Soft and Chewy Coconut Milk Bread is so soft, fluffy, tender, and moist, thanks to the coconut milk, coconut oil, and oatmeal thatโs kneaded right into the dough. Total time from start to finish is about 4 hours, most of which is downtime.
This bread is like a big, soft, fluffy pillow.
A pillow that smells very softly of coconut.
The past 6 months I’ve been going gangbusters with coconut oil in breads, muffins, and cookies. The flavor it imparts is subtle, yet it lends such a soft and moist texture to everything it touches.
For this bread, I paired coconut oil with rich, creamy coconut milk and am thrilled with the results. It’s adapted from Soft and Fluffy Sandwich Bread (vegan), which has been very popular with readers and is my husband’s all-time favorite bread.
And this one is my new favorite bread for toasting, making sandwiches with, or just nibbling on.
The good news and the bad news about this bread is that it doesn’t have much coconut flavor. If you’re a fan, you may wish for more intensity, and if you’re not into coconut, you’re totally safe. It’s usually shredded coconut, rather than coconut milk or oil, that has the pungent taste many people dislike. The bread is nothing like that.
The recipe makes one modest loaf, perfect for our family, and uses just two cups of flour for the entire loaf. When I read bread and roll recipes that begin with โAdd 5 to 6 cups of flourโ I tune out.
Begin by warming the coconut milk, just until it begins to boil. Then, add the special ingredient that keeps the bread soft, chewy, and moist: oatmeal. Youโd never know oatmeal was baked in and when mixing the dough, youโll think thereโs no way this whole cup of sloppy oatmeal is going to just disappear, but it magically does.
Let the oatmeal-coconut milk mixture cool to the proper temperature, about 15 minutes. I urge you to use a thermometer. You donโt want to add overly hot oatmeal to the yeast because youโll kill it. Yet it has to be warm enough so the yeast activates. For me, this is in the 120 to 130F range because I use Red Star Platinum yeast. The brand of yeast used dictates the temperature.
Combine the oatmeal mixture with all-purpose flour, yeast, brown sugar, and coconut oil. My stand mixer kneaded for about 6 minutes, and if youโre kneading by hand, knead for 10 minutes, or until the dough comes together, adding as little additional flour as possible.
This is a fairly moist and sticky dough, but manageable. With bread-making, the less flour added, and the more you tolerate sticky dough, the lighter and fluffier the bread will be. Sure, I could have added another half-cup or more of flour, but refrained and dealt with the stickiness. And I have a light, fluffy loaf in return.
I used all-purpose flour because I wanted really soft and tender bread. Bread flour will produce a loaf thatโs chewier. I donโt know how whole wheat flour would work. If you try it, I suggest not using more than 1 cup (50% of the total amount) for fear it wonโt rise well, and will become very heavy and dense.
After kneading, place the dough into a greased bowl, cover it, and let it rise in a warm, draft-free place for about 2 hours, or until doubled in size. Create a warm environment by preheating your oven for 1 to 2 minutes to 400F, then shutting it off. This creates a 90F-ish warm spot. Slide the bowl in and wait while the yeast works. Just make sure your oven is off.
After the dough has doubled, punch it down, turn it out onto a floured surface or Silpat and knead it for about 3 minutes.
This is my puffball after the first two-hour rise, before being punched down. You can see it’s glistening and loose, cues that the bread will turn out soft and fluffy.
With your fingers or a rolling pin, shape it into a 10-inch by 6-inch rectangle, just eyeball it. Itโs being baked in an 8-inch pan and you want the long side slightly longer than the pan, so about 10 inches.
Starting with a long side, roll up the dough to form a tight cylinder. Tuck the ends in and place the cylinder in the pan. Cover it, and allow it to rise until doubled, 60 to 75 minutes. Optionally, when rolling it, sprinkle with cinnamon, nutmeg, ground ginger, raisins, or dried fruit.
Bake for about 30 minutes or until domed, golden, and puffy. When tapped, it should sound hollow. Technically, the internal temperature should reach 210F, but I despise spearing pretty bread with the dagger-like thermometer probe, so I rarely do this unless Iโm very uncertain. I usually rely on visual cues and tapping.
