, but the result isn’t quite the same. Your loaves will turn out a bit flat and without the air holes on the bottom of a baking sheet, they won’t get as good of a crust. There are many baguette pans on the market that make a wider loaf that remind me more of an Italian loaf, so I suggest the thinner baguette size for a true French bread.
My French Bread didn’t come out crusty
If your homemade French bread turned out soft, there are usually a few sources of that problem. First, be sure you are using quality bread flour. Second, don’t rush the kneading process. Allow that gluten to develop in the dough. Next, be sure your bread is going into a hot oven. A preheated oven creates that perfect crust on homemade French bread!
Also, if you end up with baguettes that aren’t as crusty as you want, you can always take them out of the pan and put them in the oven directly on the racks for 5-8 minutes. Sometimes they just need more time. This is also a great way to reheat any leftover loaves the next day.
How to know when French Bread is done baking
It is all about the color, the crust, and the sound. You’ll know when your homemade French bread is done baking by first looking at the color. You want the loaves a gorgeous golden brown. Anything too light and your loaves will not have that amazing crust. Once you have the right color, tap on the bottom of a loaf. It should be crisp and sound hollow inside once the bread is completely baked.
My bread turned out dry and crumbly
Oftentimes, when this happens to homemade bread, it is because of measurements that aren’t precise enough. First, be sure you are using liquid measures for the water. Next, check that you are measuring your flour correctly. If you are just scoping it up with a measuring cup, you are using too much flour! I made a short Instagram video you can watch to learn how to properly measure your flour.
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Homemade french bread is the best! Each baguette is crunchy on the outside with a soft, chewy texture on the inside.
Total Time:45 minutes
Yield:4 baguettes 1x
Ingredients
Scale
3 cups warm water
1 tablespoon granulated sugar
5 teaspoons yeast or 2 packages
2 tablespoons canola oil
3 1/2 rounded teaspoons kosher salt
8 cups bread flour
Instructions
Mix: Using your stand mixer with a dough hook, mix the water, sugar, yeast, and 2 cups of flour into the bowl. Allow to sit until yeast activates and begins to bubble. Add oil and salt.
Add: Slowly mix in remaining flour. You want the dough to just barely pull off the sides of your bowl once the flour is fully incorporated. It should still be a soft dough. That might mean using less flour.
Knead dough until smooth and elastic, about 8 minutes.
Rise: Remove the dough hook and form the dough into a ball inside the bowl. Cover and allow to rise until double, about one hour.
Place the dough gently onto a lightly floured surface.
Divide into four equal pieces. Flatten each piece into a generally triangular shape, about 1/2″ thick.
Roll: Starting on the small point, roll and seal your way across the triangle until you have a small log. Roll the log on the counter to stretch your baguette to the proper length, keeping the thickness uniform across the loaf. Place dough into a greased french bread pan, slit the top with a sharp knife and brush with an egg wash if desired. Allow to rise about 15-20 minutes.
Bake at 375 degrees for 20-25 minutes until golden brown. The bread is completely baked at this point and can be cooled on racks. When it is time to serve, I prefer to place the loaves on the oven racks and bake them for an additional 5-7 minutes. This heats the bread and creates that great crust while keeping the interior soft and chewy. In my opinion, this last step makes all the difference.
Notes
For an even better texture and flavor, let the dough complete its first rise in the fridge. It will take a few hours but the end result will be even better.
Carole Jones is an Arizona-based cookbook author & food blogger. She's authored The 30 Minute Cooking From Frozen Cookbook and the self-published Take 5: Chicken e-cookbook. For the past 15 years, Carole has shared her culinary adventures cooking and baking for her six brutally honest children here on My Kitchen Escapades. Hot, crusty bread is Carole's love language, but her two adorable grandchildren are a close second. Yes, second. Don't judge.
65 comments
elizabeth bontrager
5 years ago
Hey! Will bread flour be lots better than cake flour?
Carole
5 years ago
Yes! Cake flour is made to make baked goods light and fluffy. Bread flour has extra protein and gluten in to make your bread chewy and have a great crust. Please don’t substitute cake flour for bread flour 🙂
Chris McConathy
5 years ago
I just made four loaves last night and the bread is amazing! I have the flexible french loaf pans that I found on Amazon and they worked perfectly! I am a culinary student and have learned to always sift your flour to create the perfect texture. I also added sesame seeds after the egg wash on two loaves and TJ’s everything but the bagel seasoning on the other two. Thank you so much for sharing your recipe!
