Best Homemade French Brioche Bread Recipe | Aline Made (2024)

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Fluffy, soft, and rich in flavor – that’s how an authentic French Brioche Bread must be! Let me show you how to make the best brioche bread recipe at home!

Best Homemade French Brioche Bread Recipe | Aline Made (1)

What Is Brioche Bread

Brioche bread is one of the most known and most authentic French bread that exists. It’s made with eggs and butter, which gives this bread a very rich flavor.

The texture of this bread is similar to soft toast bread or challah bread, but much fluffier. Furthermore, it has a very intense flavor and is due to the use of a high amount of butter quite buttery. Some like it, others don’t.

Because French Brioche Bread is so buttery, it’s an excellent bread to use for making Brioche French Toast, Baked French Toast Casseroles, or Grilled Cheese Sandwiches.

I love to toast it and use it for sandwiches or spread it with Nutella or jam in the mornings.

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How To Make Brioche Loaf

The loaf is basically a yeast dough with extra butter and eggs. The dough is hard to handle and quite sticky (different than regular bread). Therefore, I can highly recommend you to use your stand mixer!

I have never made the dough from hand and would never try it, to be honest with you.

Also, you need to knead your dough for 20 minutes, and I wouldn’t want you to spend that time on kneading, your stand mixer can do this for you!

The key to a very fluffy and airy brioche bread is to let it rise for at least 4 hours up to a maximum of 16 hours. My tip is to start with the dough in the early evening and let it rise in your fridge overnight.

The next morning, you can form it into a loaf, let it rise again, and bake it. Your French brioche will be ready around noon (depends if you are an early bird or like to sleep in).

The second option is starting in the early morning, let it rise in the fridge during the day, finish and bake it in the evening!

I always bake my brioche as a loaf in a loaf pan. But you can also use the dough to make brioche buns or burger buns (sprinkle with seeds). If so, reduce the baking time and take the buns out of the oven when golden brown.

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French Brioche Recipe

Ingredients you need:

  • Fresh yeast, or active dry yeast → I always recommend using fresh yeast if available in your supermarket, don’t spin your head if it’s not available and use dried yeast instead
  • Milk, can be substituted with plant-based milk, preferably soy or oat milk
  • Sugar, necessary for the yeast and a light sweet taste
  • Eggs → can’t be replaced if you are following a vegan diet, sorry
  • All-purpose flour
  • Salt
  • Butter, needs to be cold → can be substituted with a plant-based butter

How to make it:

  • Mix the yeast, milk (need to be lukewarm, but not hot → warm up in the microwave or a small pot), and sugar until the yeast starts foaming. → This takes about 5 minutes, you will see the process very well when using fresh yeast.
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  • Mix in the eggs.
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  • Give it with the flour and salt in the bowl of your stand mixer and knead for 5 minutes at speed level one using the dough hook. → The dough is quite hard to handle, don’t add more milk.
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  • Now, add the butter in pieces and knead for another 15 minutes at speed level two until the butter is well incorporated and your dough is smooth and still slightly sticky but comes easily from the bowl if using a silicone spatula.
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  • Grease a bowl with oil (olive, sunflower, or canola oil).
  • Add your dough, turn it around once until fully covered with the oil, and cover it with a damp tea towel or plastic wrap.
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  • Leave your dough to rise for one hour at room temperature.
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  • Place in the fridge and leave to rise for 4-16 hours. → Overnight is perfect.
  • The next morning, your dough is very airy and has a lot of bubbles. Place on a lightly floured surface and divide into five equal pieces (using a knife or dough scraper).
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  • Fold each one into a log:
    1. Form it first into a rectangle → slightly press the dough with the palm of your hands and stretch using your fingers.
    2. Then roll it up into a log using your fingers.
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  • Place the logs in a with oil greased 10×5-inch loaf pan (25x12cm). You can push them carefully together if they don’t fit.
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  • Cover with a damp tea towel or plastic wrap and let it rise again for 1.5-2 hours until it has grown significantly to the top of the loaf pan. Start preheating your oven (395°F/200°C) after 1.5 hours.
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  • Brush your brioche with a beaten egg (use a baking brush). → This ensures a golden top and keeps your dough from drying out during baking. Vegan egg wash alternative: 2 tbsp unsweetened soymilk, 1 tbsp agave nectar, 1 pinch ground turmeric.
  • Bake the brioche for 30-35 minutes in the preheated oven until it’s golden brown.
  • Take it out, place on a wire rack, and let it cool down for at least 15 minutes before you take it out of the pan. Leat if cool entirely before slicing.
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French Brioche Recipe FAQ

How To Store Brioche?

