FabulousFusionFood's Bread Recipes Home Page

A mixture of different breads. A mixture of different breads.
Welcome to FabulousFusionFood's Bread Recipes Page — Bread, as the saying goes, is the stuff of life. Indeed, before potatoes came from the New World, bread was the staple carbohydrate source for Europeans. Bread is a baked good made from a blend of a finely-ground grain, water and salt with yeast as a rising agent. For bread to work, the grain must contain gluten, a protein molecule that cross-links when it is worked (it is this that makes bread dough go elastic when it is worked). It is the gluten that traps the carbon dioxide that the yeast produces as it metabolizes the sugars in the grains. This is what makes bread rise.


Here you will find recipes for classic breads from around the world, including yeast-leavened breads, unleavened breads, flatbreads, buns and sweet breads. There are hundreds of recipes here that range from some of the very earliest breads known to be baked by humans right through to the most modern recipes for bread-making machines.

You will also find bread recipes, derived from period sources, here all the way from ancient Roman breads through Medieval breads, Elizabethan breads, Stuart right up to Victorian and modern Fusion recipes. Essentially the history of bread making is presented on this site and you can re-create these breads at home to gain a taste of historic breads. We know that bread has been baked for at least 7000 years, from the stone age through to today. Indeed, before the availability of potatoes bread formed the staple foodstuff of much of Europe, the Middle East and North Africa. As a foodstuff bread is incredibly versatile, made from a starch source (wheat or barley) and using yeast as a rising agent. Put this way, it would seem that a bread could be made with any flour. So you might expect Maize breads in the Americas, Rice breads in Asia and Millet or Sorghum breads in Africa. However, this ignores a truly amazing property of wheat and barley grains.

The important factor here is that 80% of all the protein (ie the total protein) in wheat and barley grains is made from two proteins: gliadin and glutenin. These are bound together in the starchy part of the grain, but when wheat flour is kneaded some of the glutenin molecules are released from the starch and these cross-link with one another to form gluten and it's this gluten that gives bread it's amazing properties.

In ancient Rome, the basic bread dough was sometimes enriched with butter, eggs, and honey, which produced a sweet and cake-like baked goods.

Early cakes in Medieval Europe were also essentially bread: the most obvious differences between a 'cake' and 'bread' were the round, flat shape of the cakes and the cooking method, which turned cakes over once while cooking, while bread was left upright throughout the baking process. Though by the late middle ages, cakes would be flavoured with sweet spices and then with honey before being made richer with the inclusion of eggs and sugar.

That's why, as you knead bread dough it becomes noticeably, physically, smooth and elastic. This is because the kneading process forces some of the protein out of the starch within the grains, allowing for a network of gluten molecules to form throughout the dough, binding it together. If yeast is added this ferments the sugars in the grain producing bubbles of carbon dioxide. These bubbles are trapped by the gluten network and when the gas is warmed by being heated in an oven it expands, causing the bread to rise. Baking also solidifies the gluten network by coagulation so that the bread sets firm with a smooth texture. Which is not to say that you can't add other ingredients to bread. Typically you can add up to 20% of any other flour to a bread dough and it will still rise and keep its bread-like properties. Indeed, there is a move now to introduce more millet (a native African grain) into the breads of Africa, as wheat only grows in a few African countries. Other breads include flours made from cassava, yams and plantains as well as grated or mashed versions of these foodstuffs.

As a bread, at the most basic level can be any type of savoury baked dough that includes a rising agent (typically yeast, but also baking soda) I'm using a fairly loose definition in terms of selecting bread recipes for inclusion on this page. I also have bread recipes from the stone age to the present day as well as representative breads from all across the globe. Bread is incredibly versatile as a foodstuff, keeps for many days and there's nothing like the aroma of your own freshly-baked bread filling your kitchen on a sunny weekend morning.



The alphabetical list of all the bread recipes on this site follows, (limited to 100 recipes per page). There are 335 recipes in total:

