Have you ever eaten Shokupan, the Japanese milk bread? You must try it! It’s the delicious, soft and fluffy white bread loaf that you can get in Japan. The golden brown crust and soft white inside make it irresistible. It is amazingly fluffy and stays moist for longer than ordinary bread because of the Yudane method.
Why is Japanese Bread So Fluffy?
Why is Japanese bread so soft and fluffy and has the mochi-like texture? The answer is because of the “Yudane” method. The Yudane method makes the bread pillowy soft and fluffy and also keeps the bread from drying out quickly. This is because the heated gelatinised starch in the flour keeps the moisture inside the bread.
What is the Yudane Method?
Yudane is made by mixing bread flour and hot boiling water. Adding hot boiling water gelatinises the starch. The gelatinised starch not only allows the starch to take in more water, but also increases the sweetness of it. Therefore by adding Yudane to a bread dough (the yudane method), you can make soft, moist and sweeter bread which lasts longer.
Yudane vs Tangzhong roux
- The Yudane method originated in Japan and it became widespread and the popular way to bake bread in Asian countries when Yvonne Chen introduced “Tangzhong” roux as a secret ingredient to bake the super soft and light Japanese milk bread in her book called “Bread Doctor”.
- Yudane ratio of flour and water is usually 1:1 whereas “Tangzhong roux” is made by 1:5 ratio of bread flour to water. The Tangzhong mixture is made by heating up to 149°F(65°C) then cooled down to room temperature and added to the bread dough. I will explain how to make Yudane in a paragraph below.
- I have often seen this type of bread also called “Hokkaido Milk Bread” or “Japanese Milk Bread” on social media platforms such as Pinterest. Those breads are made by the same principle either adding Yudane or Tangzhong roux to bread dough.
How to Make Yudane?
We need to deduct 20% of total flour ingredients to make Yudane. So to make 1 standard loaf size dough, we need 250 x 0.2 = 50g bread flour. Yudane flour to water ratio is generally 1:1, but I found it is easier to make yudane with 1:08 ratio. Then simply add hot boiling water (should be above 194°F/90°C) and combine them with a wooden spatula. The ideal combined dough temperature will be around 122°F/50°C. When it is cooled down, wrap with a sheet of plastic wrap and leave it on the kitchen bench or in the fridge.
Ingredients
You need to gather bread flour, milk, sugar, unsalted butter, Salt and Yudane that you made the night before. Some ingredients will be further explained as I have received many questions about this.
Flour
For making fluffy Japanese milk bread, we need to use bread flour that contains around 12% of protein. I use Japanese brand Nisshin flour. You can use all-purpose flour but all-purpose flour has around 10% protein content therefore the bread will not rise as high as the shokupan made with bread flour.
Yeast
I usually use LeSaffre Saf-Instant Yeast Gold for making shokupan Japanese milk bread. If you cannot find instant active dry yeast but can find fresh yeast, you can substitute. This recipe requires 1 teaspoon(5g) of dry yeast, so you would need 5g x 3 = 15g of fresh yeast.
Butter
We need to use unsalted butter. Because the salt content of butter will affect the gluten formation. If you don’t have unsalted butter, and would like to use oil instead, you can. However it is a little bit tricky because butter is solid and oil is liquid. Generally speaking, you can replace 3/4 of the amount of butter with oil.
Milk
Some readers have asked if they can replace the whole milk with other types of milk. Using different milk does not affect the fluffiness and lightness of the bread. I tested using coconut milk and almond milk. Read the result in the FAQ.
Bakers Percentages
Some readers have asked to change the amount of the ingredients to make bigger or smaller sized bread loaves. Baker’s percentage is great because it is universal even when each country uses different units of weight. In the table below, is the bread ingredients mixing ratio. Each ingredient is shown as a % of the flour.
Ingredients | weight | percentage |
Bread flour for Yudane | 50g | 20% |
Hot water | 40g/ml | 16% |
Bread flour | 200g | 80% |
Milk | 150g/ml | 60% |
Sugar | 15g | 6% |
Instant dry yeast | 3g | 1.2% |
unsalted butter | 10g | 4% |
Salt | 5g | 2% |
Using Cup Measurement
If you don’t have a kitchen scale, don’t worry. I have figured out measurements for using cups. However, you need to be as precise as you can. For example, when you measure 1 cup of flour, you need to spoon flour to the measuring cup, then level the surface with the back of a knife. The cup measurements are included in the recipe cards’ note section.
How to Make Shokupan Japanese Milk Bread?
This is the basic process of making the shokupan Japanese bread in 8 steps using Yudane method.
