Editor's note, June 2023: We've slightly updated this post, including photography, to provide even more guidance for readers. Time to get baking!

Do you bake bread in a bread machine?

Many bakers do, judging by the popularity of our bread machine recipes. And for good reason: The bread machine is a great way for first-time bread bakers to get started. And for seasoned bread bakers, it can be a welcome shortcut when you simply don't have time to bake bread the standard way: Simply pop ingredients into a machine like the Zojirushi Virtuoso and let it do all the work, from mixing to kneading to rising to baking.

Harvest Grains Loaf for the Bread Machine Photography by Kristin Teig; food styling by Liz Neily
Harvest Grains Loaf for the Bread Machine

It would be great if the bread machine's chief product — sandwich loaves — would come out perfect every time. Beautifully risen, symmetrically domed, a lovely crust with no floury spots. But honestly? That's not the reality of bread machine baking. What you save in time and effort, you often lose in quality, including mishappen loaves or bread with those dreaded holes in the bottom from the bread machine's paddles.

But with just a minimal amount of effort, you can step in and help your bread machine as it kneads and shapes and bakes — thus ensuring yourself a higher percentage of perfect (or nearly so) loaves. You just need to be willing to touch the dough. 

(Fair warning: If you're someone who likes to "set it and forget it" — add the ingredients, press Start, and come back 3 hours later — then this post isn't for you.)

Let's make some bread. We'll go with our most popular bread machine recipe: Bread Machine Bread — Easy As Can Be.

Begin by putting everything into the bucket of your bread machine. Putting the liquids in first makes the dough (and baked bread) less prone to floury spots.

Bread machine bucket with dry ingredients Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne

Tip 1: Open the lid and check the dough as it kneads.

So many people seem afraid to "interfere" with their bread machine as it works. But honestly, nothing bad will happen if you open the lid and poke at the dough.

Start watching the dough about 10 minutes into its kneading cycle; it shouldn't be viscous and liquid-like, nor dry, stiff, and "gnarly." As fellow blogger Susan Reid says, "If you touch the dough and your finger comes back coated, the dough is too wet. If you touch the dough and it feels like poking a beach ball, it’s too dry."

The dough should have formed a cohesive unit and, if not "smooth as a baby's bottom" yet, should be headed in that direction. If it's not, add more flour (if it's too soft), or water (if it's dry).

Bread machine bucket with bread dough in it Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
Bread dough 10 minutes into kneading.
Bread machine bucket with bread dough in it Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
Fully kneaded dough.

Tip 2: Once the dough is done kneading, take a paper towel and wipe any excess flour out of the bucket.

This step takes just a few seconds and will help prevent floury spots on the baked loaf's crust.

Tip 3: To prevent big rips and holes in the bottom of your loaf, take the paddles out of the bucket before the loaf bakes, just before its final rise.

The timing for this can be a bit tricky; but once you figure it out, you're good to go forever.

Get out your kitchen timer, and put it in count-up (stopwatch) mode. Start your timer when you press "Start" on your bread machine (even if your machine has a "rest" or "preheat" mode right at the beginning); you're simply trying to gauge the amount of time between when you press start, and when the final rise begins.

You want to be around when your bread starts its final rise. Most bread machine manuals show a timeline of steps: e.g., preheat 31 minutes, knead 19 minutes, first rise 35 minutes, second rise 20 minutes, etc. A little simple arithmetic will give you an idea of when the final rise will start.

Hang around the kitchen when you figure that final rise is imminent. You'll hear the machine start up momentarily; it'll be knocking down the dough, which means the final rise is about to begin. When you hear that happen, stop your timer and check the time. (On our Zojirushi Virtuoso, it's 1 hour, 45 minutes).

So there you have it: You now know, for the next time you bake bread, that 1 hour, 45 minutes (or whatever) will elapse between the time you press "Start" and when the final rise begins. So whenever you make bread-machine bread and want to remove the paddles before the loaf bakes — pull out your timer and put it to good use.

Reach into the bucket, move the dough aside, and lift out the paddles.

Empty bucket of bread machine Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
Empty bucket of bread machine with paddles removed Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
How your bucket should look with paddles removed.

This step will result in loaves of bread without that noticeable divot at the bottom. 

Side by side of interior of two bread machine loaves, one with a noticeable divot in the bottom middle, one without Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
The loaf on the right baked with its paddles in. On the left, no paddles. What a difference!

Tip 4: Reshape the loaf before its final rise.

This is where you prevent ski-slope loaves — unevenly shaped bread that's much higher on one end than the other. When you open the lid of the machine to remove the bucket's paddles, check out the shape of the loaf. It might be just fine, filling the pan from end to end. Or it might look like this:

Bread machine bucket with bread dough in it, all on the left side Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
If the dough isn't evenly dispersed in the machine, it can lead to misshaped loaves.

If the dough isn't in an acceptable loaf shape, take it out of the bucket, shape it into a nice, symmetrical log, and put it back into the bucket.

Bread machine bucket with bread dough in it that's been shaped into a loaf Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
Shaping the dough before baking results in prettier loaves.

It will rise nice and evenly and bake into a lovely loaf.

Bread machine bucket with baked bread in it Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne

Tip 5: Cool the bread in the machine, instead of on a rack on the counter.

Isn't it annoying when you've done everything right, and your loaf still comes out looking ... well, not as good as it could?

You've pulled your gorgeous loaf out of the pan, and within minutes it develops a crust as wrinkled as Yoda. What's up with that? And how do you prevent it?

As soon as your bread is done, remove the bucket from the machine, take out the bread (which will be easy, since the paddles aren't there to impede its progress), and gently set the loaf back into the machine, sans bucket. Note: While setting the loaf back into the machine without its bucket is a reasonable option with our Zojirushi machines, it may not work well in other brands' machines. Let experience with your own machine be your guide here.

Crack the lid open an inch or so, and let the bread cool right in the turned-off machine. The still-warm (but gradually cooling) air helps prevent moisture from condensing on your loaf's surface — no wrinkles!

So, what's the baking science behind this? If your loaf hits the cooler air outside the machine, any moisture migrating from inside reaches the top surface and condenses, forming water droplets that cause the crust to shrink unevenly — in other words, to wrinkle.

DSC_7709
The loaf on the right cooled on the counter — check out those wrinkles.

Final step: Enjoy your wonderful homemade bread. Who says you can't bake a perfectly acceptable loaf right in your bread machine?

Sliced loaf of bread machine bread Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
This bread machine bread is ready for sandwiches.

If you're looking for a great bread machine, our Zojirushi Home Bakery Virtuoso Plus Bread Machine has over 300 five-star reviews and is a beloved appliance for many King Arthur employee-owners.

Cover photo by Kristin Teig; food styling by Liz Neily.

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Bread Machine Bread - Easy As Can Be
Bread Machine Bread - Easy As Can Be
4.7 out of 5 stars 567 Reviews
Total
2 hrs 20 mins
Yield
1 loaf
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The Author

About PJ Hamel

PJ Hamel grew up in New England, graduated from Brown University, and was an award-winning Maine journalist (favorite topics: sports and food) before joining King Arthur Flour in 1990. Hired to write the newly launched Baker’s Catalogue, PJ became the small but growing company’s sixth employee.PJ wa...
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