Sourdough Sandwich Bread With Fresh Milled Flour- Tangzhong Method!
This Sourdough Sandwich Bread With Fresh Milled Flour is made using the Tangzhong Method. I have really been enjoying using this method in my breads lately. I think is makes them softer, and last longer on the counter. So, this small extra step is very much worth it to me! Let me show you how I make it.

You do not HAVE to use the Tangzhong method to get a wonderful sourdough sandwich bread with fresh milled flour, HERE is my video on how to make a nice FMF sourdough sandwich bread without the Tangzhong method.
FMF=Fresh Milled Flour for reference.

What Is The Tangzhong Method?
The Tangzhong Method is a Chinese method of making bread softer, hold together better, and can last longer on the counter. The method involves cooking a small amount of the fresh milled flour in a bread recipe with some milk or water into a paste, then allowing it to cool to room temperature. After it has cooled, you knead the paste into your dough, and wow what a difference!
How Does The Tangzhong Method Work?
Cooking the small amount of flour before hand, allows the starch in the freshly milled wheat flour to gelatinize. This allows the flour to be able to absorb more liquid than normal, which results in the softer, fluffier bread. Also, this tangzhong method allows the bread to last longer after baking. So, it is a method of preservation without adding artificial preservatives.
When To Use The Tangzhong Method With Fresh Milled Flour?
I have been experimenting with this method for a while, and I recommend using the Tangzhong method for your fresh milled flour breads, rolls, and buns. But, I do think just about any FMF recipe could benefit from this “paste.” So, basically, any dough you want to be softer and fluffier.

Ingredients To Make Soft Fresh Milled Flour Sandwich Bread With The Tangzhong Method
- 3/4 cup Sourdough Starter 170g (Active and bubbly works best)
- 6&1/8 cup fresh milled flour, divided 735g (Hard wheat for this. I use 615g hard white wheat and 120g of Kamut.) *See notes for alternatives
- 1 cup milk 250g (can sub for water if needed)
- 3/4 cup water 180g (May need more if dough seems stiff or dry)
- 4 TBSP softened butter, unsalted 57g (can sub for oil)
- 4 TBSP Honey 84g (can sub for 4 TBSP sugar (36g))
- 2&1/2 tsp sea salt (If using salted butter, decrease to 2&1/4 tsp salt)
- 1 egg 50g
Instructions To Make Soft Fresh Milled Flour Sandwich Bread With The Tangzhong Method
Make The Tangzhong Paste
- Firstly, mill the flour. I mill 735g total of wheat berries to get my fresh milled flour. But, this flour will be used in two different places in the recipe.
- So, let’s use part of the flour to make the Tangzhong paste.
- Put 1/2 cup of fresh milled flour (60g) and 1 cup milk (250g) into a sauce pan, stir to combine.
- Heat this mixture on medium-high heat until it forms a paste. This should only take about 3-5 minutes. Once it forms a paste, remove from the heat, and allow it to cool at room temperature. Allow it to cool while you work on the rest of the dough.
Make The Dough
- While that mixture is cooling, put the water, softened butter, honey, salt, and an egg, into your mixer.
- Mix these ingredients to incorporate.
- Then, add the remaining flour into the mixing bowl, and mix to combine until no flour is left.
- Add the sourdough starter and mix to combine.
- Cover, and let this mixture sit for about 15 minutes. This is the autolyse period and it allows the fresh milled flour to absorb the liquid and the bran to soften.
- After the autloyse period, then add the paste (make sure it is not hot to the touch first, or it will kill your sourdough culture and will result in an uprisen dense loaf), mix to incorporate.
- Once the paste is added, Start the kneading process. Make sure not to knead the dough with the cover on your mixer, this will overheat your dough, and cause it to break down.
- Knead until the dough is nice and stretchy. Typically, 6-8 minutes in a Bosch style mixer, 16-20 minutes in an Ankarsrum style mixer, or 25-30 minutes in a Kitchen aid mixer (allow extra time for a Kitchen Aid style mixer to have breaks in between kneading to prevent overheating of the mixer.) These kneading times will vary for everyone, this is just the most common times for these style of mixers.
- Once the dough is nice and stretchy, and doesn’t easily tear. Then, cover and allow it to rise until almost double. This can take somewhere between 3-6 hours. (In a warm area the dough will rise closer to 3 hours, in a cooler area it will take longer to rise. If the area is too cool (under about 75*F it will take a very long time to rise if it rises at all.)
- While the dough is rising, prepare your bread pans with parchment paper, or softened butter.
Shape & Bake The Loaves
- Once the dough has almost doubled in size, lightly flour a clean work surface. Then, divide the dough in half.
- Shape the dough into 2 bread loaves with some surface tension. I like to flatten each piece of dough, then fold two corners into make a triangle tip. Then, lightly pull (not so tight that it rips the dough) to create tension, and roll the triangle into the dough all the way up until it forms a loaf. You can pinch the ends together. After shaping, the top should have a tight tension on the top of the loaf, this helps with the rise also. *see video
- Put each shaped loaf into each prepared bread pan, cover, and then allow to rise a second time. 1.5-3 hours. (*Tip- usually the second rise time is close to half the the first rise time.)
- During the end of the second rise, preheat the oven to 350*F.
- Once the loaves have risen, they should appear nice and puffy, then bake for 50-60 minutes. Check the center of the loaf to make sure they are done. The internal center of the loaf should be at 205- 210*F for sourdough breads.
- Once they have finished baking, remove from the oven, and carefully dump them out of the bread pans onto a cooling rack. I like to place mine on their sides as they cool.
- Once the loaves have cooled, you can slice and enjoy. If you slice into them while they are still hot, this can cause them to be gummy or crumbly the next day. So, try to resist cutting them while hot.