Itโs so soft and fluffy, even without eggs and butter, and a great little vegan loaf. There’s a very slight chewiness, thanks to the oatmeal. But you definitely don’t think, oh there’s oatmeal in this. It’s a stealth operator.
The bread is moist and there’s a richness to the crumb that I attribute to the coconut milk and coconut oil. It’s slightly denser than this version of Sandwich Bread, which was made with water and canola oil.
It’s wonderful to eat plain, or with butter, jam, or a smear of Homemade Peanut Butter. Toast it, make French toast with it, make PB&Js for lunches with it, or put a basket of it on the dinner table and watch it disappear.
If you’ve not gotten on the coconut milk or oil train, please, hop on board.
This loaf lasted precisely 1 day.
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Soft and Chewy Coconut Milk Bread
Ingredients
- 1 cup coconut milk, I used Trader Joeโs Light
- 1 cup old-fashioned whole rolled oats, not quick cook or instant
- ยผ cup water, from the tap, not hot and not cold
- 2 cups all-purpose flour, bread flour may be used and will create a heartier, chewier bread
- 3 tablespoons coconut oil, melted (canola or vegetable oil may be substitued)
- 2 tablespoons light brown sugar, packed
- 2 ยผ teaspoons instant dry yeast (one 1/4-ounce packet, I use Red Star Platinum
- pinch salt, optional and to taste
Instructions
- In a 2-cup microwave-safe glass measuring cup or small bowl, heat the coconut milk until it just begins to boil; likely just over 2 minutes.
- Add oatmeal to the milk and stir to combine. Set aside and let cool until temperature reaches about 120 to 130F, about 15 minutes. (I use Red Star Platinum Yeast which necessitates this temperature; allow mixture to cool to the ~100F range for other types of instant dry yeast, or to package directions). Stir in 1/4 cup tap water.
- To the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the dough hook (or a large mixing bowl and knead by hand for about 10 minutes), combine flour, oil, brown sugar, instant dry yeast, and oatmeal mixture. Knead for 5 to 7 minutes on low speed, or until a moist, shaggy dough forms. The dough is quite moist and sticky, but resist the temptation to add additional flour, unless itโs so moist that it wonโt combine. Conversely, if itโs too dry, add up to one-quarter cup water. Erring on the side of too moist is always preferable to too dry in bread-making.
- After kneading, turn the dough out into a large, greased bowl, cover with plasticwrap, and let it rise in a warm, draft-free place for about 2 hours, or until doubled in size. Create a warm environment by preheating your oven for 1 to 2 minutes to 400F, then shutting it off. This creates a 90F-ish warm spot. Slide the bowl in and wait while the yeast works. Just make sure your oven is off.
- Spray an 8-by-4-inch loaf pan with (coconut) cooking spray, or grease and flour the pan; set aside.
- After the dough has doubled, punch it down, turn it out onto a floured surface or Silpat and knead it for about 3 minutes.
- With your fingers or a rolling pin, shape dough into a 10-inch by 6-inch rectangle, just eyeball it. The long side should be slightly longer than the baking pan, which is 8 inches. Starting with a long edge, roll to form a tight cylinder. Thereโs not much to roll, about 3 turns. Tuck ends in and under, and place cylinder in prepared pan, seam side down. Optionally, when rolling, sprinkle with cinnamon, nutmeg, ground ginger, raisins, or diced dried fruit.
- Cover pan with plasticwrap, and allow dough to rise in a warm, draft-free place until doubled, about 60 to 75 minutes. I use the oven trick to 400F for 1 minute trick again.
- In the last minutes of rising, preheat oven to 350F. Bake for about 30 minutes, or until lightly golden, domed, and puffy. Rotate pan midway through baking if desired. When tapped, bread should sound hollow. The internal temperature should reach 210F.
- Allow bread to cool in pan for 5 to 10 minutes before turning out onto a wire rack to cool completely before slicing. The cooling process is important and although itโs tempting, donโt slice into warm bread. I store bread by wrapping a fully cooled loaf in plasticwrap, and place it inside a gallon-size Ziplock, where it stays fresh for about 5 days. Bread freezes very well and can be made from start to finish, cooled, and placed in a freezer-safe airtight container or a ziplock for up to 3 months. I like this bread plain, or with butter, jam, or with homemade peanut butter. Itโs great toasted with butter and a sprinkle of cinnamon-sugar or Cinnamon-Sugar Butter. It makes great sandwiches and French toast.
