Renaissance Medieval Bread Recipe made with Beer and Yeast – Yum Eating (2024)

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This is traditional medieval bread made in Elizabethian times, made with beer and wholemeal bread flour. Great rustic bread perfect with soups, stews or made into sandwiches.

I love visiting medieval and historical fairs and have always loved researching historic recipes. Today I wanted to share with you a simple bread made with beer, which was popular in Elizabethan times in England.

It’s based on a medieval ale bread recipe found in ‘Daily life in Elizabethan England’by Jeffery Singman and I’ve adapted it slightly to suit modern times (and taste!).

Why bake this medieval recipe ?

  • Great bread to bake with a flavour twist (the beer!)
  • Recipe is based on medieval bread recipe & you’ll be baking a piece of history!
  • Perfect bread to serve with soup, stews or made into sandwiches
  • Great bread to bring to a medieval-themed party, historical reenactments days or medieval fairs

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Renaissance Medieval Bread Recipe made with Beer and Yeast – Yum Eating (1)

MY OTHER FAVOURITE BREAD RECIPES

  • Black Russian Bread >>
  • Wholemeal Soda Bread >>
  • Rye Bread >>

Notes on Ingredients & Substitutions for this medieval bread recipe

Flour

White flour was expensive and only used in wealthy houses in medieval times. Most people had only access to whole meal bread flour (made from wheat) and rye flour. Wholemeal flour was a lot less expensive than white bread flour in Elizabethian times as it was considered to be a ‘wastage’ from making white flour.

These days, you can make this recipe from any bread flour you like, but wholemeal bread flour (or brown bread flour) works great with this recipe and compliments the flavour of the beer well (plus you’ll be keeping this medieval bread recipe authentic).

Another option is to use 50% wholemeal bread flour and 50% white bread flour, which will make the bread nice and light, but still add great flavour.

Beer

Don’t worry about making your bread alcoholic, it won’t be! Any alcohol still remaining in the bread will be destroyed by the oven temperature when you bake your bread.

Beer was used in the olden times because it was the only way to leaven (rise) the bread. Brewers yeast, which can be found in beer, works very similarly to bakers yeast.

The only difference is that you would need larger volume of beer to contain the same yeast content like a teaspoon of concentrated dry bakers yeast, so it’s not really practical.

Because the yeast levels in beer are much lower than in regular yeast, raising your bread by beer on it’s own would take a considerably longer period of time. It’s not impossible and you could certainly use beer to revive sourdough starter or to add to sourdough bread, which does use natural yeast.

Adding beer into bread is not coincidental, when you understand how commercial bakers yeast was invented – I always find this story fascinating:

In medieval times, the brewery was often located next to the bread kitchen with hot ovens as the beer needed warm environment to develop. The story goes, that somebody added (or probably knocked over…) a bit of beer mixture to the bread mixture, by mistake and after a while, they noticed that the bread was rising a lot quicker than usual.

From that moment, the bakers have experimented with adding beer or the beer yeast to the bread dough to make it rise faster.

Depending on what beer you use, you might end up with a slightly different bread flavour, but that’s part of the fun!

Start with 320 ml (or about 1 1/2 cup) of the beer and add more if the dough feels tight as you knead it. Wholemeal flour soaks up more water, so bear that in mind.

Yeast

The traditional yeast as we know it wasn’t invented until mid 19 century, so the original recipe relies only on the brewers yeast from the beer to rise your bread.

You are welcome to omit the yeast completely and wait until the beer yeast does it’s magic.

If you want to do this, I’d recommend that you use about 1 1/2 teaspoon of sugar and mix it with the beer. This will help to speed up the yeast and your bread will rise quicker, but it will still take 2-3 times longer than without it. If you want to split this recipe over few days, you can also rise your beer bread in the fridge overnight.

For everyone else who is happy to cheat, just add about 1 teaspoon of dry active yeast to your bread mix. This is still considerably less than for normal yeasted breads which would be made with water.

Salt

You can use any fine salt – cooking or table salt for this medieval beer bread recipe. If you are using sea salt or large granules of salt, dissolve the salt in a bit of water before adding it to the bread dough mixture.

This is because you don’t want to dissolve the salt with the beer as this might slow down the yeast.

