Homemade Whole Wheat Oatmeal Sandwich Bread w/ Tomato Jam
Homemade oatmeal wheat sandwich bread is amazing. Make a few loaves to share. You’ll make someone very happy!
Wheat Oatmeal Sandwich Bread Recipe
The maligned sandwich loaf. A second-class citizen in the bread world. Soft, mass-produced, with nothing artistinal or interesting about it. Bearer of boring pb&j’s and bologna sandwiches. Oscar Meyer has a better repute than the soft sandwich loaf breads.
Yet, are they really such an inferior loaves? Or has it become such a commercial mainstay that it becomes hard to admire its qualities. It’s like trying to appreciate Barber of Seville overture after watching Bugs Bunny shave up Elmer.
Easy Wheat Bread Recipe
We say rise up! Rise up noble Wheat Sandwich Bread loaf. Hold your crust high amongst your doughy brethren. Made in the hands of ones who love you, your crumb is one of our favorites. Especially you, the Whole Wheat Sandwich bread Loaf.
Your beautiful singe of crumb balanced by a delicate softness as we toast and grill you. Yet there is still that extra layer of texture and flavor given by the whole wheat which leads us to you over your brother the White Loaf. How glorious of a grilled cheese you make when paired with smoked Gouda, paper-thin sweet onion slices, crisp sweet pickle slices and a touch of balsamic. A wonderful nutty toast your gently charred slices provide. Perfect for a glancing spread of butter and jam.
Bow down before no other loaf. Every loaf has its wonder and quality, and yours is no less than any others. Do not undervalue yourself gentle sandwich loaf, because we love you and will always make you. You hold the heart of a boy who bakes.
For our latest loaf, as the nation tires and continues to braves the winter chill, we thought to open some of our bottled summer sunshine, tomato jam.
Our Homemade Tomato Jam Recipe
We had a great tomato season and were determined to save as much as possible for exactly this time of year. Even though we now live in the comfort of Southern California weather, the memories of growing up months of snowy winters will never be forgotten. The cold and gloom starts to settle into the bones. Snow isn’t “pretty” anymore. It’s annoying. And cold. I remember and feel your frostbit toes.
So here’s a sweet reminder of the warmth of summer. The ice will thaw and warmth will come again.
-Todd
Start with the dry active yeast
mixing flours and oatmeal
allow bread to rise
viola, ready for the oven
Whole Wheat Oatmeal Sandwich Bread
Ingredients
- 1 cup (240ml) Water
- 1 cup (240ml) Milk
- 1 pkg. Active Dry Yeast (2 1/4 teaspoons or 7g)
- 1 Tablespoon (20g) Honey
- 2 Tablespoons (40g) unsulphured Molasses , preferrably not backstrap molasses
- 2 1/2 cups (300g) Whole Wheat Flour
- 2 cups (275g) Bread Flour
- 1 cup (90g) Rolled Oats
- 1/4 cup (1/2 stick or 56g) unsalted Butter , melted and cooled slightly (plus extra if topping loaf with oats or bran)
- 1 Tablepoos (15g) Kosher Salt
- optional:
- bran or additional oats for topping loaf
Instructions
- Lightly butter 9x5x3 bread loaf pan.
- Gently warm milk and water to about 115°F/46°C. Combine water, milk, yeast, honey, and molasses in the bowl of a standing mixer. Stir to dissolve yeast. (If you aren't sure if your yeast is good, wait 5 minutes to see if it blooms-bubbles. If it doesn't throw out and start over.)
- Add flours, oats, melted butter, and salt to the liquid mix. Using the bread hook and stand mixer, mix for 6 minutes on medium speed. The dough should climb the dough hook and slap around the sides of the bowl without sticking. If the dough is sticking, add a tablespoon or two more of flour at a time until the dough comes cleanly away from the sides of the bowl.
- Cover the bowl with a towel and place in a warm area to rise. Leave to rise for about an hour or until doubled in size (to test if it has proofed enough, gently poke the dough- if it springs back, it needs to proof longer - if a dimple remains, it is ready.)
