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This wreath bread has a crispy crackly crust and super soft, spongy center. It will rival the taste and texture of your favorite fancy restaurant rolls.
We used our favorite Crusty French bread as the base (super easy with very little active time). Forming it into a Christmas Wreath Bread is beautiful and so special for the holidays. It not only looks amazing, but tastes like it came out of a high end French bakery – holiday worthy!
TIP: Serve it as an edible centerpiece on your holiday table and your guests will be so impressed.
P.S. It’s easy!! Watch the video tutorial and you will quickly realize YOU CAN DO THIS!!
Watch How to Make Wreath Bread:
Did you hear that crunch? This isn’t just a show-stopping “pretty” bread, but really tastes incredible!
Ingredients for Wreath Bread:
1 3/4 cups (14 oz) warm water (100˚F)
1/2 tsp molasses
2 1/2 cups (315 grams) unbleached all-purpose flour, *measured correctly
2 1/3 cups (290 grams) unbleached bread flour* plus more for dusting
2 tsp salt
1 1/4 tsp instant yeast (quick rise)
*To measure flour correctly, spoon into a dry ingredients measuring cup and level the top with the blunt edge of a knife.
*Watch our easy video tutorial on how to measure correctly
P.S. I have included Amazon affiliate links to our favorite tools below.
How to Make Wreath Bread:
1. In a large measuring cup, stir together 1 3/4 cups warm water (100˚F) and 1/2 tsp molasses and stir until dissolved.
2. In a large mixing bowl, add 2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour, 2 1/3 cups bread flour, 2 tsp salt, and 1 1/4 tsp yeast, whisking until combined. Add water-molasses mixture and stir with a spatula until it comes together. Knead by hand 4 minutes. Dough should be soft and sticky to the touch but won’t stick to clean fingertips. If dough is too sticky, add flour 1 Tbsp at a time (I usually add 2-3 Tbsp extra flour while kneading).
3. Cover bowl with plastic wrap and let rise at room temp (69˚F – 75˚F) for 4 hours. Every hour, punch down dough with a wet hand and fold it over onto itself a few times.
Note: a wet hand will keep the dough from sticking to your hands without adding unnecessary flour.
4. After the 4 hours of rising time, punch down the dough one last time and pinch it in the center to divide into two even pieces. Generously dust 2 pieces of parchment paper with flour. Place each dough piece on it’s own sheet of parchment, turning it to coat in flour. Poke a hole in the center of the dough piece and stretch the dough into a ring about 5-6″ diameter in the center and 9-10″ diameter on the outside. Let the rings rest on parchment at room temperature 30 minutes.
5. Meanwhile, place an upside-down large baking sheet in the center of your oven with a cast iron or broiler pan on to one side of the bottom rack. With pans in place, preheat oven to 450˚F.
CAUTION: Do not use glass on the bottom rack – you will add ice cubes once the pan is fully preheated which can cause glass to shatter.
6. Sprinkle the top of dough ring with flour. Holding kitchen scissors at a 45˚ angle to the parchment paper, cut deep slits into the dough about 1 1/2″ apart, pulling the points away from the ring as you cut them. Rotate the parchment paper as you slice to maintain the correct cutting angle.
7. Transfer your bread (with the parchment paper) to the preheated oven onto the hot baking sheet and immediately pour 1 cup of ice cubes into the hot cast iron pan on the bottom rack (be careful not to drip on glass surfaces!). Bake at 450˚F for 20 minutes or until top is golden brown. Repeat step 7 with the second ring.
Print-Friendly Christmas Bread Wreath Recipe:
DIY Wreath Bread (VIDEO)

Ingredients
- 1 3/4 cups (14 oz) warm water (100˚F)
- 1/2 tsp molasses
- 2 1/2 cups unbleached all-purpose flour, measured correctly*
- 2 1/3 cups unbleached bread flour, measured correctly,* plus more for dusting
- 2 tsp salt
- 1 1/4 tsp instant yeast, quick rise
Instructions
- In a large measuring cup, combine 1 3/4 cups warm water (100˚F) and 1/2 tsp molasses and stir to dissolve.
- In a large mixing bowl, add 2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour, 2 1/3 cups bread flour, 2 tsp salt, and 1 1/4 tsp yeast, whisking until combined. Add water-molasses mixture and stir with spatula until it comes together. Knead by hand 4 min. Dough should be soft and sticky to the touch but won't stick to clean fingertips. If dough is too sticky, add flour 1 Tbsp at a time (I usually add 2-3 Tbsp extra flour while kneading).
- Cover bowl with plastic wrap and let rise at room temp (69˚F - 75˚F) 4 hours. Every hour, punch down dough with wet hand and fold it onto itself a few times.