Carole
5 years ago
I”m so glad you loved it Chris! And I am totally going to try the everything bagel seasoning on top 🙂
Angela
5 years ago
Looks great! Have you ever used a bread machine for the dough?? Since I don’t have a standing mixer and I’be made pizza and ciabatta dough in the machine with very good results, I wonder if it will work. Thanks for sharing!
Carole
5 years ago
Hello Angela! I have not used a bread machine for this recipe before but it should work but I doubt this whole recipe will fit in a bread machine. Good luck and let me know how it goes!
Anotabaker
5 years ago
The written steps don’t match the steps associated with the pictures. If you follow the written steps and then switch to the pictures (like me) you’ll end up with 2c more flour than intended. I caught it before adding the extra, but not before over stirring. Hopefully it still turns out. Its in the oven now.
Carole
5 years ago
I’m not sure to what you are referring to with your review because the recipe, video, and the pictures are all correct. You add 2 cups of flour in the first step, then the remaining flour (6 cups) in the second.
Alison
5 years ago
Yum! This looks delicious, I love the simplicity of ingredients, as many breads recipes have the same ingredients, but not all are created equal. The amount of a particular ingredient and the process in which it’s made can make or break it!… safe to say I’ve been there done that, ended up with many disastrous recipes! With that said the reviews and your gorgeous photos tell me my search is finally over! Trying this ASAP.
One thing I want to mention is that I do not have bread flour but I learned a neat trick a while back, to substitute bread flour all you need to do is use all purpose flour, for every 1cup used take out 1 1/2 tsps replace that with 1 1/2tsp of vital wheat gluten! I know not everyone has such an ingredient on hand but for those who do it works well… as a vegan of 10 years I almost always have this.
Carole
5 years ago
That is very true Alison! Thanks for sharing. I actually add vital wheat gluten to my whole wheat breads to help improve their chew and texture.
Marguerite
5 years ago
The written recipe and the pictures/ video are different. I follow the written recipe. The pictures don’t show the canola oil being added. The pictures also say 2 packets of yeast which is about 1 1/2 tablespoons but the written recipe says 2 tablespoons . Just to let you know. My bread always comes out delicious using just the written recipe.
Carole
5 years ago
Glad you love the recipe Marguerite! And thank you for coming back and leaving your review. It helps so much 🙂
Anne Smith
5 years ago
I am making this tonight for our 98 year old neighbor’s bday and wondered two things:
1) the video doesn’t include the oil – is that part of the revised recipe?
2) you mention at the end to warm up a 7-8 min before serving – should that be done at the same temp of 375?
Thank you,
Anne
Carole
5 years ago
I hope it turns out perfectly! Yes, you need the oil and yes, use the same temperature to reheat it.
Cindi
5 years ago
This is a wonderful recipe for French Bread. I bought the special pans because I wanted the loaves to turn out like yours. Got the pans from Amazon and Made the bread the next day. Just awesome. Only bad part is my trusty Kitchenaid mixer broke down while mixing the dough. It refused to take the last cup of flour so I omitted it. Still was just perfect. Except now I need to buy another Kitchenaid stand mixer (#3).
Carole
5 years ago
I’m so glad you loved it Cindi….even if the cost was your KitchenAid 🙂
Lili G
5 years ago
Hello,
can I sub the canoloa oil for extra virgin olive oil?
if i wanted to freeze, do i freeze the dough after cutting into four peices, or once i roll out and shape into baguette?
Carole
5 years ago
Hi Lili! If you use extra virgin olive oil, the flavor will be quite pronounced in the bread. As far as freezing, I would par bake the bread until it is 90% done, let it cool, then freeze them. When you need one, pop it in the oven at 350 for about 10 minutes to finish baking.
Cindi
5 years ago
This is my 2nd comment, but I feel compelled! This bread is so good, I’m making a batch every single week. I make some of the loaves into small loaves for sub rolls. My neighbors love it too. It’s such an easy bread to make and the taste is absolutely perfect. My husband actually took my Kitchenaid mixer apart, ordered parts and fixed it so I didn’t have to buy a new one!!! He knew how important the bread was to all of us. No kidding!
Carole
5 years ago
That is awesome Cindi! Thank you so much for coming back and leaving your review. It makes such a difference 🙂
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65 comments
Hey! Will bread flour be lots better than cake flour?
