Vegan Brioche Bread Recipe (2024)

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By Carine Claudepierre
Published on 02/10/2021 - Last updated on 05/21/2023

4.97 from 112 votes

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This vegan brioche bread adapts the authentic French brioche bread with no eggs, no butter, or milk.

It is a fluffy, soft, and lightly sweet bread perfect for vegan breakfast toast.

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Table of contents

As a French couple, we had to share a vegan brioche recipe on the blog.

We were born and raised snacking on brioche as kids, so now this is the version we share with our kids on the weekend.

Is Brioche Vegan?

No, a classic brioche is not vegan. It is made with butter, eggs, and dairy milk.

Most commercial brioches are similarly made with animal-based ingredients and reaching the same texture requires a very specific recipe

If you want to get that taste and texture, follow our recipe below!

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How To Make Vegan Brioche

The good news is that it’s pretty easy to make your own vegan brioche bread at home with only simple plant-based ingredients.

Below I am guiding you step by step on how to make this classic French brioche vegan!

Ingredients

Before starting any vegan baking recipes, I recommend measuring all your ingredients in individual bowls for precision.

Remember that this recipe is tested using all-purpose flour, and it doesn’t work with flour substitutes like gluten-free flour blends, almond flour, or coconut flour.

The ingredients you need to make this fluffy vegan brioche bread are:

  • All-Purpose flour – also known as bread flour or white flour. Again, don’t swap the flour for any other flour, or the recipe will be a big fail! You need regular white-wheat flour for this recipe or spelt flour but don’t even try almond flour or coconut flour. It will not work at all. Also, note that my trials with all-purpose gluten-free flours didn’t come out great. The brioche won’t rise or get fluffy, so I don’t recommend that either.
  • Soy Milk – this is the best choice to make a moist, soft and fluffy vegan brioche. You can use oat milk or almond milk with different results, mostly a drier crumb.
  • Sugar – you can use any sugar. Unrefined cane sugar is my favorite or coconut sugar, but this option adds a lightly dark color to the brioche.
  • Apple Cider Vinegar – or lemon juice or white vinegar.
  • Active Dried Yeast Learn why yeast is vegan.
  • Vegan Butter – or light olive oil or coconut oil, but oil usually makes the brioche very dense, so it’s not my favorite choice for a soft fluffy center.
  • Salt
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Activating The Yeast

The first step to making brioche is to feed the dried active yeast with sugar into a lukewarm mixture of soy milk, vanilla, and melted vegan butter.

To warm the milk, you can either use a microwave or a non-stick saucepan.

Keep in mind that you want lukewarm milk. Think bath temperature 98°F (37°C), not boiling milk. This would ‘kill’ the yeast.

Combine the ingredients above into the bowl of a stand mixer, whisk with a fork, and set aside 10 minutes.

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Kneading Brioche Dough

Next, sift flour and salt into the bowl and place the dough hook on the stand mixer. Then, knead the dough for 6 minutes or until the dough is soft and tacky but doesn’t stick to the bowl’s bottom.

If it sticks to the bottom of the bowl, it means you need more flour.

Add 12 tablespoons of extra flour one at a time until the dough is soft and doesn’t stick to the bowl.

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Rising The Dough

Finally, transfer the dough into a large mixing bowl oiled with olive oil or coconut oil. The oil prevents the dough from sticking to the bowl.

Then, cover the bowl with a piece of parchment paper and top with a clean kitchen towel.

Place the bowl in a warm room or into a preheated oven at 110°F (40°C) for 45 minutes or up to 1 hour.

You know the dough is ready when it has doubled in size.

Kneading Brioche Dough

When the dough has doubled in size, push down with floured hands and transfer onto a floured surface.

Knead the dough for 1 minute bringing the extremity of the dough ball to the center and pressing with your palm to knead the dough evenly.

If the dough sticks, sprinkle extra flour onto it.

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Braiding The Dough

Divide the dough into 3 equal portions and form balls.

Then, roll each ball into 9 inches long cylinder/tubes. Bring the three tubes of dough together by their extremity and pinch to seal.

Start braiding tightly but don’t pull on the dough tubes, or you would overextend them.