Store your brioche wrapped in a tea towel or plastic bag for three days.

Can I Freeze Brioche?

You can freeze the whole loaf or cut in slices (easy to defrost in a toaster). Place them in freezer friendly zip bags and freeze for up to 3 months. Defrost in your oven or toaster before serving.

Can I skip the overnight freezer rise?

You can, but I don’t recommend it. If you do so, your brioche is still delicious, but it’s not as airy and fluffy when skipping this significant step.

Can I make this brioche recipe vegan-friendly?

Unfortunately, you need eggs for this recipe to work. But I give options for all other dairy products used which can be easily swapped with the non-diary version.

This recipe takes so much time, can I shorten it?

Most of the time is just dough rising time, and only little is actual active time in the kitchen. Give it a try, and you will be amazed by how simple it is making quality bread at home.

More Authentic French Recipes

  • Authentic French Crepes
  • Brioche French Toast
  • French Croissants
  • French Chocolate Croissants
  • White French Dressing
  • Vegan French Dressing

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📖 Recipe

Best Homemade French Brioche Bread Recipe | Aline Made (24)

French Brioche

Fluffy, soft, and rich in flavor – that's how an authentic French Brioche Bread must be! Let me show you how to make the best brioche bread recipe at home!

Author : Aline Cueni

4.74 from 104 votes

Click on the stars to leave a vote!

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Prep Time :1 hour hr

Cook Time :30 minutes mins

Dough Rising Time :7 hours hrs

Total Time :8 hours hrs 30 minutes mins

Servings : 8

Calories : 294kcal

Ingredients

French Brioche Dough

  • 1 tbsp (15 g) fresh yeast or 2 tsp active dry yeast
  • ¼ cup (60 ml) milk lukewarm, use soy or oat milk as a non-diary option
  • 2 tbsp (30 g) sugar
  • 3 eggs
  • 2.5 cups (320 g) all-purpose flour
  • 1 tsp salt
  • ½ cup (113 g) unsalted butter chilled, use plant-based butter as a non-diary option

Egg Wash

  • 1 egg beaten

Instructions

  • Mix the yeast, lukewarm milk, and sugar, and let it sit for 5 minutes until foaming. Mix in the eggs until well combined.

  • Place it with the flour and salt in the bowl of a stand mixer, and knead at speed level 1 for 5 minutes (your dough is very sticky).Add the butter in pieces and knead for another 15 minutes at speed level 2 (your dough should be sticky but comes easily from the bowl using a silicone spatula).

  • Place the dough in a greased bowl, cover with a damp tea towel, and let it rise at room temperature for one hour. Refrigerate for 4-16 hours ➝ makes your brioche soft & airy.

  • Take the dough out of the fridge, place on a lightly floured surface, divide into five pieces and fold each one into a log (punch down the dough gently with the ball of your hand, stretch into a rectangle, and roll up into a log). Place them in a greased (or with parchment paper lined) 10×5-inch loaf pan (25x12cm), cover with a damp tea towel and let it rise for 1.5-2 hours at room temperature.

  • Preheat the oven to 395°F/200°C. Brush the dough with the egg wash and bake it for 30-35 minutes until brown.

  • Allow the brioche to cool down on a cooling rack before slicing.

Notes

  • Use a plastic wrap instead of a damp tea towel to cover your dough.
  • The temperature in the recipe is for the use of a regular oven. If you use a convection oven (fan-based), set the temperature to 355°F/180°C.
  • Brioche is the best if fresh, but can be stored in an airtight container for a few days or up to three months in the freezer. Defrost in the oven or toaster.

Nutrition

Serving: 8Servings | Calories: 294kcal | Carbohydrates: 34g | Protein: 7g | Saturated Fat: 8g | Cholesterol: 113mg | Sodium: 428mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 4g

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Aline Cueni

I’m a girl who loves to cook and bake delicious homemade food. Let me help you to incorporate more plant-based foods into everyday life! Vegetarian & vegan recipes can be anything but boring.

Best Homemade French Brioche Bread Recipe | Aline Made (2024)

FAQs

What is the best flour for brioche? ›

Use good-quality flour with a high gluten content, ideally a fine pastry flour (T45 in France). Classic French brioche recipes use half as much egg and butter as flour.

