Mom's Best Recipes
Recipe

Fresh Cinnamon Bread

A soft, buttery loaf with a crisp cinnamon sugar crust and a swirly, cozy center. Big cinnamon flavor, minimal drama, and the kind of crunchy top that makes you “just one more slice.”

Author By Matt Campbell
4.8
A golden loaf of cinnamon bread on a wooden cutting board with a crunchy cinnamon sugar crust, sliced to show a cinnamon swirl

There are two types of cinnamon bread people: the ones who want a pillowy slice for coffee, and the ones who want crunch. This recipe is for the second group, but it still gives you a tender, buttery crumb so you get the best of both worlds.

We build a simple enriched dough, tuck in a cinnamon sugar ribbon, then finish the loaf with a buttery cinnamon sugar top that bakes into a crisp, crackly crust. It is warm, nostalgic, and just chaotic enough to make your kitchen smell like you have your life together.

A close-up photo of cinnamon sugar being sprinkled over a butter-brushed loaf in a loaf pan

Why It Works

  • Crispy, crunchy top: A butter-brushed cinnamon sugar cap bakes up crackly, not just sweet.
  • Bold cinnamon flavor without dryness: A swirl gives you cinnamon in every bite, while the dough stays soft.
  • Accessible ingredients: Pantry basics, no specialty flour required.
  • Clear bake cues: You will know exactly when it is proofed, browned, and done in the center.

Pairs Well With

  • A mug of hot coffee with a splash of milk on a kitchen counter

    Hot Coffee or Latte

  • A bowl of vanilla yogurt topped with sliced bananas and a drizzle of honey

    Vanilla Yogurt with Bananas

  • A small dish of whipped honey butter with a butter knife

    Honey Butter

  • A plate of scrambled eggs with black pepper

    Simple Scrambled Eggs

Storage Tips

Day 1: Keep the loaf at room temperature in a bread bag or wrapped in foil. If you want maximum crunch, leave it loosely covered on the counter and toast slices as needed.

Days 2 to 3: Store airtight at room temperature. In hot or humid climates, bread can spoil faster, so consider freezing after day 2 for best quality. Refrigeration is not ideal (it stales bread), but it can be a better option than the counter if your kitchen runs very warm.

Freeze: Slice the loaf, wrap slices tightly, and freeze up to 2 months. Toast from frozen at a low setting, then bump the heat for crisp edges.

Crunch rescue: If the top goes soft, put the loaf (or slices) in a 350°F oven for 6 to 10 minutes. Let it cool 5 minutes so the sugar re-crisps.

Common Questions

Can I make this without a stand mixer?

Yes. Mix with a wooden spoon until shaggy, then knead by hand 8 to 10 minutes. The dough should feel smooth and slightly tacky, not wet or sticky.

How do I know when the dough is done proofing?

Use the poke test. Gently press a floured finger into the dough. If the dent slowly springs back and stays slightly indented, it is ready. If it snaps back fast, give it more time.

Why did my swirl sink or create a gap?

Too much loose sugar, or you rolled it too tight. Keep the swirl layer even and avoid piling cinnamon sugar in one spot. Also make sure the loaf is proofed properly before baking.

Can I use instant yeast instead of active dry?

Absolutely. Use the same amount and you can skip blooming it in milk. Still warm the milk slightly for a faster rise.

How do I keep the top from getting too dark?

If the crust is browned but the center needs time, tent the loaf with foil for the last 10 to 15 minutes. Dark metal pans and glass pans can brown faster, so check early and foil sooner if needed.

My yeast did not foam. Did I ruin it?

Not necessarily. Active dry yeast sometimes looks only slightly foamy, especially in milk. If your yeast is within date and your milk was warm (not hot), keep going. The rise may just take longer. If nothing rises after a reasonable proof (about 90 minutes in a warm spot), that is the sign to start over.

I started making cinnamon bread as a “use what you have” project, the kind that begins with a lonely jar of cinnamon and ends with flour on the floor and everyone hovering near the oven. The first time I nailed the crunchy top, I literally stood there tapping it like a crusty loaf at a bakery. That little crackle is the whole point. Now I make this when I want my kitchen to feel warm and friendly, even if the rest of my day is a mess.