- Make Yudane the night before. (8-12 hours)
- Knead all ingredients using a stand mixer, bread machine or by hand (20min)
- The first rise (45-60 min depends on the temperature)
- Divide & roll
- Bench time (20 min)
- Shape
- The second rise (30 min)
- Bake (30 min)
Tips for Making Shokupan Japanese Milk Bread Successfully
- Start making Yudane the night before with boiling hot water. When the mixture combines the temperature of the dough should be around 122°F/50°C.
- Leaving Yudane longer will result in better Japanese bread.
- The dough rising temperature should be around 86°F(30°C). My oven has a defrost function and I set the temperature to 86°F(30°C), so I use that setting for rising. Or use a styrofoam box with 4 little cups with hot water in the corners of the box.
Other Recipes That Call for Shokupan Japanese Milk Bread
The fluffy, soft and moist Japanese milk bread is the basis of other delicious Japanese creations.
- Tamago Sando (Japanese egg sandwich). This egg salad sandwich is super popular and for good reason.
- Fruit Sando (Japanese fruit sandwich). Another popular sandwich in Japan, often made with strawberries and cream.
- Panko (Japanese bread crumbs). You can use this Japanese bread to make Japanese bread crumbs which are so crispy and perfect for using to make pork katsu or chicken katsu.
- Simply toasting the bread with some butter or jam is also great. The bread is so delicious that even eating it simply like this tastes amazing.
- You can also use this recipe to make super soft Japanese bread rolls.
How to Store the Bread?
Another tip that I can give you is that this bread is super soft, so it is better to slice it the following day. I bake the bread on a Saturday and slice it on Sunday. It will stay moist for a few days just sitting on the kitchen bench. In my household, the bread is eaten in a day or two. But if you wish, slice them and individually wrap and place them in a ziplock bag to freeze. It will last about a month.
FAQ
A: Yes, you can. But as you can see the all purpose flour did not rise well in my experiment. The texture of the bread was not fluffy, but rather it was like eating a savoury muffin.
A: Using different milk does not affect the fluffiness and lightness of the bread. The coconut milk I used was the “Ayam Premium Coconut Milk 100 % Natural” which contains 24.3 g fat in 100ml and it is quite rich and thick. The almond milk that I used was “Sanitarium So Good Almond Milk” and contained only 1.4g per 100ml. It was very thin milk. The almond milk bread turned out fluffier and coconut milk bread was denser. Hope these experiments using different ingredients helps you make a decision as to which ingredients to use.
A: You can hand knead, however, because this has yudane in the dough which is very moist, the dough is quite sticky. Therefore, this recipe is more suitable for machine kneading. I usually use either a machine or bread mixer to knead and rise.
A: Yes you can. Some of my readers and myself have only rested the dough for about a couple hours in the fridge and the bread made with that shorter resting time of the yudane was quite successful. However, the longer you rest the yudane the better the quality of the bread.
A: My bread form size is 3.9 x 7.9 x 3.5 inch (10 x 20 x 9 cm). I bought it in Japan. This is similar to what I have from Amazon.com.
Stay Connected
This is not a popular effortless “No Knead” type of bread recipe, however, it is worth the effort to bake this bread especially if you love any Japanese baking stuff. This is the bread you must try!
If you liked my recipe for Shokupan Japanese milk bread, please rate it and leave a comment below. Also, don’t forget to follow me on Youtube, Pinterest, Facebook , Twitter and Instagram to keep up to date with all the latest happenings on Chopstick Chronicles. Don’t forget to use the hashtag #ChopstickChronicles so I can see your wonderful creations!
Shokupan
Ingredients
Yudane
- 50 g Bread flour *1
- 40 ml boiling water above 194°F(90°C)
Bread
- 150 ml milk (room temperature) *3
- 15 g sugar
- 3 g dry instant yeast *2
- 10 g unsalted butter (room temperature)
- 200 g Bread flour *1
- 5 g salt
Instructions
- Make Yudane the night before. Place bread flour in a bowl and add boiling water and mix well. Put cling wrap and refrigerate overnight. *4
- Pour the room temperature milk into a stand mixer bowl.
- Add sugar,butter and yeast to the bowl then add the yudane as you tear it into small pieces.
- Add the bread, flour and salt.
- Attach the kneading hook onto the stand mixer and combine all ingredient on low speed 1.
- When all ingredients are combined, turn the speed up to 5 or 6 and knead the dough for 20 min.
- Roll the dough round and place the dough into a greased bowl. Wrap with cling wrap to rise for about 45 min to 1 hour at about 86°F(30°C) or until double the size.