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Česnica
(Serbian Christmas Bread)
     Origin: Serbia
Bara Brown Sylfaenol
(Basic Brown Bread)
     Origin: Welsh
Brown Oatmeal Bread
     Origin: Britain
Aberdeen Butteries
     Origin: Scotland
Bara Carwe Ynys Môn
(Anglesea Caraway Bread)
     Origin: Welsh
Brunei Murtabak
(Meat Rotis)
     Origin: Brunei
Ablo
(Togolese Corn Bread)
     Origin: Togo
Bara Cig Moch a Pherlysiau
(Bacon and Herb Loaf)
     Origin: Welsh
Buchty
(Poppy Seed Buns)
     Origin: Czech
Acorn Cakes
     Origin: Britain
Bara Claddu
(Funeral Bread)
     Origin: Welsh
Buckwheat Bread
     Origin: Fusion
Acorn Pan Bread
     Origin: Ancient
Bara Cnau Pecan a Llugaeron
(Pecan Nut and Cranberry Bread)
     Origin: Welsh
Bullet Naan
     Origin: USA
Agoulou
     Origin: Guadeloupe
Bara Cymysg
(Maslin Bread)
     Origin: Welsh
Burdock Root Flour Bread
     Origin: Britain
Air Fryer Pull Apart Dinner Rolls
     Origin: Britain
Bara Gwenith
(Wholemeal Bread)
     Origin: Welsh
Burum Cartref
(Potato yeast Starter)
     Origin: Welsh
Air Fryer Tear and Share Garlic Bread
     Origin: Britain
Bara Gwenith a Cheirch Sylfaenol
(Basic Wheat and Oat Bread)
     Origin: Welsh
Burundi Chapati
     Origin: Burundi
Air-fryer Fajitas
     Origin: Britain
Bara Gwyn Sylfaenol
(Welsh Basic White Bread)
     Origin: Welsh
Buttermilk Bread
     Origin: Scotland
Aish Baladi
     Origin: Egypt
Bara Haidd Croyw
(Unleavened Barley Bread)
     Origin: Welsh
Buttermilk Cornbread
     Origin: American
Aloo Paratha
(Flatbread with a Spicy Potato Stuffing)
     Origin: India
Bara Llaeth Enwyn
(Buttermilk Bread)
     Origin: Welsh
Buttery King Cake
     Origin: Cajun
Ambasha
     Origin: Ethiopia
Bara Llechwan
(Bakestone Bread)
     Origin: Welsh
Cajun Crayfish Cornbread
     Origin: Cajun
Ancient Egyptian Flatbread
     Origin: Egypt
Bara Planc
(Griddle Bread)
     Origin: Welsh
Cambaabur
     Origin: Djibouti
Anjera
(Somali Flatbreads)
     Origin: Somalia
Bara Pot Clai Bacheldre
(Bacheldre Clay-pot Bread)
     Origin: Welsh
Cambaabur
     Origin: Somalia
Antiguan Johnny Cakes
     Origin: Antigua
Bara Pyglyd
(Pitchy Bread)
     Origin: Welsh
Cassava Flour Bread
     Origin: Liberia
Antiguan Rotis
     Origin: Antigua
Bara Sur Ceich
(Oatmeal Soda Bread)
     Origin: Welsh
Cassave Brood
(Cassava Roti)
     Origin: Suriname
Apas
(Rice Flour Rotis)
     Origin: India
Barley Bread
     Origin: Ancient
Cassave de manioc
(Cassava Pancake)
     Origin: Guadeloupe
Arán Breac
(Speckled Bread)
     Origin: Ireland
Basic Focaccia
     Origin: Italy
Catrachitas
     Origin: Honduras
Arepas
(Venezuelan Flatbreads)
     Origin: Venezuela
Basic White Bread
     Origin: Europe
Cauliflower Roti
     Origin: India
Artolaganon II
(Leavened Flatbread)
     Origin: Roman
Basic Yeast Dough
     Origin: British
Cayman Roti Skins
     Origin: Cayman Islands
Aruban Corn Bread
     Origin: Aruba
Bedmi Puri
     Origin: India
Cayman Style Curry Chicken Roti
     Origin: Cayman Islands
Australian Cheese Garlic and Chive
Damper

     Origin: Australia
Bérédjé
     Origin: Mayotte
Cecina
(Chickpea pancake)
     Origin: Roman
Australian Damper
     Origin: Australia
Bérédjé
     Origin: Comoros
Challah
     Origin: Jewish
Babka Paska
(Ukrainian Easter Bread)
     Origin: Ukraine
Berreenyn Jastee-hollan
(Soda Cakes)
     Origin: Manx
Chapati
     Origin: East Africa
Bagels
     Origin: Jewish
Biga Pugliese
     Origin: Italy
Cheesy Potato Bread
     Origin: Britain
Bagels II
     Origin: Jewish
Bird Cherry Flour Bread
     Origin: France
Cheesy Stuffed Focaccia
     Origin: Italy
Bajan Salt Bread
     Origin: Barbados
Black Eyed Pea Flour Bread
     Origin: Liberia
Chelsea Bun (Recipe 1)
     Origin: Britain
Bajra Roti
(Pearl Millet Flatbread)
     Origin: India
Bohobe ba Polata
(Lesothan Fat Cakes)
     Origin: Lesotho
Chelsea Bun (Recipe 2)
     Origin: Britain
Bajra Roti
(Pearl Millet Roti)
     Origin: India
Bokit
(Guadeloupe Fried Bread)
     Origin: Guadeloupe
Cheoreg
(Armenian Sweet Bread)
     Origin: Armenia
Baked Millet Flour Bread
     Origin: Kenya
Boletinos Artos
(Mushroom Bread)
     Origin: Roman
Cherry Swirl Buns
     Origin: Britain
Bakestone Bread
     Origin: Britain
Bolo Preto
(Aruban Black Cake)
     Origin: Aruba
Chestnut Flour Bread
     Origin: France
Bambam
(Cassava Bread)
     Origin: Saint Vincent
Boxemännercher
(Gingerbread Men)
     Origin: Luxembourg
Chocolate Babka
     Origin: Ukraine
Bannock
     Origin: Scotland
Braaied Flatbreads
     Origin: Turkey
Bara
(Surinamese Savoury Doughnuts)
     Origin: Suriname
Braided Easter Bread
     Origin: Europe

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