Pinch the extremity of the dough when you reach the end. You will end up with a long braid, longer than your 9-inch loaf pan.

To fit the pan, tuck under the extra dough from the extremities under the loaf to fit the loaf pan.

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Second Rise

Place the braided dough into a loaf pan covered with parchment paper. Then, cover the top of the pan with a clean kitchen towel and raise for 20 minutes or 30 minutes.

Baking

In a small mixing bowl, mix melted vegan butter and a pinch of turmeric to mimic egg color.

Use a pastry brush to brush the top of the brioche and bake in a preheated oven at 180C/350F for 35-45 minutes.

The vegan brioche is cooked through when the top is golden brown, and a skewer inserted in the center of the bread comes out clean.

Cooling Down

Flip over the brioche on a wire rack and cool at room temperature for at least 2 hours before slicing or overnight.

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Serving Vegan Brioche

This vegan brioche makes a delicious breakfast, served plain or with jam, peanut butter, or vegan butter.

You can also use this vegan brioche recipe to make French toast.

However, I recommend slicing the brioche and letting the slices harden for a few days at room temperature before using it for vegan French toast.

In fact, this brioche is very fluffy and soft, and the French toasts taste better if the bread has had time to firm up.

Storing Vegan Brioche

This is an egg-free brioche recipe, so it stores very well at room temperature as soon as it’s stored in a sealed container.

You can keep it fresh for up to 4 days in a cake box or freeze slices in zip-lock bags for later.

Thaw the vegan brioche slices the day before at room temperature.

Can I Make Vegan Brioche Buns With This Recipe?

Yes, you can use this recipe to make buns or vegan brioche hamburger buns.

However, I would recommend decreasing the sugar to 2 tablespoons for a savory bun.

Then, divide the entire dough into 8 or 10 balls. Then, place each ball onto a baking tray covered with oiled parchment paper.

As for the brioche bread, always rise a second time for 30-45 minutes and bake until golden brown.

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More Vegan Breakfast Recipes

I love to bake for breakfast, especially during the weekend. Below I’ve shared our top 3 favorite vegan baking recipes for the family on the weekend:

Vegan Cinnamon Rolls Recipe

Banana Oatmeal Pancakes

Date Loaf

Eggless French Toast

Oatmeal Banana Bread

Strawberry Rhubarb Crisp

Vegan Pancakes

Cinnamon Roll Baked Oatmeal

Vegan Crepes

Your friend, Carine

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Leave a comment below or head to our Facebook page for tips, our Instagram page for inspiration, our Pinterest for saving recipes, and Flipboard to get all the new ones!

Vegan Brioche Bread Recipe (21)

Vegan Brioche Bread

A soft, pillowy vegan brioche bread recipe perfect to make French toasts or plain for breakfast with jam.

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Prep Time: 15 minutes mins

Cook Time: 30 minutes mins

Total Time: 45 minutes mins

Course: Breakfast

Cuisine: American, French

Servings: 12 slices

Calories: 218 kcal

Author: Carine Claudepierre

4.97 from 112 votes

Ingredients

US CustomaryMetric

To brush on top – vegan 'egg'wash

Instructions

  • Before you start, precisely measure all ingredients into small bowls.

  • Add the soy milk to a small microwave-safe mixing bowl and microwave for 20 seconds to bring the milk to around 37°C/100°F. If you don't have a microwave, warm milk in a non-stick saucepan over medium heat for 20-30 seconds. The milk should be at bath temperature, not boiling or too warm, or it would 'kill' the yeast.

  • Pour the lukewarm milk in the bowl of a stand mixer and stir in sugar, melted vegan butter, vanilla, apple cider vinegar, and active dried yeast. Whisk quickly with a fork to combine and set aside 10 minutes.

  • Sift in flour and salt into the bowl, and using the dough hook attachment of your stand mixer, start kneading the dough on speed 2 or 3 for 6 minutes.

  • As it goes, the dough will be soft and won't stick to the sides or bottom of the bowl. If the dough sticks to the bottom of the bowl, it means you need slightly more flour. Add more flour, 1 tablespoon at a time, up to 4 tablespoons until the dough is soft, tacky but doesn't stick to your fingers.