Your bread will be edible without salt, but I’d recommend adding some for flavour.

Renaissance Medieval Bread Recipe made with Beer and Yeast – Yum Eating (2)

What kind of beer is best for beer bread ?

Pretty much any beer is fine to use in this recipe, but I’d stay clear of fruity flavoured beers or beers not made by the traditional method.

Depending on what type of beer you use, your bread might taste slightly differently.

For example dark black beers or stouts usually have higher sugar content, so your bread will be darker in colour with lovely rounded flavour and crusty bread crumb (the sugar in beer will caramelise on the top of the bread).

Always make sure that the beer is at least room temperature (18-23C) before adding it to the bread flour.

If you take the beer directly from the fridge it will be too cold and the yeast will take forever to start working. You can easily warm up your beer in microwave (make it only slightly lukewarm) but please don’t heat it up too much as heat will destroy the natural yeast in the beer.

  • Non-alcoholic beers (with yeast )
  • Pale ales
  • IPAs
  • Stouts
  • Wheat beers
  • Heineken beer

What beer is not suitable for this beer bread?

Since were are using the beer to rise the bread and not just to flavour it, we need to make sure that the beer does contain yeast.

So, the beers that are not suitable for this medieval beer bread recipe is any type that contains no yeast or low yeast.

  • Lagers with low or filtered out yeast such as Stella Artois
  • Non-alcoholic beers – some non-alcoholic beers have also no or very low yeast content

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Can you get drunk from eating beer bread?

No, you can’t not! The alcohol will be killed off by the high temperature as you bake the bread, leaving only the flavour of beer in your bread. It’s perfectly safe bread to serve for the whole family.

But if you are still concerned about potential alcohol in the bread, you can use non-alcoholic beer.

What can you serve beer bread with?

This traditional medieval beer bread has slightly darker and richer flavour than normal type of bread, which makes it a perfect bread to eat with pate, meats, game meat and rich cheeses.

It’s also perfect with a real butter and a bowl of hot soup or served with meat or vegetable stews.

You can cut the bread in thinner slices and make the bread into sandwiches or cut regular slices and make open sandwiches if you prefer.

This beer bread is also great toasted and served with butter with breakfast scrambled eggs, omelette or other savoury breakfast dishes.

Renaissance Medieval Bread Recipe made with Beer and Yeast – Yum Eating (3)

How to make Elizabethan beer bread recipe

Measure out the flour and salt into a large mixing bowl.

Add the dry active yeast and stir in.

Warm up the beer a little bit (either in a microwave or on the hop). Make it only lukewarm and definitely don’t boil or simmer.

Pour into the flour mixture.

Bring together and knead for 10 minutes until you get nice and elastic bread dough. Resist to add more flour to your work bench as you are kneading to keep your bread soft and light in texture when baked.

READ MORE

  • How to make your bread soft and fluffy >>
Renaissance Medieval Bread Recipe made with Beer and Yeast – Yum Eating (4)

Let the dough rise for about 45 minutes or until it doubles in size (make sure it’s covered and somewhere warm).

Deflate the dough and shape into your chosen bread shape.

Cover the bread with a teatowel or another plastic bowl and let it rise until is double in size.

Renaissance Medieval Bread Recipe made with Beer and Yeast – Yum Eating (5)

Preheat your oven to the highest setting and when your bread is ready score the top with a sharp knife before placing in the oven.

Lower the oven temperature after about 10 minutes, depending on how brown you want your bread to be and carry on baking for another 20 minutes or so.

Check when your bread is ready by tapping it on the bottom and cool down on a wired rack.

Advanced bread baking tip + time saving tip

If you want to make your bread softer, try my scalded flour bread baking method with this recipe. It will make the bread lighter and you’ll only need to prove the bread once.

Recipe size

My recipe will give you a large 800 grams (under 2 pounds) loaf of bread when baked. This is a large loaf, that will give you about 20 slices (from smaller to large size) and should be sufficient for a family of 4 for at least 2 meals.

You can also make this recipe into bread rolls. This will give you 12 medium-sized rolls.

Can I scale up or down this beer bread recipe?