- Shape the loaf. Put the dough on a lightly floured work surface. Flatten out the bubbles while working the loaf into a square shape. Grabbing the top edge, fold the dough down towards the middle. Grab the bottom edge and fold up to the middle, bringing the two edges together. Pinch the seam and sides, sealing them with your fingers. Roll the dough back and forth, plumping it into an even log and about the size of your bread pan. Gently place the dough into your bread pan, seam side down. Press the dough gently into the corners of the bread pan.
- Cover the loaf with a towel and leave it to rise in a warm area for about an hour or until the dough rises to half again its size and is puffing up barely over the edges of the loaf pan.
- While the dough is rising, preheat the oven to 400°F/205°C.
- If loaf topping is desired, gently brush some melted butter over the top of the loaf, being careful not to deflate it. Sprinkle the top of the loaf with bran or oats.
- Bake for about 40 minutes, rotating halfway through. The loaf is done baking when the crust is dark brown and sounds hollow when tapped. Remove the loaf from the pan and allow to full cool on a baking rack.
Nutrition Information per Serving
Here’s moreeasy bread recipes for you.
I am in love with this bread I have been making it at least once a week for my daily sandwiches and I am at my 5th loaf now, it keeps great. This time I experimented by adding some toasted seeds (poppy, sunflower, flax & pumpkin), makes for a denser texture, easier to slice thin, I LOVE it!!! I also used it to make my first ever PBJ (I have been in the US for only 4 years…) with all natural peanut butter and home-made strawberry jam, sooooo addicting!!!! Thank you so much for that recipe (among so many others…)
Great great recipe! The husband was dying for some bread, but a self imposed – no shopping in the middle of the grocery store – rule prevented him from picking some up. I knew he wanted oatmeal bread, and I was in favor of whole wheat and a quick google search pulled up your recipe. Simply amazing! This will for sure be our go to bread from now on!
This looks delicious. I try to bake as much of my own bread as possible. There really is no comparison. I will have to try your tomato jam this summer. I have never made that before and am always looking for new ways to put up my tomatoes. Thanks!
I tried this recipe last night and am currently enjoying the best PB&J ever!! Thanks so much, this is going to be my go-to bread recipe from now on. Infinitely better than store-bought!
Beautiful bread and that tomato jam is seriously tempting me.
Thank you so much for the bread recipe. I had a similar bread recipe with oats and honey and molasses that I somehow lost a couple years back. Can’t wait to give this recipe a whirl.
Also, I’ve never heard of tomato jam, but will save this recipe for when my tomatoes are mass producing this summer so I can enjoy them in the winter too.
We just starting making tomato jam over the last couple years and it has become a must from the garden each summer. Especially with the super sweet Sun Gold tomatoes. Hope you love the bread recipe.
T & D
I saw this post on Taste Spotting and HAD to try it! I made this loaf yesterday with a few changes (I was out of bread flour) and it came out so beautifully – total success and delicious to boot. Thanks for posting!!
Man that jam looks amazing!!!
Great post! The photos are always amazing and the recipes delicious.
Made it this evening. Came out great, very easy to make. Will make it again and again. Thank you for a great recipe
Yay for sandwich bread!!!! All I could think of when I was reading this was how good a sandwich made with this bread and the tomato jam would be – a little thinly sliced roast chicken and a little mayo and some crisp lettuce…. (sigh)…..
Yum, this looks so delicious!
I saw this photo on Foodgawker and thought, “Oh my! Someone can take a great food photo.” Then I looked and noticed it was you two. I should have known. Your photography & recipes just keep getting better & better. Yum on both counts!
Oh yum! I may actually make this today! This looks delish and I just know it would be something our kids would love too. We enjoy eating whole grains and I would love to use our favorite Kamut Wheat as the flour – and along with the oats – wow! This is going to be great ๐ Thanks for sharing it!
The bread is looking so fresh and healthy. I wish it could fly to me for my breakfast …
There is nothing nicer than the smell of freshly baked bread in the house. I’m a cheat though and use a bread machine for the kneading part before chucking in the oven. Love that knife btw!