How To Store Fresh Milled Flour Sourdough Sandwich Bread Made With The Tangzhong Method
To store fresh milled flour sourdough sandwich bread made with the Tangzhong method, it will last a little longer on your counter than bread without using this method. However, we still love to allow the loaf to cool completely, then slice it and place it in a freezer safe container or bag. Freeze for up to 4 months. To thaw, just place however many slices you want on the counter to come to room temperature, usually about an hour or so.
Shop This Post
Bosch Universal (Black & Stainless)($20 OFF Coupon Code: Grainy)
My Cook Book (Paperback Version)
Grain Bin Sticker Labels – Save 10% with coupon code – GRAINY
Shop My Site Wheat Berries & Coupon Codes
Baja Gold Salt SAVE 10% OFF with Coupon Code: Grainy
Checkout Some Of My Other FMF Recipes
FMF Sourdough Sandwich Bread (Non-Tangzhong Method)
FMF Soft Sandwich Bread (Non- Tangzhong Method, Yeast)
The Best Sourdough Cookies Ever!
Fresh Milled Flour Sourdough SandwichBread Tangzhong Method Video Tutorial
Tangzhong Method With Fresh Milled Flour Sourdough Sandwich Bread Printable Recipe

Sourdough Sandwich Bread With Fresh Milled Flour – Tangzhong Method
Ingredients
- 3/4 cup Sourdough Starter 170g Active and bubbly works best
- 6&1/8 cup fresh milled flour, divided 735g (Hard wheat for this. I use 615g hard white wheat and 120g of Kamut.) *See notes for alternatives
- 1 cup milk 250g can sub for water if needed
- 3/4 cup water 180g May need more if dough seems stiff or dry
- 4 TBSP softened butter, unsalted 57g can sub for oil
- 4 TBSP Honey 84g can sub for 4 TBSP sugar (36g)
- 2&1/2 tsp sea salt If using salted butter, decrease to 2&1/4 tsp salt
- 1 egg 50g
Instructions
Make The Tangzhong Paste
- Firstly, mill the flour. I mill 735g total of wheat berries to get my fresh milled flour. But, this flour will be used in two different places in the recipe.
- So, let’s use part of the flour to make the Tangzhong paste.
- Put 1/2 cup of fresh milled flour (60g) and 1 cup milk (250g) into a sauce pan, stir to combine.
- Heat this mixture on medium-high heat until it forms a paste. This should only take about 3-5 minutes. Once it forms a paste, remove from the heat, and allow it to cool at room temperature. Allow it to cool while you work on the rest of the dough.
Make The Dough
- While that mixture is cooling, put the water, softened butter, honey, salt, and an egg, into your mixer.
- Mix these ingredients to incorporate.
- Then, add the remaining flour into the mixing bowl, and mix to combine until no flour is left.
- Add the sourdough starter and mix to combine.
- Cover, and let this mixture sit for about 15 minutes. This is the autolyse period and it allows the fresh milled flour to absorb the liquid and the bran to soften.
- After the autloyse period, then add the paste (make sure it is not hot to the touch first, or it will kill your sourdough culture and will result in an uprisen dense loaf), mix to incorporate.
- Once the paste is added, Start the kneading process. Make sure not to knead the dough with the cover on your mixer, this will overheat your dough, and cause it to break down.
- Knead until the dough is nice and stretchy. Typically, 6-8 minutes in a Bosch style mixer, 16-20 minutes in an Ankarsrum style mixer, or 25-30 minutes in a Kitchen aid mixer (allow extra time for a Kitchen Aid style mixer to have breaks in between kneading to prevent overheating of the mixer.) These kneading times will vary for everyone, this is just the most common times for these style of mixers.
- Once the dough is nice and stretchy, and doesn’t easily tear. Then, cover and allow it to rise until almost double. This can take somewhere between 3-6 hours. (In a warm area the dough will rise closer to 3 hours, in a cooler area it will take longer to rise. If the area is too cool (under about 75*F it will take a very long time to rise if it rises at all.)
- While the dough is rising, prepare your bread pans with parchment paper, or softened butter.
Shape & Bake The Loaves
- Once the dough has almost doubled in size, lightly flour a clean work surface. Then, divide the dough in half.