You can easily scale up (or down) the beer bread recipe. I can easily triple the recipe and knead (by hand) dough that’s made from 1,5 kg. It’s quite a lot if you are a beginner, so I’d suggest only double the recipe to start off with.

Alternatively, you can also knead this dough in the mixer, but you’d need to check the capacity of your dough mixer (as if you use too much dough you might damage the mixer engine).

When doubling the recipe ingredients, use the recipe quantities and click on 2x and the recipe card will multiply the ingredients for you.

The kneading, proving and baking time will remain the same, whether you double or triple the ingredients.

You will also need more baking trays and make sure that you have enough space in your oven (or stagger the baking time, if you can’t fit all baking trays in at the same time).

How to store your beer bread

Keep your bread in a bread bin or plastic bag inside the bread bin or other suitable container.

How long will your beer bread last for

This beer bread lasts for good few days, but make sure that you store it correctly to prevent getting the bread mouldy or drying out.

I find, that this type of traditional beer bread last a good 4-5 days. It can be sometimes a bit longer, but the bread will start to dry out after the 3rd day, which makes it perfect for toast.

Can you freeze traditional beer bread?

If you know that you can’t finish your bread within 3 days, I would recommend to freeze the beer bread. I usually slice the bread before freezing and then only take out 1-2 slices as and when I need them.

Renaissance Medieval Bread Recipe made with Beer and Yeast – Yum Eating (6)

Elizabethan Beer Bread (Medieval Recipe)

Magdalena Marsden

Traditional bread made in Elizabethian times, made with beer and wholemeal flour. Great rustic bread perfect with soups, stews or made into sandwiches.

4.75 from 4 votes

Print Recipe Pin Recipe

Prep Time 20 minutes mins

Cook Time 40 minutes mins

Proving time 2 hours hrs

Course bread

Cuisine British, European

Servings 1 large loaf

Calories 1847 kcal

Ingredients

  • 500 grams whole wheat bread flour or 4 cups
  • 1 teaspoon active dry yeast
  • 1 1/2 teaspoon of salt
  • 320 ml beer 1 1/3 cup (approx) – small bottle or regular beer can

Instructions

  • Measure out the flour and salt into a large mixing bowl.

  • Add the dry active yeast and stir in.

  • Warm up the beer a little bit (either in a microwave or on the hop). Make it only lukewarm and definitely don't boil or simmer.

  • Pour into the flour mixture.

  • Bring together and knead for 10 minutes until you get nice and elastic bread dough.

  • Let the dough rise for about 45 minutes or until it doubles in size (make sure it's covered and somewhere warm).

  • Deflate the dough and shape into your chosen bread shape.

  • Cover the bread with a teatowel or another plastic bowl and let it rise until is double in size.

  • Preheat your oven to the highest setting and when your bread is ready score the top with a sharp knife before placing in the oven.

  • Lower the oven temperature after about 10 minutes, depending on how brown you want your bread to be and carry on baking for another 20 minutes or so.

  • Check when your bread is ready by tapping it on the bottom and cool down on a wired rack.

Notes

The nutritional value is calculated for the whole loaf.

Nutrition

Calories: 1847kcalCarbohydrates: 372gProtein: 69gFat: 13gSaturated Fat: 2gPolyunsaturated Fat: 6gMonounsaturated Fat: 2gSodium: 3513mgPotassium: 1932mgFiber: 54gSugar: 2gVitamin A: 45IUVitamin C: 0.01mgCalcium: 186mgIron: 18mg

Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

This blog post was originally written on 28 December 2020 and last updated on 3 April 2023

Renaissance Medieval Bread Recipe made with Beer and Yeast – Yum Eating (2024)

FAQs

How do you make bread in the Middle Ages? ›

The grain (almost always bread wheat, though barley and rye were sometimes mixed in or even used directly, oats far less) was ground and sifted. Then it was mixed with water and a leavening. For much of Europe, the latter was sourdough (old dough - that is, a piece of dough from the last batch).

How much did a loaf of bread cost in medieval times? ›

It follows that the wheat in a 2 lb. loaf cost about 1.4 pence (remember there were 240 pennies in a pound in those days). Add in the cost of milling and baking, plus some profit, and the loaf might sell for perhaps 2 pence.

