
Mondays go better when lunch is already sorted, and this Wholemeal Honey Sandwich Bread (Bread Machine) is my quiet reset button for the week. I started making it after one too many rushed mornings with nothing but crackers in the cupboard. The honey gives a gentle sweetness without turning it into dessert bread, and the mix of wholemeal and white flour keeps the loaf soft enough for sandwiches.
The flavour is warm and wheaty with a light honey aroma, and the crumb stays tender for toast and school style slices. A small amount of milk powder (or a simple dairy-free swap) helps it slice neatly, which is exactly what I want for quick weekday meals.
This is the kind of loaf that made me appreciate how a bread machine turns good intentions into actual bread on real weeks: add ingredients, press start, and come back to a loaf that feels homemade without taking over your day.

Wholemeal Honey Sandwich Bread (Bread Machine)
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Add ingredients to the bread machine pan in the order recommended by your machine. A common order is: water, oil, honey, milk powder (if using), salt, flours, then yeast last (keep yeast from touching the liquids).
- Select the Basic/White or Sandwich program (or Whole Wheat program if your machine tends to under-knead heavier doughs). Choose loaf size 1 kg (2 lb) and a light or medium crust.
- During the first 10 minutes of mixing, check the dough: it should form a smooth, slightly tacky ball. If it looks dry or crumbly, add water 1 tsp at a time. If it looks wet and puddly, add bread flour 1 tbsp at a time.
- Let the program run through baking. When finished, remove the loaf promptly, turn out onto a rack, and cool at least 60 minutes before slicing for the neatest sandwich slices.
Notes
Sweetener note: Honey can speed browning. If your crust gets too dark, choose Light crust next time.
Paddle: Remove the paddle after the last punch-down (if your machine allows) to reduce the hole in the base. Tips:
- For extra-soft slices, replace 20 g of the water with 20 g yogurt (or a dairy-free yogurt). Keep total liquid the same.
- If your wholemeal flour is very coarse, let the mixed dough rest 10 minutes (pause the machine if possible) before kneading continues. This helps hydration and softness.
- Storage: Cool completely, then store in a bag or container at room temperature for 2 to 3 days, or slice and freeze for up to 2 months.
- For toast lovers: Slice slightly thicker and toast from frozen, it keeps the crumb tender. Approximate nutrition, will vary by ingredient brands and exact 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
- 225 g water, room temperature (about 1 cup minus 1 tbsp)
- 19 g neutral oil (about 1 1/2 tbsp)
- 34 g honey (about 1 1/2 tbsp)
- 11 g milk powder (optional, for softer crumb) (about 1 1/2 tbsp). For dairy-free: use soy milk powder or omit
- 7 g fine salt (about 1 1/4 tsp)
- 240 g bread flour or strong white flour (about 2 cups, spooned and leveled)
- 180 g wholemeal (whole wheat) flour (about 1 1/2 cups, spooned and leveled)
- 6 g instant yeast (about 2 tsp)
FAQ
Can I make this 100% wholemeal (whole wheat)?
Yes, but it will be denser. For a 1 kg loaf, replace the 320 g bread flour with 320 g wholemeal flour, add 15 to 25 g extra water, and use the Whole Wheat program if available.
What can I use instead of milk powder?
You can omit it, the loaf will still work but may be slightly less soft. If available, soy milk powder is a good dairy-free option. Another option is to replace 30 g of the water with 30 g milk (dairy or unsweetened plant milk).
Can I reduce the honey?
Yes. Reduce honey to 25 to 30 g for a less sweet loaf. If you reduce it, add back the difference as water so the dough consistency stays similar.
Why did my loaf sink after baking?
Common causes are too much liquid, too much yeast, or the loaf over-proofing in a warm room. Next time, hold back 15 g water and add only if needed during mixing, or reduce yeast by 1/4 tsp.