What is a typical percentage of butter to be used in brioche? ›

Brioche
METRICBAKER'S %
Salt.25kg2.5%
Sugar1.2kg12%
Butter, pliable5kg50%
Yeast0.7kg7%
4 more rows

Is melted or softened butter better for brioche? ›

Traditionally, brioche dough says to beat softened butter into your dough, which takes a really long time and burnt out my stand mixer once. But I've also had success with enriched dough recipes that just say to mix melted butter in with the wet ingredients.

Why does brioche take so long to make? ›

Brioche has around 5 times as much butter as an average white bread recipe! Fat inhibits the formation of gluten which is formed when we knead dough which is required to make breads rise so they're soft and fluffy. So brioche dough is required to be kneaded for longer than usual to develop the gluten.

What can I use instead of yeast for brioche? ›

Baking Soda, Milk and Vinegar

Vinegar, milk and baking soda mixed together helps the bread rise. Use one teaspoon of baking soda, half a teaspoon of vinegar and half a teaspoon of milk to replace two teaspoons of yeast. Lighter batters may have a slightly different texture, but you will still get a rise from the dough.

How sticky should brioche dough be? ›

Your brioche dough should be slightly tacky because of all the eggs and butter, but not stick to your fingers. It should also be smooth and elastic. To test this, take a small amount of dough and slowly stretch it until it becomes thin and semi-transparent.

What happens if you put too much butter in brioche? ›

Too much butter will result in a very soft, sticky dough that's difficult to shape, and bakes up greasy and dense.

Should butter be cold for brioche? ›

Do not use cold butter, though, because butter must be at room temperature to mix in properly. Don't mix these doughs by hand—your hands are warm enough to melt the butter. Instead, use an electric mixer or, if you don't have one, try our recipe for No-Knead Brioche (see page 242).

Why add butter slowly to brioche? ›

The reason is that butter can inhibit gluten formation. It 'coats' the proteins that would form gluten. You knead the dough first to get gluten, and then add the butter afterward around the already formed gluten. You can add it earlier, you just end up with less gluten and a more tender dough.

How do you know when brioche is kneaded enough? ›

You know that the brioche dough has been kneaded for long enough when: the dough does not stick to the bottom of your stand mixer bowl or bread machine anymore, the dough can be held on to your hand without sticking to them, and you can extend the dough to the point it becomes see-through (it's called the windowpane ...

Why does brioche collapse after baking? ›

Baking temperature

Some ovens run hotter than its settings, some cooler. If the oven is too hot the loaf will be brown and crispy on the outside but doughy in the middle and may collapse as it cools. When bread is baked at too low a temperature it will not rise enough in the oven resulting in a dense and sunken loaf.

Why is my brioche chewy? ›

The flour you used may have contained too much protein. Protein is one of the ingredients that help yeast bread brown. Use bread flour that is purchased at a grocery store or a national brand of all-purpose flour.

How do you know when brioche bread is done? ›

Bake until the internal temperature reaches at least 190°F in the center, and up to 205°F for a crustier loaf.

Why does my brioche taste yeasty? ›

If the area is too warm, bread will rise too fast and begin cooking before the yeast has finished acting. This will impart a "yeasty" taste to the dough that will be transferred to the finished baked loaf. Using old ingredients (rancid nuts, "old" shortening) will cause yeast breads to taste old or have an "off" taste.

Why does brioche taste weird? ›

Brioche is different to most breads because it's made with an enriched dough and tastes a little sweeter. . Because it's an enriched dough, you get that famous brioche texture of soft bread, the classic golden colour and quintessentially rich taste.

Should I use AP or bread flour brioche? ›

What kind of flour should I use? We went with AP flour for this brioche recipe, but you can use bread flour or substitute half of the flour for white whole wheat flour. The critical thing to remember is that the texture of the brioche will change depending on the kind of flour you use.

Is bread flour better for brioche? ›

Since brioche is a highly structured dough, with its interweaving web of fat, eggs, gluten and sugar, the use of strong bread flour, which has a protein content of 12.7% or above, is essential because fat, especially in high proportions, inhibits gluten development.

Is all-purpose or bread flour better for brioche? ›

Bread flour is your go-to for yeast breads—such as brioche, croissant, French bread, and sourdough—which use yeast as a leavening agent. With a protein content of 12 to 16 percent, this high-gluten flour is made of 99.8 percent hard-wheat flour.

Is bread flour good for brioche? ›

Before You Even Start Flour Selection After testing this recipe for what seemed like an infinite amount of times –something my boyfriend can attest to– I have come to the conclusion that the best flour to use for brioche is bread flour, which is oftentimes referred to as “strong flour”, “high protein flour”, or “ ...

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