30-Minute Honey Whole Wheat Skillet Bread โ Skillet breads bake quicker than bread in loaf pans, so you get to enjoy this bread sooner rather than later. It’s soft, fluffy, chewy, and lightweight with a moist crumb that reminds me of the texture of a moist muffin.
No-Knead Whole Wheat Skillet Bread
Every once in awhile, I get lucky with a recipe. The stars align and things works out better than anticipated.
This cast iron skillet bread is that recipe.
Recipes like this are the good karmic payback for all the caketastrophes, seized chocolate, wasted butter, and various fails that I experience. Fresh, warm, no-knead whole wheat bread in a half hour is great karma.
It’s the easiest bread I’ve ever made. It only takes 3 minutes to mix up the batter in one bowl. It’s so easy you’ll think you’ve missed something.
Simply combine all the ingredients all at once in one bowl, pour buttermilk over the top, stir until just moistened, and turn dough out into the skillet and bake. No kneading, no mixer, no dough hooks. Nothing fancy or complicated, and no tricky steps.
It’s reminiscent of Irish soda bread in appearance, but I avoided the pitfalls that come with soda bread. Usually that’s dry, bland, crumbly, and by the next day it’s even drier. This bread is anything but dry.
I had a little buttermilk to use and wanted a quick and easy bread but didn’t want to remake Browned Butter Buttermilk Banana Bread. Even I didn’t need another banana bread recipe. This week.
Buttermilk Cinnamon Rolls were out of the question because they aren’t quick. I loved the loaf of bread that’s created when making Fruit, Seed and Nut Crackers. It’s so good I almost didn’t even want to make crackers with it and haven’t been able to get it out of my mind.
So I recreated a version of it, minus the fruit, seeds, and nuts. I baked in a skillet rather than loaf pan so that it bakes more evenly, and in about one-third the time.
What’s in Whole Wheat Skillet Bread?
To make this no-knead whole wheat bread recipe, you’ll need:
- Whole wheat flour
- All-purpose flour
- Baking soda
- Salt
- Canola oil
- Honey
- Unsulphured molasses
- Brown sugar
- Buttermilk
How to Make Cast Iron Bread
Simply combine all the ingredients except the buttermilk in a large bowl, then slowly add the buttermilk to the mixture. When pouring the buttermilk over the dry ingredients, start with 1 cup, and stir.
The dough should be quite loose, shaggy, and very moist. The flour is like a sponge and seems to inhale the liquid. If it’s at all dry, add up to 1/4 cup more buttermilk so that it’s nicely moistened. I used 1 1/4 cups buttermilk total.
The dough will be lumpy, bumpy, thick, and not at all smooth. Don’t overmix and don’t try to make it smooth. It’s like pancake batter, less is more when it comes to stirring and mixing.
Turn dough out into the skillet in a circular mound that’s about 6 inches in diameter and bake for 15 minutes at 400F, rotate the skillet 180 degrees to ensure even baking, lower the oven temp to 350F and continue to bake for 10 minutes at 350F, or until browned and done.
Starting out with a hotter blast of air and then reducing the temperature helps create internal steam, helping the dough rise better, which creates a puffier loaf than if you bake at 350F the whole time. The same principle applies to muffins create bakery-style, high-domed muffin tops.
After removing the skillet from oven, turn bread out of the skillet and onto a rack immediately because the carryover heat will continue to cook the bread and the bottom will become too browned.
After the bread has cooled completely, I wrap it in plasticwrap, and slide it into a large Ziplock or airtight container, where it’ll keep for 4 days, or freeze for up to 3 months. But leftovers weren’t an issue here.
It’s moist and flavorful enough that ripping off soft hunks and enjoying them plain and fresh was just fine; and with a little hummus or butter, even better.
I used it for PB & J sandwiches with Homemade Chocolate Peanut Butter. So good.
It’s soft, fluffy, chewy, and lightweight without being airy, crumbly, or dry. The crust isn’t a tough or overly hearty and the interior has a moist crumb that reminds me of the texture of a moist muffin. Buttermilk always works miracles keeping things light, moist, and tender.
It’s has just a very slight hint of both honey and molasses amidst the heartier wheat flavor. It’s not a ‘sweet bread’ and the honey just takes the edge off the wheat, which can sometimes be a little bitter or earthy.
