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By Shobee |Created On:  |Updated:
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Best Pandesal Recipe plus step by step video.This is the Best Pandesal Recipe you can use plus a step-by-step video. This post is the most commented post in the blog in which raving readers who tried it have been using this recipe since.
for more bread recipes: Try this Ube Pandesal with Cheese
WHAT IS PANDESAL
Table of Contents
Pandesal is a Filipino bread coated with crust. It is baked for a shorter period of time, to get a crusty top and soft and fluffy inside. It is a traditional Filipino bread usually served in the morning for breakfast and around 3 PM in the afternoon as a mid-day snack.
When you are vacationing in the Philippines, the chances of you hearing a manong (older man), on his bike with a Pandesal basket on the back is 99.9 percent. This is just the way it is, a Filipino tradition in which most people eat Pandesal as breakfast. OR bakeries are selling Pandesal in the early dawn and usually, the Pandesal supply is gone around 8 in the morning, and then, it is baked again for an afternoon snack at 3 PM.
This bread is not just “bread” per se. It is one part of my Filipino culture which was deeply ingrained in me. But when I came here to the US, I had stopped eating just because it is not available and because I was just simply lazy to make my own. When I went home this year and my children tasted Pandesal for the first time and liked it, I cannot help but be embarrassed by myself and guilty at the same time.
How crazy was I to let my children be ignorant about this Filipino tradition? But it is not too late. I can make it and remind them of our roots. I made sure this recipe will taste similar to what they tasted in the Philippines.
I’ve tried out two recipes but they did not work out, so from those trial and error, I was able to come up with thisthis recipe that worked.
The fluffiness, the sweetness of this Pandesal is spot on. I am sharing it with you, guys! I believe that Filipino children raised in any part of the world should experience this Pandesal tradition….just like what I am doing now. So hop into the bandwagon and let’s get baking. CHECK OUT THESE CINNAMON ROLLS TOO: MY FIRST SUCCESSFUL CINNAMON ROLLS WITH WALNUTS, HOW MUCH DOES IT COST TO ENJOY CORON PALAWAN, PHILIPPINES.
How to Make your Pandesal?
There is no secret in making Pandesal. The ingredients are simple. It has to be fermented with yeast to achieve its fluffy bread dough and to make it sweet, there is a small amount of sugar added to the dough. It is then baked for 20 t0 25 minutes, sometimes even 15 to 20 minutes depending on your oven.
Some websites used a bread machine to make their Pandesal just like this site right here, but I cannot guarantee if soft or fluffy, but you can try it just for kicks.
TRICKS TO MAKE AIRY PANDESAL:
- By the smell. You don’t want to bake it for a long time. When you smell the bread, that is when you get prepared and check it. Sometimes it is ready to pull out from the oven. Usually about 20-25 minutes. So whiff that smell.
- After checking the bread when you can smell it, tap it. When it is hollow, then it is ready.
- The dough. Fold the dough. Watch the video on how I did it. I tried making Pandesal so many times and failed because I did not fold the dough, it came our hard as a rock. Also, do not over knead.
If you follow this Pandesal recipe, you will be able to make a soft and fluffy Filipino, traditional that actually tastes similar to the one we have in the Philippines.
FOR MORE BREAD RECIPES CLICK ON THE LINK
- SPANISH BREAD -Soft and fluffy Spanish bread recipe and step-by-step video for your sure success. Easy list of ingredients that are pantry staples, and clear guidance in using them, and detailed recipe instruction.
- SIOPAO RECIPE/STEAMED BUNS–An easy way to make siopao filling. Quick to follow recipes and ingredients that are easily available. Make Siopao now.
- UBE PANDESAL-Soft, fluffy and surprisingly easy to make Ube Pandesal with Cheese. I will show you how to make it, with these easy-to-understand recipe instructions.
- ENSAYMADA-ThisEnsaymada recipe is no-fail and easy to follow. It will be 12 pieces of fluffy bread and it is perfect for a Filipino party or occasion you may have. Double the recipe to make more and share with everybody.
