I read a book a few weeks ago that mentioned something about making bread in a pressure cooker. So I had to see if it would work!
I used my favorite, tried and true bread recipe that makes three 1.5 lb loaves of bread. Two of the loaves I made in the oven. And one loaf I experimented with in pressure cooker. I wanted to see first of all if you could make bread in the pressure cooker. And second of all if there was any benefit to doing it.
Here's the round pan that I used to cook the bread in. Nothing special, it just needs to be able to fit inside the pressure cooker.
I put in the bread dough into the greased pan and pressed it down.
I filled the pressure cooker with 2 cups of water and a splash of vinegar. I've found that adding the vinegar to the water helps so you don't develop a white film around your pressure cooker pan when you cook this. I placed the metal trivet on the bottom of the pressure cooker. Then I made a cool little pan carrier by folding a 1-1/2 to 2 foot piece of tin foil into thirds.
I used that to place my bread inside the pressure cooker and I folded the tin foil down.
I turned on the pressure cooker onto the warm setting for just a few minutes and let it barely start to get warm and then turned it off. I placed the lid on the pressure cooker and let my bread dough rise in the heated little "room" for about 30 minutes until it filled the pan.
When it was done rising I turned the pressure onto high pressure for 20 minutes and let the bread cook. When it was done cooker I released the pressure using the quick release method and here's what I saw when I opened the lid.
It looked a little strange with a very moist top and I wondered it if was done. But I pulled it out and let it cool just a minute in the pan.
Then I took it out of the pan here's what it looked like on the inside - I was pleasantly surprised! It was completely done, with wonderful texture and tasted delicious!
So to answer the first question, I discovered that YES you could make bread in the pressure cooker. It works great.
Now for the second question...is there any benefit in doing it? And the answer is, that depends! Here's what I discovered:
- Pressure cooker bread cooks in about the same time as bread baked in the oven - actually to be specific, the pressure cooker beat the bread in the oven by 1 minute! It was that close. So there's not really any time benefit.
- Pressure cooker bread has no crusts - this could be a good or a bad thing. I love bread crusts, but I know there's some people out there that may not. This may be the answer you're looking for to get your kids to eat homemade bread, I don't know. But as for me and my house, we like bread crusts.
- There is very little difference in taste or texture between pressure cooker bread and bread baked in the oven - The pressure cooker bread may be a little more moist, but it's really not noticeable. And they taste about the same.
- Pressure cooker bread is kind of unusual looking - this may be a good or a bad thing for you. I like the color of crusty loaves of browned bread out of the oven. And in my opinion, pressure cooker bread leaves a lot to be desired, visually speaking.
So in conclusion, yes cooking bread in the pressure cooker is possible, but I really don't see myself making it that way on a regular basis and probably not ever again to be quite honest. It was a fun little exercise, and you are ever bored, you are welcome to try it yourself. If you just want to bake it in the oven, I won't be offended! In fact I encourage it! Unless...maybe you don't have an oven and you just happen to have a pressure cooker lying around. Or the other possibility is that your kids don't like crusts. And then you can make 1 loaf for them in the pressure cooker and 2 for yourself in the oven!
Whole Wheat Bread {Electric Pressure Cooker Recipe}
Printable Recipe ( Electric Pressure Cooker Method)
Printable Recipe (
*Makes three 1.5-lb loaves
3 Cups hot water, microwave on high 2-3 min or until quite warm
1/3 Cup oil
1/3 Cup sugar
1 Tbsp. salt (put in first before adding yeast)
3 Cups + freshly ground whole wheat flour (hard white wheat)
2 Tbsp. yeast on top of flour
½ Cup gluten flour
1/3 Cup oil
1/3 Cup sugar
1 Tbsp. salt (put in first before adding yeast)
3 Cups + freshly ground whole wheat flour (hard white wheat)
2 Tbsp. yeast on top of flour
½ Cup gluten flour
½ Cup ground flax seed (optional)
Combine above ingredients in Bosch mixer in order, making sure that the yeast is on top of the flour. Mix with the dough hook. Add more whole wheat flour until the dough pulls away from the sides of the bowl. Then mix for an additional six minutes. Divide dough into 3 loaves (the dough will still be VERY sticky - so sticky that you won't be able to form your loaves without putting oil on your hands). In the pressure cooker, you will only be able to cook 1 loaf of bread at a time. If desired, you can cook the other two loaves using the oven method or freeze the dough to cook in the pressure cooker later.
Grease a round pan that fits into the pressure cooker, place the 1/3 of the bread dough into it, and pressed it down to fill the pan. Place the metal trivet on the bottom of the pressure cooker. Then add 2 cups of water to the pressure cooker and a splash of vinegar. I've found that adding the vinegar to the water helps so you don't develop a white film around your pressure cooker pan when you cook this way.
Then make a little pan carrier by folding a 1-1/2 to 2 foot piece of tin foil into thirds. Place the tin foil carrier underneath the round bread pan and use it to place the bread inside the pressure cooker. Then fold the tin foil down around the edges of the bread pan so it doesn’t prohibit the dough from rising.
Turn on the pressure cooker onto the warm setting for just a few minutes and let it barely start to get warm and then turn it off. Place the lid on the pressure cooker and let the bread dough rise in the heated little "pressure cooker room" for about 30 minutes until the dough has risen to fill the pan.
When it is done rising, turn the pressure cooker on to high pressure and cook the bread for 20 minutes. Release the pressure using the quick release method. Allow the bread to cool. Then remove from the cooker using the foil handle. Slice, eat, and enjoy.
For more pressure cooker recipes see my pressure cooker recipe page. Or follow my pressure cooker board on pinterest.
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