On a work-reward scale, this is the type of recipe you wish every other recipe could be like. Three minutes of effort for a scrumptious loaf of soft bread.
The hardest part is waiting 25 whole minutes for it to come of of the oven.
What Skillet Should I Use?
I used my Le Creuset Enameled Cast-Iron 10-1/4-Inch Skillet to make this cast iron skillet bread recipe. If you don’t have an oven-safe skillet, this 10-inch pre-seasoned cast iron pan is $15 bucks. With almost 2800 4.5/5 star ratings, you really can’t go wrong. Or, bake it on a baking sheet. No excuses not to bake this easy loaf.
Can I Use All Whole Wheat Flour?
For the flour, I used a combo of whole wheat and all-purpose, one cup of each. I’m sure you could use a combination of your favorite flours including whole wheat pastry flour, bread flour, ground oats, rye, or almond flour. I’d be reluctant to use more than 50% wheat or another similarly low gluten flour because they’re more resistant to rising.
Can I Use Gluten-Free Flour?
I don’t know how gluten-free flours and baking blends will behave, but because of the buttermilk, you have as good of a chance of any as getting some height and lift, even without gluten.
Can I Use a Buttermilk Substitute?
If you don’t keep buttermilk on hand, pick up a container of Cultured Buttermilk Powder. Not all grocery stores have it, but it’s in the baking aisle. It’s shelf stable, and just mix a couple tablespoons with water for buttermilk.
Or, make homemade buttermilk by adding 2 tablespoons white vinegar (or lemon juice) to 1 cup milk, wait 10 minutes to allow it to curdle, stir; use as necessary. Or, add 1/4 cup yogurt to about 1 cup milk, stir, and use as necessary.
Those options give you many of the benefits of a cultured milk and for a this recipe, they’ll likely be fine. However, I don’t recommend the shortcuts for a very fancy cake or fussy recipe that calls for buttermilk. Use the real thing.
Tips for the Best Whole Wheat Bread
If you don’t have a cast iron skillet, I recommend using a 9ร9-inch baking pan and bake it in there, or use about half of a 9ร13-inch pan. The bread is not at all dry or crumbly. In fact, itโs so moist that I fear if you bake it in a 9ร5-inch or standard loaf pan, rather than a skillet, itโll never cook through in the center before the edges burn.
If you’re not consuming this bread immediately and it stays on a rack to cool for an hour or two, you may observe a fair amount of water released that’s pooled underneath the rack. Mine released about 3 tablespoons in 1 hour.
I store all my fully cooled bread by wrapping it in plastic wrap, then placing it inside a large Ziplock where it stays fresh for up to 4 days. Bread may also be frozen for up to 3 months.
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30 Minute Honey Whole Wheat Skillet Bread
Ingredients
- 1 cup whole wheat flour
- 1 cup all-purpose flour
- 2 teaspoons baking soda
- pinch salt, optional and to taste
- 2 tablespoons canola or vegetable oil
- 2 tablespoons honey
- 1 tablespoon unsulphered molasses (I recommend a medium molasses
- 1 tablespoon brown sugar, packed (I use light brown)
- 1 ยผ cups buttermilk*, see Buttermilk Tips below if you don't have it on hand
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 400F. Spray an enameled cast-iron skillet with cooking spray, grease a seasoned cast iron skillet, or prepare an oven-safe skillet; set aside. My skillet is 10 1/4-inches and I recommend a skillet from 8 to 12 inches in diameter. Alternatively, bake bread on a Silpat-lined or greased baking sheet.
- In a large mixing bowl, combine all ingredients in the order listed, except the buttermilk, and give a quick stir to mix them.
- Pour 1 cup buttermilk over the top. Stir to combine. Dough should be quite loose, shaggy, and very moist. The flour is like a sponge, and if dough is at all dry, add up to 1/4 cup buttermilk so that it's nicely moistened, and stir until just combined (I used 1 1/4 cups buttermilk total). Dough will be lumpy, bumpy, thick, and not at all smooth; don't overmix and don't try to make it smooth.
- Turn dough out into skillet in a circular mound that's about 6 inches in diameter and 3 to 4 inches high. Score top of bread with a knife, making a cross.
