Mom's Best Recipes
Recipe

Traditional Easy Spiced Bread

A soft, cozy loaf with cinnamon, cardamom, and a golden crust. Simple ingredients, clear steps, and the kind of aroma that makes the whole kitchen feel warmer.

Author By Matt Campbell
4.8
A golden-brown loaf of spiced bread cooling on a wire rack on a wooden counter with a few scattered spices nearby

This is the bread I bake when I want the house to smell like I have my life together, even if the sink is full of dishes and I am wearing the same hoodie I cooked breakfast in. It is traditional, easy, and deeply aromatic, with warm spices tucked into a soft, everyday loaf.

No starter. No fancy flour. No panic. Just a reliable dough that bakes up with a gentle crumb, crisp edges, and a spice blend that makes you pause mid-bite like, okay, wow.

A close-up of a sliced spiced bread loaf showing a soft, tender crumb

Why It Works

  • Approachable dough: This is a straightforward yeast bread with two rises and a simple shape. No complicated techniques required.
  • Big flavor from pantry spices: Cinnamon brings warmth, cardamom adds a floral lift, and a touch of cloves gives that classic bakery vibe.
  • Soft interior, crisp crust: Milk and a little butter keep the crumb tender, while a hot oven finishes the outside with color and snap.
  • Flexible sweetness: It is lightly sweet on purpose, so it works for toast, sandwiches, or alongside soup.

Pairs Well With

Storage Tips

Room temperature: Let the loaf cool completely, then store in a bread bag or zip-top bag for 2 to 3 days. If your kitchen runs warm, keep it out of direct sunlight and away from the stove.

Freeze: Slice the loaf, then freeze slices in a sealed bag for up to 2 months. Toast straight from frozen for low-drama breakfasts.

Revive day-old bread: Warm slices in a toaster or skillet with a little butter. If the whole loaf feels a bit dry, wrap it in foil and heat at 300°F for 10 to 15 minutes.

Common Questions

Can I make this without a stand mixer?

Yes. Stir with a wooden spoon until a shaggy dough forms, then knead by hand on a lightly floured counter for 8 to 10 minutes, until smooth and springy.

What if I only have instant yeast?

Use the same amount. Skip the blooming step. Whisk the yeast into the dry ingredients (flour, salt, spices, and sugar), then add the warm milk, melted butter, egg, and vanilla and continue with kneading and rising as written. Keep the milk warm, not hot.

Can I reduce the sugar?

You can drop it to 1 tablespoon if you prefer. The loaf will be a touch less tender and the browning will be slightly lighter, but it will still work.

Why did my bread turn out dense?

Usually one of three things: the milk was too hot and hurt the yeast, the dough needed a bit more rising time, or extra flour was added during kneading. Next time, add flour only until the dough is soft and just slightly tacky.

Can I add raisins or nuts?

Absolutely. Add up to 3/4 cup raisins, chopped nuts, or dried cranberries after the first mix, once the dough starts to come together.

I started baking bread because I wanted the practical skills, the ones you can lean on when you are hungry and the day is loud. This loaf is my favorite kind of reliable. It feels like something your mom would slice thick, butter without hesitation, and hand over like it fixes everything. The spice combo is my little chaos move. It is familiar, but it has a bit of sparkle. The first time I baked it, I cut in too early and steamed up the slices, because patience is not my strongest seasoning. Still tasted incredible. That is the point.