- Use your finger, to test if the dough has risen by dusting your finger with flour and poking the dough. If the dough doesn't bounce back and the hole you poked stays there, it is ready.
- Punch the dough down and cut the dough into two equal parts with a scraper and roll them.
- Cover the rolled doughs with a wet cloth and stand it for 20 minutes bench time.
- Roll out each dough to about 5.9×7.8inch (15 x 20 cm) rectangle with a rolling pin.
- Fold the dough tightly not letting any air in towards the centre from left and right.
- Rotate the dough 90 degrees and roll it from one end.
- Spray one loaf bread tin lightly and place the rolled dough in the end of the tin facing the centre.
- Cover it with a wet cloth and let the dough rise for a second time until the dough rises to the size of the bread tin about 30 min.
- Start to preheat the oven to 365 °F(185°C).
- When the dough has risen to be level with the tin, it's ready to bake.
- Bake the dough for about 25 -30 minutes in preheated oven.
- Remove the bread from the tin and cool it down on a rack. * 5
- Whisk an egg, rightly brush over the bread dough.(Optional)
Video
Notes
Nutrition
Chopstick Chronicles is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com. As an amazon associate I earn from qualifying purchases.
This recipe was originally posted in 2017, since then had received so many questions and suggestions. So I have decided update the post and the recipe in order to answer all the questions asked. Thank you for those who left comments below and rate the recipe highly.
Susan says
Hi! Can I use sourdough starter instead of yeast? If so, how much starter do you think to substitute the yeast? Thank you ☺️
Shihoko | Chopstick Chronicles says
Hi Susan, yes you can use starter but i have not tried it myself and it will be a completely different recipe
Rob says
Hi,
I have made this one and it works quite well. I have a somewhat cooler kitchen though, so it took a lot longer for the dough to rise to the proper height.
valeria farinella says
Hi Rob, how much sourdough starter have you used? Did you also change anything else in the recipe?
Sabrina Wong says
Can you help me calculate thr amount of ingredients if i want to use 500 gms of flour?
Your recipe calls for 5 gm of salt. I find it too salty so i half it and came out perfect.
Can you tell me how to make it so smooth like store bought? Mine has lots of tiny air pockets.
Love this recipe so much. So healthy too.
Sabrina says
I used the exact amount in the recipe but came out with a salty bread. I reduced the salt to 2.5 gms and itd better. Another question is why the bread came out with so many little air pockets unlike the shokupan i bought in japan where its so smokth without any holes. How do i correct it?
Melissa says
Hi,
As soon as it is cooked You must remove the lid and drop the pan from 15cm to remove the air inside.
And take out the bread to cool down on a grill.
Aries says
The bread flour, do you have more specific recommendations because I find my bread is soft but not as soft as cotton like
Shihoko | Chopstick Chronicles says
Hi Aries, thank you for the comment. If I were you, I would look protein content of flour and i discussed about it in the post.
Celene C. says
Hi I tried to make this recipe as dinner rolls and they didnt seem to rise after 1 hr the second time. The first rise was perfect and there were no issues, they never rose the second time and turned out dense and tough. Do you have any tips?
Shihoko | Chopstick Chronicles says
Hi Celene, it is hard to know as I am not sure the ingredients you used, and conditions you made.
Risa’s Kitchen says
Hi Celene,
I am not the author obviously, but am a chef and was having this problem a lot with other doughs. While it can be any number of things without knowing what you did specifically, What I often was having was when making dinner told you “roll” them to make the dinner roll shape, and turns out you can significantly overdo this, it will still rise a little but not as much and will be very dense and not how shokupan should be.
If this is not the case with you, check the following things next time you make them;
– Temperature (room, dough and when rising) – meaning if your room is hot your dough should be a bit cooler. If your room is cooler try having some warm/boiled water to create steam and warmth. (In the post – you can use the oven with everything turned off and a tray of boiled water on the rack below where your dough is rising.)
– Yeast – meaning yeast can go bad/off / particularly the case for fresh yeast, instant dry yeast can go off in 6 – 12 months or so. You can avoid this by keeping it in the fridge. To check if it is fresh is when adding it to the milk, make sure it is slightly warm (35C / 93F) allow it to bloom for 5 minutes. It should foam and bubble – if it doesn’t it’s not active and should be thrown away.
There are others but those are the main ones.
From what you said where the first rise was fine but second not so much I suspect it is you may have rolled them too tight and didn’t have enough warmth and steam to help it rise.