- Bake at 400F for 15 minutes. Lower the temperature to 350F and bake for 10 minutes, or until bread is golden and done. (When I lower the temperature to 350F, I also rotate my skillet by 180 degrees to ensure even baking).
- With a large spatula, slide or nudge bread out onto a wire rack immediately to cool. Don't keep it in the skillet because it will continue to cook and bottom will get too browned. Serve after it's sufficiently cooled.
Notes
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
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DANG that looks good. I used to have some of the powdered buttermilk on hand at all times and it was great in baking. That was back in my bread making days. It really kicks the bread softness up a notch.
The cookies yesterday? Also, DANG.
Ummm this sounds amazing! I can’t wait to give this a try!
Sounds amazing, Averie!! Yay for recipes turning out even BETTER than expected! :)
O love how simple and easy this is!! We have bread every morning for breakfast and I think I need to make this apart of our ration!
Oooooooo, guuuuuuurl I want 16 slices!
I just posted a recipe for scones today with buttermilk that I absolutely love. There’s something about the thickness and tang of buttermilk that just sends recipes over the top. Avery, you are making it kind of difficult for me to attack my bucket-list yeast bread with this easy bread recipe ;)
I know – I have some yeast breads I want to trial but lately buttermilk to the rescue :)
Quick and easy breads are seriously the best! There is nothing better than the smell and taste of freshly baked bread. I actually found a skillet bread recipe in my Dad’s old recipe box that I’ve been dying to make. I’ll have to compare his recipe to yours and see how they both turn out!
Fun find! Love finding old recipes and family treasures!
That looks so beautiful. I love rustic looking breads. I’ve never tried one in a skillet. I definitely don’t have a proper skillet for it though. Hmmm….good excuse to shop ;-)
You could do it on a baking sheet, but I did enjoy the skillet :)
An easy bread recipe? With whole wheat flour? That doesn’t require yeast either? Love it!
amen to everything you just said!
I love, LOVE no-knead bread. I’ve done versions that have to rise overnight, but I love that yours can be ready in time for a quick dinner. Fabulous Averie!
This is super similar to a recipe I use for a sort-of-Irish soda bread but mine is NOT DONE in 30 minutes! Also it calls for cutting in butter and other time-consuming things. Love this! Lunch!! Thanks, Averie!
I HATE cutting in butter. It’s such a gloppy task. The butter sticks to the cutter OR you have to dirty/wash out a food processor. And so much butter is wasted and flour is flying and it’s just..a scene. Girl this is sooo easy. LMK if you try it!
I love it when spur-of-the-moment recipes turn out great! You definitely built up a ton of karma because this looks so tasty!
I have been excited to see this and am definitely excited to make it (very hearty and a little rustic) I’m with you on the potential dryness of soda breads–but with buttermilk and a little bit of “moisturizing” sweetener and oil…. oh yum! My husband has become a fan of browned butter so I know he will want a little of that on it. This bread will be my Friday thing!
You’re going to love it and glad you were so excited for it…LMK how it goes!
Gorgeous bread, Averie! I love making bread in the skillet- it’s SO fast I almost feel like I’m doing something wrong, haha! I made a jalapeรฑo, corn and cheddar one a bit ago and it was delicious!
Oh your version sounds fab!
You know how I am with carbs and how I can actually make dinner out of this!
Very easily…you could just smear some PB and J on it. Or browned butter…and call it dinner :)
Omg, it’s like you are reading my mind! I went to a St. Patrick’s day party thrown by an Irish family and JUST posted about how fabulous their soda bread was because it was anything but dry and crumbly.
(It’s the second to last picture: https://vintagezest.blogspot.com/2013/03/weekly-wrap-up-class-concert-night-out.html)
This looks pretty close and I can’t wait to try it, especially if it’s as easy as you say. By the way, it almost looks like a giant scone, which I love the looks of, but I’m usually disappointed by how dry and crumbly they are. I think you should make a scone recipe next because if you can make a moist soda bread, then a scone recipe will be a piece of cake! Or bread, rather. :)
I love all those glass bottles in that post of yours! Scones..well, no offense to anyone who likes them but normally they’re like eating cardboard…they are just not my thing. I want ooey, gooey, drippy…and they are crumbly, bland, and tasteless. My idea of making a scone better…is to just make a blondie :) Butter, sugar, and flour :)