  • Oil a large mixing bowl with olive oil or coconut oil, and with lightly oiled hands, transfer the dough to the oiled bowl.

  • Cover the bowl with a piece of parchment paper, then add a clean kitchen towel on top to seal the bowl.

  • Place the bowl in a warm room or even better, place it in a warm oven at 45°C/50°C (110°F/115°F) for 45 minutes to 1 hour or until it has just doubled in size.

  • When the dough has doubled in size, sprinkle a bit of flour on top of the dough and push down with your hand to deflate and release gas.

  • Lightly flour your hands and the surface of your benchtop to prevent the dough from sticking, then turn out the dough onto the surface.

  • Knead the dough, gently pressing the edges of the dough to the middle, repeating this for about 1 minute. If the dough is sticky, sprinkle more flour.

  • Divide the dough into 3 equal balls and roll each ball into a long tube/cylinder – about 9-inch/20-cm long.

  • Roll out each dough cylinder with your palms, gently pressing the dough, creating a back and forth motion until you create a 9-inch long bread rope.

  • Repeat for the other two portions of dough.

  • Bring the ends of the three ropes together and pinch to seal.

  • Braid the dough tightly but don't stretch the dough. When you reach the end, pinch to seal.

  • Once braided, the braid will be longer than the loaf pan, and that's normal. Fold the ends of the braid under the loaf to make it fit the pan.

  • Cover a 9-inch loaf pan with oiled parchment paper and bring the braided brioche into the pan.

  • Cover the pan with a clean kitchen towel and place in a warm room or preheated oven at 40°C-50°C/110°F for 30-40 minutes or until the dough rises.

  • Brush the top of the brioche bread with melted vegan butter mixed with a pinch of turmeric to give yellow color to the brioche.

  • Bake in a preheated oven at 180°C/350°F for 35-45 minutes or until golden brown on top.

  • Flip the brioche bread out of the pan and cool on a cooling rack for 2 hours or overnight before slicing.

  • Store at room temperature in a sealed cake box for up to 4 days or freeze slices for later. Thaw the day before at room temperature.

Notes

Flour: you can’t use other flours for this vegan brioche recipe. Don’t replace it with almond flour or coconut flour or an all-purpose gluten-free flour blend. These options wouldn’t work!

Plant-based milk options: you can use almond milk or oat milk for this recipe, but the brioche will be slightly drier.

Vegan butter – can be replaced by light olive oil or canola oil, but the brioche will be less fluffy.

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Nutrition

Serving: 1slice | Calories: 218kcal | Carbohydrates: 35g | Protein: 6g | Fat: 6g | Saturated Fat: 1g | Trans Fat: 1g | Sodium: 244mg | Potassium: 96mg | Fiber: 2g | Sugar: 4g | Vitamin A: 52IU | Vitamin C: 1mg | Calcium: 38mg | Iron: 2mg

Vegan Brioche Bread Recipe (28)

About Carine

Hi, I'm Carine, the food blogger, author, recipe developer, photographer, and published author of a cookbook and founder of The Conscious Plant Kitchen with my husband Damien.Learn more about us.

About Us

Vegan Brioche Bread Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is vegan brioche made of? ›

Ingredients: Flour: You can use bread flour or all-purpose flour. Unsweetened applesauce: You can also use dairy free yogurt, which is what I used in this version! Active Dry Yeast: This is different than instant yeast, so make sure you're reading the label!

Why is my brioche not fluffy? ›

If the kneading is not done correctly and the dough is not kneaded enough or is kneaded too much, this will affect the texture of the brioche. The dough should be left to rise in a warm place, away from any draughts.

Why is my brioche dough not doubling? ›

6 Reasons Why Your Dough Didn't Rise
  • 6 Reasons Why Your Dough Didn't Rise: ...
  • The yeast was old. ...
  • You didn't test your yeast before using it. ...
  • The liquid was too hot, or not hot enough. ...
  • The yeast touched salt. ...
  • The dough didn't rise in a warm place. ...
  • You didn't grease your bowl or plastic wrap before rising.