- After the 4 hours of rising time, punch down dough one last time and pinch it in the center to divide into two even pieces. Generously dust 2 pieces of parchment paper with flour. Place dough on parchment, turning it to coat in flour. Poke a hole in the center of each the dough piece and stretch dough into a ring 5-6" diameter in the center and 9-10" diameter on the outside. Let the rings rest on parchment at room temp 30 min.
- Meanwhile, place an upside-down large baking sheet in the center of your oven with a cast iron or broiler pan** set to one side of the bottom rack. With pans in place, preheat oven to 450˚F.
- Sprinkle the top of dough ring with flour. Holding scissors at a 45˚ angle to the parchment paper, cut deep slits into the dough about 1 1/2" apart, pulling the points away from the ring as you cut them. Rotate the parchment paper as you slice to maintain correct cutting angle.
- Transfer 1 ring (with the parchment paper) to the preheated oven onto the hot baking sheet and immediately pour 1 cup ice cubes into the hot cast iron pan below (be careful not to drip on glass surfaces!). Bake at 450˚F for 20 min or until top is golden brown. Repeat step 7 with second ring.
Notes
**CAUTION: Do not use glass or ceramic on the bottom rack - you will add ice cubes once the pan is fully preheated which can cause glass to shatter.
If you make this recipe, I’d love to see pics of your creations on Instagram, Facebook and Twitter! Hashtag them #natashaskitchen
Are you surprised how easy it is to make a bread wreath?!
I hope you all have a beautiful and Merry Christmas!! If you make this wreath bread and share a picture, let me know about it!! If you need more ideas for your holiday menu, check out our Christmas recipes here.
Christmas Blessings to you!
Love,
-Natasha, Vadim and the littles 🙂
Dear Natasha,
So excited to make this recipe tomorrow as a trial run for our Christmas This is the bread Wreath. I do have a question is there any way I could make this like a garlic bread ? With parsley herb butter, garlic butter.
I thought if I put it in between the slits while baking it would infuse into the bread for a better flavor. Do you have any ideas or should I just make the garlic herb butter on the side while the bread is hot and serve it like that and people can fix themselves .
I love watching you teach me many things .
You are very easy to understand and to follow.
Thank you
Debby Lappat
Springfield , VA
Hello Debby, it sounds like a good idea but I have not tried it yet to advise. If you do an experiment, we’d love to know how it goes!
This bread is incredible! I have made it multiple times and the recipe works beautifully as written and is always a show stopper. Thank you for this wonderful recipe, Natasha!
You’re very welcome! Glad you always love this recipe when you always make it.
Hello Natasha hope you’re doing fine. I wanted to ask if I can use only bread flour because I don’t have all purpose flour here.
Hi Ranuth, I have always made this particular bread with a combination of both flours. Bread flour has a higher gluten content and the dough results in a really soft and fluffy consistency. I have substituted my no-knead bread with 100% all-purpose flour and it worked well, so I think you could make it work. The amount might vary slightly with only all-purpose. Merry Christmas to you also!
Thank you for your quick response Natasha plus phew can’t believe how 2021 is already going to end it feels as though it was new year yesterday. Anyhow Merry Christmas and A Happy New Year Natasha,Vadim,David and Diana!!! Plus all family members!!!
Thank you so much and you too!
Can’t wait to try this! Amazing addition to holiday table coming up! Plan on making several dipping oils with various seasonings like Italian, Everything Bagel etc. Thank you so much for sharing❤️
It’s a statement piece on the dinner table! I’m glad you’re going to try this! I look forward to your feedback!
Hi Natasha, I love this recipe. I’m from the Netherlands and we use grams and liters. Therefore, I noticed an error in the metrics that you might want to adjust: 1 3/4 cup of water is 414 gram (or ml), not 50 gram! Nevertheless, this recipe is fantastic, my friends love it.
Hi Jan, thank you so much for catching that. I have no idea why it converted that way but I fixed the error.
Hi, Natasha this bread it’s so good,but can I make this dough night before?I want to bake in the morning, please let me known thank you!
Hi! I have refrigerated the dough overnight and then let it get to room temperature and rise before baking the following day and that worked out well.
Hi Natasha! I have made this recipe three times! Omg, sooo delicious! My husband praises it three and four times each meal! This was the first time I made bread! What a confidence builder! You instructions and video are fun and easy to follow! Bread freezes well! We reheat in oven! Fabulous! Thank you so much!
You’re welcome! I’m so happy you enjoyed it, Kim!
Is there a whole wheat version? I love the bread the way it is, however, I do need a recipe better for diabetics! Any suggestions?
Hello Kim, I honestly can’t speak to the flour substitution since I haven’t tried that. Using only whole wheat flour tends to toughen the dough and the end result is not nearly as soft. You can sub the molasses for 1 tsp honey.