Yes! Cake flour is made to make baked goods light and fluffy. Bread flour has extra protein and gluten in to make your bread chewy and have a great crust. Please don’t substitute cake flour for bread flour 🙂
I just made four loaves last night and the bread is amazing! I have the flexible french loaf pans that I found on Amazon and they worked perfectly! I am a culinary student and have learned to always sift your flour to create the perfect texture. I also added sesame seeds after the egg wash on two loaves and TJ’s everything but the bagel seasoning on the other two. Thank you so much for sharing your recipe!
I”m so glad you loved it Chris! And I am totally going to try the everything bagel seasoning on top 🙂
Looks great! Have you ever used a bread machine for the dough?? Since I don’t have a standing mixer and I’be made pizza and ciabatta dough in the machine with very good results, I wonder if it will work. Thanks for sharing!
Hello Angela! I have not used a bread machine for this recipe before but it should work but I doubt this whole recipe will fit in a bread machine. Good luck and let me know how it goes!
The written steps don’t match the steps associated with the pictures. If you follow the written steps and then switch to the pictures (like me) you’ll end up with 2c more flour than intended. I caught it before adding the extra, but not before over stirring. Hopefully it still turns out. Its in the oven now.
I’m not sure to what you are referring to with your review because the recipe, video, and the pictures are all correct. You add 2 cups of flour in the first step, then the remaining flour (6 cups) in the second.
Yum! This looks delicious, I love the simplicity of ingredients, as many breads recipes have the same ingredients, but not all are created equal. The amount of a particular ingredient and the process in which it’s made can make or break it!… safe to say I’ve been there done that, ended up with many disastrous recipes! With that said the reviews and your gorgeous photos tell me my search is finally over! Trying this ASAP.
One thing I want to mention is that I do not have bread flour but I learned a neat trick a while back, to substitute bread flour all you need to do is use all purpose flour, for every 1cup used take out 1 1/2 tsps replace that with 1 1/2tsp of vital wheat gluten! I know not everyone has such an ingredient on hand but for those who do it works well… as a vegan of 10 years I almost always have this.
That is very true Alison! Thanks for sharing. I actually add vital wheat gluten to my whole wheat breads to help improve their chew and texture.
The written recipe and the pictures/ video are different. I follow the written recipe. The pictures don’t show the canola oil being added. The pictures also say 2 packets of yeast which is about 1 1/2 tablespoons but the written recipe says 2 tablespoons . Just to let you know. My bread always comes out delicious using just the written recipe.
Glad you love the recipe Marguerite! And thank you for coming back and leaving your review. It helps so much 🙂
I am making this tonight for our 98 year old neighbor’s bday and wondered two things:
1) the video doesn’t include the oil – is that part of the revised recipe?
2) you mention at the end to warm up a 7-8 min before serving – should that be done at the same temp of 375?
Thank you,
Anne
I hope it turns out perfectly! Yes, you need the oil and yes, use the same temperature to reheat it.
This is a wonderful recipe for French Bread. I bought the special pans because I wanted the loaves to turn out like yours. Got the pans from Amazon and Made the bread the next day. Just awesome. Only bad part is my trusty Kitchenaid mixer broke down while mixing the dough. It refused to take the last cup of flour so I omitted it. Still was just perfect. Except now I need to buy another Kitchenaid stand mixer (#3).
I’m so glad you loved it Cindi….even if the cost was your KitchenAid 🙂
Hello,
can I sub the canoloa oil for extra virgin olive oil?
if i wanted to freeze, do i freeze the dough after cutting into four peices, or once i roll out and shape into baguette?
Hi Lili! If you use extra virgin olive oil, the flavor will be quite pronounced in the bread. As far as freezing, I would par bake the bread until it is 90% done, let it cool, then freeze them. When you need one, pop it in the oven at 350 for about 10 minutes to finish baking.
This is my 2nd comment, but I feel compelled! This bread is so good, I’m making a batch every single week. I make some of the loaves into small loaves for sub rolls. My neighbors love it too. It’s such an easy bread to make and the taste is absolutely perfect. My husband actually took my Kitchenaid mixer apart, ordered parts and fixed it so I didn’t have to buy a new one!!! He knew how important the bread was to all of us. No kidding!
That is awesome Cindi! Thank you so much for coming back and leaving your review. It makes such a difference 🙂