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
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I’m linking this bread up to Lora the Cake Duchess’ #TwelveLoaves group
Do you have a favorite bread recipe? Do you like coconut milk or coconut oil? Do you cook or bake with it?
Please share recipe links to your favorites.
Could this loaf be any more perfect?! It is gorgeous and it looks SOOOO delicious!
Your pizza from the other day was perfect :)
The thin crust and soft texture of the bread caught my eyes. This is another blog that I will explore further.
Love this! It looks so fluffy. I’ve been using tj’s coconut milk since it’s not in a can but I can barely detect coconut flavor. Most of the time I use it just like almond or regular milk.
I use their unsweetened almond milk or Silk’s for many things and usually buy their canned coconut milk for baking needs b/c it’s thicker than the cartons of coconut milk. It just depends on what I’m going for!
That bread looks so fluffy and gorgeous! I am really into bread baking these days – I haven’t tried RedStar yeast though. Do you think it is much better than other kinds?
The Red Star Platinum yeast is without a doubt my FAVORITE yeast and I get wayyyyyyyyy better results with that yeast than any other. It’s forgiving, works better, and is just a great yeast. It’s a few nickles more than other yeast but so worth it. Look for the Platinum like of yeast, not just their regular line.
Everything looks wonderful! I’m hosting a new linky party at https://hickorytrailblog.blogspot.com/2013/05/efforts-and-assets-linky-party-1.html
I would love to have you!
Angela
I absolutely LOVE baking with coconut milk! This bread looks absolutely delicious! Total perfection as always :)
Thanks, Trish, and thanks for hosting your linky party every week!
I love that this bread is made with coconut milk! It’s one of my favorite ingredients without a doubt. I’ve totally got the bug to start making my own bread, and this is another nudge in that direction1
Another wonderful looking bread on the “to make list”. Got to get some supplies first. If it is anything like the fluffy sandwich bread you made- it will be delicious! Tell me – how do you cut your bread to make the slices so perfect??
With a big, sharp, serrated knife! Nothing fancy but I just take my time! :)
Ooooh I love the idea of biting into this pillowy soft bread with just a hint of coconut flavor! It sounds phenomenal
Could this bread be any more perfect?! Nope! I loooove that it only uses two cups of flour and also has the addition of oats. Awesome recipe!!! And PS – every recipe you post makes me want to run to the kitchen and start baking right away!
I’m glad the posts make you want to start baking! That’s always a good sign :)
I’m a little crazy for coconut as well lately, oil, butter, milk, you name it, it’s in my pantry at the moment!
Okay. I reeallllllly need to make bread now. You’re a bread genius Averie, I love this!
as a complete carb addict and everything coconut lover, this is my idea of a perfect food! your loaves are always perfect looking – I will be making this bread tomorrow, and I can almost smell it already:)
No way, really? Okay well LMK how it goes for you! I know you know your way around bread and yeast so hopefully you love this one as much as I do! keep me posted!
This would be my favoite bread of your bunch too, Averie. I have to tell you – I love how you explain the process. I know it’s a ton to type (it takes me SO long!) but I truly have learned so much about bread baking from your posts. I am thankful! I just used coconut milk last week to make my oatmeal very creamy. Well, it was SUPER creamy and amazing. I have to bake with it now! This loaf of bread looks SO soft and yes – like a huge bread pillow! The shot of the slice of bread with jelly – ummm, I shot my bread with strawberry jelly lol. Last night I toasted the last piece with a little butter. Amazing! I bet this would be even better. Such pretty pictures too!
Glad that my posts have taught you things and that you find them helpful. With bread, there are things that can go wrong, even ‘simple’ loaves, like this one. Rolls, cinn rolls, etc. are even more detailed b/c you have to talk fillings and frostings! But I’d rather spell it out as much as possible so people make it, and with success!
That’s too funny about your strawberry jam + bread pics. We are twins, I swear!
This bread looks like a pillow I want to dive into!
Totally honestly, this is the most perfect looking homemade bread I’ve ever seen! Thanks for sharing, Averie!
Really? Well I am flattered! Thank you!