To fix this: roll it a little less, add steam and warmth (how I recommend above, and rest it for longer (if it’s rolled too tight rest it for extra time (normally 40 minutes? Try 1 hour. Normally 1 hour try 1.5 hrs)
I hope this helps, and that the next time your dinner rolls are softer and more enjoyable 🙂
Alice says
Thank you for this recipe. I made my first shokupan yesterday and it turned out wonderful.
I knew shokupan was cloudy soft, but I wasn’t prepared for how amazing it actually is.
I don’t know what people’s issues are with your recipe, but mine rised just as expected with the amount of yeast. I used classic Type 550 flour, because in my country it’s hard to get anything besides the classic Type scale flours and I use it for everything that isn’t supposed to be a nutritionless endproduct.
Currently making my second loaf.
B says
This was a failure for me.
It didn’t rise in the pan, perhaps some more detailed instructions on temperature and rising would be useful
Vyonne says
Love. … live love the bread, its also very nice with huge golden raisens and mixed fruit, walnuts and peacans mixed in and a sausage of home made almond paste in the middle (put it at the last when rolling the bead) thank you for this recipe I use it at least once a week!!
Evangeline says
I have the same question as Carole Zattz
I see you’re using a KitchenAid mixer. However KitchenAid warns against using a speed higher than 2 when kneading. In addition they warn against running the mixer for than 6 minutes. How do you get around these limitations?
Shihoko | Chopstick Chronicles says
Ohhhhhh, I did not read the warnings 😳. I will fix the instructions when I have a proper oven.
Carole Zatz says
I see you’re using a KitchenAid mixer. However KitchenAid warns against using a speed higher than 2 when kneading. In addition they warn against running the mixer for than 6 minutes. How do you get around these limitations?
Andrew says
Softest bread (and best) I’ve ever made, thank you for sharing your knowledge.
Settie says
Hi, my loaf pan is pretty big (right now I’m using an aluminum foil dam to make it smaller) and it can easily fit twice the recipe. My question is, if I double the recipe do I also double the yudane or will the same amount be enough?
Shihoko | Chopstick Chronicles says
Hi Settie, I would use beaker’s percentage to calculate all ingredients amount, it is in the post. So if you double the flour amount to 400g, then yudane flour amount will be 80g. It is not just double everything.
Settie says
Thanks for clarifying! But in that case, if I use a total of 500g flour, it’s 100 g for the yudane and 400g for the rest of the dough. Basically doubling everything, if my math is correct. 🙂
Shihoko | Chopstick Chronicles says
Hi Settie, yes 😀
Sheri Williams says
SO FAR, I just made the yudane. Very sticky! I see my bread flower is 3 gm protein per 30 gm flour. (1/4 cup). so 4 times go gm is 12gm.That seems right. Its in the fridge till tomorow. I did order a bread pan from Japan on Amazon, it was $34 and no shipping. I hink i t is about 7” tall and one lb. loaf size. I think the American Pullman pans are not high enough, being only around 4” high. I would definately make a high silver foil collar around the top of any ordinary bread pan to encourage the mountain high tallness of the bread. I will edit my post after I bake the bread. Thank you for your time and recipe.
Shihoko | Chopstick Chronicles says
Hi Sheri, 3g protein per 30g flour is 10% of protein. You need higher percentage like 12%.
Hellomuffin says
Hello can I check if you used the recipe for 1 serving or two for the dough to rise to the height of the bread tin? I’ve been trying this recipe a few times but my dough can’t rise that high! 🙁 wondering if I should double the servings instead. Also, do we need to thaw the yudane to room temperature or we can use it straight from the fridge?
Sheri Williams says
my bread. did not rise either. I am a professional cook and love bakery. I am reviewing the steps and comparing measurements times ingredients to figure out what went wrong.
Shihoko | Chopstick Chronicles says
Hi Sheri, one thing I can see from your last comment is that you use different flour. I use 12% protein content flour where you use 10%.
Vyonne says
Hey, the dough will not rice to its potential if the protein is not what is said.
What can also happen (I had that once) the flour is off, either old or has been open to long or stored under wrong conditions, its very disappointing when that happens, but beyond your control, face it if you buy in rhe shop you presume its fresh!
Do you use fresh yeast or dried there is a difference, 5 grams of dried yeast is not the same as 5 grams of fresh yeast, there is formula google it. Even the dried yeast can be “old” and again bread winter rise!!
Just retry, also if you don’t want to split it in two, make a larger bread also a larger bread pan naturally.
Good luck, have fun!! And most of all enjoy the delicious bread!!
Oh says
The best shokupan recipe I’ve tried so far. It’s soft with great flavor. Thanks for the recipe.