What happens if you put too much yeast in bread? ›

Too much yeast could cause the dough to go flat by releasing gas before the flour is ready to expand. If you let the dough rise too long, it will start having a yeast or beer smell and taste and ultimately deflate or rise poorly in the oven and have a light crust.

What were the ingredients in bread in the Middle Ages? ›

The Middle Ages would see white bread made from wheat become the preferred taste – medieval physicians even recommended it as being the healthiest – but poorer peoples would bake darker breads made from oats or rye.

How was bread eaten in the Middle Ages? ›

The well-to-do often enjoyed a fine white bread bun for breakfast, sometimes with currants or raisins in it, resembling a brioche. Peasants, on the other hand, often ate their coarser black bread with raw apples or cheese for breakfast or a working lunch in the fields. [9] [See Breughel unit.]

How did medieval people get yeast for bread? ›

Researchers speculate that a mixture of flour meal and water was left longer than usual on a warm day and the yeasts that occur in natural contaminants of the flour caused it to ferment before baking. The resulting bread would have been lighter and tastier than the previous hard flatbreads.

How do they make bread in olden days? ›

As long ago as 2,000 BC the Egyptians knew how to make fermented bread. The practice was to use a little old dough, or leaven, to “start” the new dough. These two doughs were mixed together and allowed to ferment (rise) for some hours before baking.

What is the oldest way to make bread? ›

Charred crumbs of a flatbread made by Natufian hunter-gatherers from wild wheat, wild barley and plant roots between 14,600 and 11,600 years ago have been found at the archaeological site of Shubayqa 1 in the Black Desert in Jordan, predating the earliest known making of bread from cultivated wheat by thousands of ...

What were bakers called in medieval times? ›

The French term boulanger, began to appear in the 13th century and refers to someone who makes loaves of bread and bakes them in their oven. The first forms of fermented and baked bread appeared in Egypt. The process of making such bread was passed on to the Greeks and then the Romans.

Did they have yeast in medieval times? ›

Some bakers would have saved part of the dough from each day's baking, burying it in flour if it was gong to be used within a couple of days, or in salt to preserve it for longer periods. They might also have used yeast from brewing beer.

How much was a house in medieval times? ›

Again, from the medieval price list, the price of a modest house was around was around 10 pounds (2,400p). A castle gatehouse cost almost as much (10 pounds). An expensive house was around 100 pounds (24,000 pence), which was also just about the construction price of a church.

What kills yeast in bread? ›

Ultimately, if you've waited for a bit and your dough isn't rising and you think your yeast is dead, don't blame the salt: Yeast can lose its effectiveness if it's improperly stored, or if it's combined with water that's too hot (over 139°F).

What happens if you eat too much yeast? ›

Too much yeast can trigger diarrhea or a skin rash. It's rare, but if yeast overgrows and gets into your blood, it could cause infection throughout your whole body.

What happens if you add salt to yeast? ›

Salt acts as a yeast inhibitor, which means that it slows down the growth and reproduction of yeast in your bread dough. Without salt present to rein in its activity, the yeast will go wild eating all of the sugar available in the dough from enzymatic activity, like an overactive Pac-Man machine.

Did medieval people eat bread? ›

Bread occupied a central role in medieval society. In most parts of England it was eaten at each meal in every type of household. For the majority of the population it was the main source of nutrition, with many consumers obtaining three-quarters of their intake of calories from bread.

What bread did knights eat? ›

What was the diet of Medieval people like? Depends on which medieval people, when, where. Over the whole period (roughly 500–1500), most people ate gruels or bread, likely rye or barley if they were poorer, white wheat bread if they were better off.

What kind of bread was Roman meal? ›

The unique taste and texture of Roman Meal bread comes from whole wheat, whole rye and defatted flaxseed. Nutritional experts know the importance of a diet rich in whole grains. Leading nutritionists recommend you eat three servings or more of whole grains every day.

Did medieval people only eat bread? ›

Barley, oats, and rye were eaten by the poor while wheat was generally more expensive. These were consumed as bread, porridge, gruel, and pasta by people of all classes. Cheese, fruits, and vegetables were important supplements for the lower orders while meat was more expensive and generally more prestigious.

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