- Shape the dough into 2 bread loaves with some surface tension. I like to flatten each piece of dough, then fold two corners into make a triangle tip. Then, lightly pull (not so tight that it rips the dough) to create tension, and roll the triangle into the dough all the way up until it forms a loaf. You can pinch the ends together. After shaping, the top should have a tight tension on the top of the loaf, this helps with the rise also. *see video
- Put each shaped loaf into each prepared bread pan, cover, and then allow to rise a second time. 1.5-3 hours. (*Tip- usually the second rise time is close to half the the first rise time.)
- During the end of the second rise, preheat the oven to 350*F.
- Once the loaves have risen, they should appear nice and puffy, then bake for 50-60 minutes. Check the center of the loaf to make sure they are done. The internal center of the loaf should be at 205- 210*F for sourdough breads.
- Once they have finished baking, remove from the oven, and carefully dump them out of the bread pans onto a cooling rack. I like to place mine on their sides as they cool.
- Once the loaves have cooled, you can slice and enjoy. If you slice into them while they are still hot, this can cause them to be gummy or crumbly the next day. So, try to resist cutting them while hot.
Video
Notes
*This post contains affiliate links, which means I make a small commission at no extra cost to you! Also, as an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. But, I will only suggest items I actually Recommend!


Hi! Can I bake in Dutch oven?
You can, but this is more of a soft sandwich bread, if you are looking for a traditional artisan sourdough loaf, I have a recipe for that as well here- https://grainsinsmallplaces.net/fresh-milled-flour-sourdough-bread/
Do you have a good egg substitute for FMF bread?
Some breads you can just use about 40g of water in place of an egg. OR you can do a flax seed egg.
Good morning! I’ve made your sourdough boules with inclusions, and they worked great. Yesterday, I made the sandwich loaf for the first time using the Tangzhong method and turned them into breakfast breads. Blueberries in one batch and cinnamon raisin in the second batch. They look great and taste good, and the crumb was good when we sliced them, but the bread is denser than I expected. Is that typical of sourdough sandwich bread? By the way, I really appreciate the videos, too! I’ve only been doing FMF since September of last year and jumped in with both feet with yeast and sourdough breads. The videos are helpful and love your cookbook!
Thank you so much! This should be a soft bread, but it is a bit more dense than a yeast sandwich bread would be because of the sourdough starter.
Can I make these into dinner rolls???
Yes, you can do these as rolls as well.
In the middle of making the dough. It seems a fairly wet dough for me (thankfully!) tho i probably don’t knead long enough. I never seem to get to a nice ‘window’. But what I’m asking about is really, a number of people are asking about lemon juice. I don’t see lemon juice in the ingredients. Have I missed something
??
If the dough seems a bit wet, try holding back some of the water and only add it in later if the dough seems stiff or dry. Just knead until the dough is nice and stretchy. They may be asking about lemon juice, because in my yeast Tangzhong recipe I include lemon juice to help the loaf to last longer on the counter. However, I have found with sourdough, the starter gives similar results for me.
have you ever tried fresh milled flour sourdough brioche bread using the tangzhong method? would love to see a video if this is possible.
I have made the regular bread, and doubled the eggs and butter. Then decrease the liquid in the recipe to get a brioche bread.
Not sure what I am doing wrong, but 3/4 cups of water to 675 grams of flour and my dough is rock hard. I’ve had to add almost that much more to get it close to being soft.
There is also a cup of milk in the Tangzhong paste. The moisture level in the sourdough starter can also make a difference, if yours runs a bit stiff, you may need a bit more water. But it should loosen as the rest times go on. Here is the video to help see what the texture of the dough should look like. https://youtu.be/Q-Kgz7APW_k