Thank you!
Hi Natasha I know you can bake the wreath fro christmas can I make the bread and after brush it with garlic and parsley and thank
Hi Rose, that sounds delicious! I haven’t tested that with this bread but I imagine that may work.
I’ve never made a comment before but I must thank you for such a wonderful recipe. I’ve made this 3 times over the last 2 weeks. My son’s were so impressed with it that I gave them your recipe too. They too have had great success. Thanks again! Happy New Year!
Happy New Year, Filomena! Thank you for that wonderful review.
Hi – what is the purpose of the ice cubes & hot baking sheet? can i skip this step and just bake in the oven as usual?
Hi El, the ice turns into steam which helps the crust to form and become crunchy.
If can’t find bread flour can you just tell me regular all purpose?
Hi Arlene, I have always made this particular bread with a combination of both flours. Bread flour has a higher gluten content and the dough results in a really soft and fluffy consistency. I have substituted my no-knead bread with 100% all-purpose flour and it worked well, so I think you could make it work. The amount might vary slightly with only all-purpose. Merry Christmas to you also!
Hi Natasha
This bread was a big hit!!
We have a friend who has celiac – is there a way I could make this gluten free so that he might also enjoy it?
Thank you, Dale. I haven’t experimented on that to advise. If you try it, please share with us how it goes as I’m sure a lot here would like to know too.
Hi Natasha I would love to make this recipe for christmas of this year I live to bake and cook my daughter just graduated from collage as a pastry chef so proud of her how long in advance shall I make the bread and thanks again love your recipes
Sounds like a great plan, Rose. I’m sure she will love this! I have refrigerated the dough overnight and then let it get to room temperature and rise before baking the following day and that worked out well.
Hi Natasha thanks for the advice
Hi Natasha, this is such a yummy and impressive recipe, thank you! I was wondering if you’d do the 4 hour rise then refrigerate it, or straight to fridge post mixing and 4 hour rise after it’s out of the fridge the next day? Also, could a stand mixer (with dough hook) be used in place of the hand kneading?
Hi Sea, if I refrigerate, it’s usually before the final rise. A dough hook should work fine.
Hi. I love your recipes and have tried several. I was wondering if i could use a pizza stone to bake it on, like I do for other breads. thank you for bring such wonderful food to my dining room table.
Hi Ellen, yes that will be fine just be sure your pizza stone is clean doesn’t have oil on it since it can get smoky at the high baking temperatures.
Hi Natasha,
Can I freeze this amazing bread? So I van enjoy it later.
Love Chantalle
Hi, yes this would work as a freezer-friendly bread. I found that if I freeze the bread shortly after it’s baked (once it’s fully cooled to room temperature ofcourse), it will be just like a fresh loaf once it’s thawed and recrisped in the oven.
Thank you so much Natasha,
this bread is the best. Tested the bread thawed and again in the oven. Omg so crips and delicious.
This recipe is forever.
Love Chantalle
Thank you for the wonderful review!
I let my dough rise for 4 hours and looks great but was wondering if I can put the dough in the refrigerator overnight and make the it tomorrow?
Hi Gina, I haven’t tried it that way but I think it could work – you would have to bring the dough to refrigerate and then bring the dough to room temp for it to make that last rise.
Hi, Natasha, I found your site today and decided to make this bread. I am not new to making bread, regular old fashioned to no knead to sweet dessert breads. This is absolutely the most delicious bread ever!! Followed the recipe to a T. I can’t wait to share it with family and friends. Thank you so much!!
You’re welcome, Marion! I’m so happy you enjoyed this recipe!
Hello Natasha, if you remember I mentioned making this beautiful shape of wreath for my garlic bread n everyone adored it. I was thinking to make this one now but was wondering if (a) I can replace molasses with maple syrup, if yes, (b) how many taps and also any (c) alternate for bread flour. Sorry for so many questions
Hi Rabya, You can sub the molasses for 1 tsp honey, I haven’t tested it with equal amount of syrup. I hope you love the bread wreath
Hi, wondering if you’ve kneaded this with the dough hook of a mixer. If so, can you recommend for how long it should be kneaded? Thanks
Hi Roz, I would do the same timing as by hand so knead on speed 2 for 4 minutes.
Thank’s for your’s recipe
You’re welcome!! I’m so glad you’re enjoying our recipes!
This came together gloriously! Thanks, Natasha!
You’re so welcome. Thank you for your short but sweet review!
I have not made this bread yet, but it will be my next one to try. I noticed that you give the measurement in cups and in gram, but when I measured a cup of flour today, it was about 150 g. Coming from Germany I am used to measure everything in gram. Do you do cup or gram?
Hi Frauke, I measure in cups, but when I measure, I spoon it into the measuring cup and scrape off the top. This conversion chart will help.