
Midweek dinners often call for something comforting that does not add extra work. I started making this Cheddar Chive Savoury Loaf on Wednesdays when soup is on the menu, because it turns a simple pot of vegetables or lentils into a full, satisfying meal with almost no extra planning.
The flavour is gently sharp and creamy from cheddar, with a fresh oniony lift from chives. The crumb bakes up soft and sliceable, with pockets of melted cheese and a savoury aroma that makes excellent toast the next morning. A bread machine keeps it realistic on busy weeks: you load the pan, let the machine knead and proof consistently, and come back to a warm loaf ready for slicing.

Cheddar Chive Savoury Loaf (Bread Machine, Soup and Toast)
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Add ingredients to the bread pan in this order: water, butter, sugar, salt, flour, dry milk powder (if using). Make a small well in the flour and add the yeast.
- Select the Basic or White bread program, 1 kg loaf size, and medium crust (or your preference).
- At the mix-in beep (or 8 to 12 minutes into kneading), add the grated cheddar and chopped chives. If your machine has no beep, pause briefly after the dough has formed a smooth ball and add them then.
- Check dough consistency during the first knead. It should be soft and slightly tacky, not soupy. If it looks dry or the machine struggles, add 1 tbsp (15 g) water. If it looks wet and smears around the pan, add 1 tbsp (8 to 10 g) flour.
- When baking finishes, remove the pan promptly. Let the loaf cool on a rack for at least 60 minutes before slicing, so the cheese pockets set and slices stay neat.
Notes
- Best cheese choice: use a firm cheddar that you can grate (young to mature). Very soft processed slices can melt too early and streak the dough.
- For soup night: slice thick and toast lightly, then rub with a cut clove of garlic for a quick garlic-cheddar side.
- For a dairy-free version: use 25 g neutral oil instead of butter, omit milk powder, and use a dairy-free cheddar-style shreds that melts well. Results vary by brand.
- Storage: wrap once fully cool. Keeps 2 days at room temperature, 5 days refrigerated. Freeze sliced for easy toast. Approximate nutrition, will vary with exact brands of flour and cheese and slice thickness.
Other Loaf Sizes
The recipe card above is the 1kg version. Use these quick conversions for smaller or larger bread machines. Select the matching loaf-size setting on your bread machine if it has one, and check your machine manual for any size-specific cycle or timing guidance.
750g loaf
- 215 g water, room temperature (about 1 cup minus 1 tbsp)
- 19 g unsalted butter, softened (about 1 1/3 tbsp)
- 11 g sugar (about 2 1/2 tsp)
- 8 g fine salt (about 1 1/3 tsp)
- 375 g bread flour (about 3 cups)
- 19 g dry milk powder (optional, for softer crumb) (about 2 tbsp)
- 5 g instant yeast (about 1 1/2 tsp)
- 90 g cheddar cheese, grated (about 1 cup, loosely packed)
- 8 g chives, finely chopped (about 1/4 cup)
- 3/4 tsp mustard powder (optional)
FAQ
Can I use all-purpose (plain) flour instead of bread flour?
Yes. The loaf will be slightly less tall and a bit more tender. Hold back about 10 to 15 g water at first, then add only if the dough looks dry during kneading.
Why did my loaf sink on top?
Common causes are too much liquid, too much yeast, or mix-ins added too early. Next time, reduce water by 10 to 20 g, keep yeast to 7 g, and add cheese and chives at the mix-in beep (not at the start). Also cool the loaf fully before slicing.
Can I use dried chives?
Yes. Use 3 to 4 g dried chives (about 2 tbsp). Dried herbs absorb water, so if the dough looks a little stiff, add 1 to 2 tsp extra water during kneading.
How do I make it more savoury for toast?
Reduce sugar to 10 g, add 1/2 tsp garlic powder, or add 1/4 tsp black pepper. Keep salt at 10 g for balanced flavour and good structure.