What flour is brioche made from? ›

Use a high-quality flour with a high protein percentage. Brioche requires gluten to hold its shape despite the large amount of butter in the recipe. The more gluten (protein) you have, the better. In Alberta, all-purpose flour is of great quality and usually has around 13% protein which is perfect for this recipe.

What makes brioche special? ›

Brioche is different to most breads because it's made with an enriched dough and tastes a little sweeter. . Because it's an enriched dough, you get that famous brioche texture of soft bread, the classic golden colour and quintessentially rich taste.

What can I use instead of yeast for brioche? ›

Baking Soda, Milk and Vinegar

Vinegar, milk and baking soda mixed together helps the bread rise. Use one teaspoon of baking soda, half a teaspoon of vinegar and half a teaspoon of milk to replace two teaspoons of yeast. Lighter batters may have a slightly different texture, but you will still get a rise from the dough.

What bread is most similar to brioche? ›

Challah would be a good substitute for brioche. Both of these are made with a “rich” dough — meaning dough that has more than flour and water in it. Brioche is French in origin and is made rich with the addition of butter and eggs. Challah is of Jewish origin and contains eggs, oil and a bit of sugar.

What does butter do in brioche? ›

Butter in bread dough tenderizes the dough, making the soft, pull-apart texture of bakes like brioche, dinner rolls, and Pullman loaves.

Why add butter slowly to brioche? ›

The reason is that butter can inhibit gluten formation. It 'coats' the proteins that would form gluten. You knead the dough first to get gluten, and then add the butter afterward around the already formed gluten. You can add it earlier, you just end up with less gluten and a more tender dough.

Why does my brioche taste yeasty? ›

If the area is too warm, bread will rise too fast and begin cooking before the yeast has finished acting. This will impart a "yeasty" taste to the dough that will be transferred to the finished baked loaf. Using old ingredients (rancid nuts, "old" shortening) will cause yeast breads to taste old or have an "off" taste.

Why does brioche need to sit overnight? ›

Cold proof your dough: According to Martin, letting the dough proof in the fridge overnight provides extended fermentation time, which in turn develops more flavor. This step is extra-helpful since most brioche doughs are made without a preferment for flavor.

Can you over mix brioche dough? ›

If mixed too long the dough can become loose and sticky. The water that was absorbed by the flour gets released back into the dough and the gluten structure breaks down. After this there is no way to fix it. It will be a loose, soggy, and sticky mass unable to hold in fermentation gasses.

What happens to overproofed brioche? ›

An overproofed dough won't expand much during baking, and neither will an underproofed one. Overproofed doughs collapse due to a weakened gluten structure and excessive gas production, while underproofed doughs do not yet have quite enough carbon dioxide production to expand the dough significantly.

What does vegan bread have in it? ›

Vegans can eat bread that does not contain animal products or byproducts. This includes breads that only use some variation on flour, water, yeast, and salt including ciabatta, baguette, focaccia, sourdough, pita, and ezekiel breads.

What makes vegan bread vegan? ›

Vegan bread shouldn't contain any animal products, including dairy, eggs, or honey. While some baking companies claim to have vegan bread, not all do because they still use egg or honey in their breads. To get a truly vegan bread with many varieties you have to look at Food for Life.

Why aren t brioche buns vegan? ›

Traditionally, no, brioche isn't suitable for vegans because it's made with eggs, dairy-based butter, cream and milk. However, it's completely possible to make your own plant-based brioche at home – we love this recipe from Domestic Gothess.

What are the ingredients in Trader Joe's brioche? ›

UNBLEACHED ENRICHED FLOUR (WHEAT FLOUR, NIACIN, REDUCED IRON, THIAMINE MONONITRATE, RIBOFLAVIN, FOLIC ACID, ENZYMES), WATER, SUGAR, EGG, BUTTER (CREAM [MILK], LACTIC ACID), YEAST, CONTAINS 2% OR LESS OF WHEAT GLUTEN, MONODIGLYCERIDES, XANTHAN GUM, ENZYMES, ASCORBIC ACID (DOUGH CONDITIONER), SEA SALT, CANOLA OIL, ...

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