- EMPANADAis a revised version of what I was used to in the Philippines. Instead of deep-frying these Chicken Empanadas, I opted to bake them so that they will not be too greasy and oily. For these Empanada fillings, I used ground chicken so that it is higher in protein and a bit healthier.
Pandesal Recipe
This is the Best Pandesal Recipe plus Step by step video got 500 plus comments from raving readers who tried it, and it is the number one traffic drawing in the blog.Check it out!
4.96 from 81 votes
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Course: bread
Cuisine: filipino cuisine
Keyword: best pandesal recipe, filipino pandesal, pandesal recipe
Prep Time: 3 hours hours 10 minutes minutes
Cook Time: 20 minutes minutes
Total Time: 3 hours hours 30 minutes minutes
Servings: 18
Author: Shobee
Ingredients
- 4 cups all purpose flour plus 1/2 cup to sprinkle on the table
- 1/2 cup sugar
- 1 egg beaten (room temperature)
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1 pack rapid rise yeast 1 sachet is 2 1/4 tsp
- 1/2 cup water
- 1 cup milk fresh
- 1/4 cup canola oil
- 1 tablespoon oil to grease the dough bowl
- 1 cup Bread Crumbs for coating
Instructions
Place the flour and yeast , in a large mixing bowl mix and make a well in the middle. Set aside. In a separate bowl, mix water, oil,sugar,salt and milk until the sugar dissolves and heat it for to warm temperature 105 - 107.OR YOU CAN JUST PUT SUGAR AND SALT WITH THE FLOUR. Pour mixture into the middle of the flour and mix twice then add the egg.Continue mixing until you will get a soft,fluffy dough. This will be a gooey dough but it is how it should be. When the dough is ready, coat your hands with flour so that the dough will not stick onto your hand and form it into the ball and transfer the dough into a greased bowl. Let the dough sit in the warm place for an hour.
Here the trick to have an airy Pandesal :After an hour, transfer the dough in a gently floured surface and directly (do not knead) gently form it into rectangle 4 " in width and 20 " in length and then fold to form a log. Cut the dough into 20 or more (depending on the size you want) pieces in a slanting form,shape them and roll them in a breadcrumbs.Arrange the dough 1' between them. Sprinkle the dough with more crumbs and let it rest in a warm place for another hour.
When ready, Preheat oven at 300 F and bake the Pandesal for 20 to 25 minutes OR when it is lightly brown on top.Enjoy! Store leftover pandesal into the freezer for until a month.
NOTE: Please read on the comment below,since anonymous did not have a success on it 🙁
ADDITIONAL TIP: Preheat oven int its lowest setting, for my oven it is 125 F for 2 minutes then turn it off . I use this as the warm place where I can keep rise my dough for two hours. I call it "kinda hot" place for my dough to rise.
Video
Tried this recipe?Mention @theskinnypot or tag #theskinnypot!
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Related Posts:
- Ube Pandesal
- Ensaymada Recipe-Soft and Fluffy plus video
- Making Creamy Ube Ice Cream without a Machine
- Ube Cake Recipe
Previous Post: « STEAMED CONDENSE MILK CAKE (NO OVEN NEEDED)
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Reader Interactions
Comments
Gary says
My wife and I are going to try this recipe tonight, I’m British but I love pandesal and ensaymada.
shobee says
It is soft and airy in the inside 🙂
Russ says
Hi, is this recipe gives soft, airy texture? I want a soft pandesal. Thanks.
shobee says
I love it most with cheddar… I am so glad you liked it
michelle says
Love these. First time makingPandesal. I used to eat them after school with cheddar cheese and mayo!
shobee says
Yeah, pansesal brings a lot of memories…Thank you for calling my attention regarding the instruction. I hope you will succeed with it. Have a great day!!!
Karen says
I am on a hunt for a recipe for pan de sal. When I lived in Aya, Talisay, Batangas from 1963-1965 a man would ride his bicycle from Tanauan, carrying freshly baked bread for sale. We could hear his cry before he arrived. “Pan-de-saaalllll”
I read your recipe and comments with interest. However, I passed up the recipe because it called for a “scrambled egg” and “rice” yeast. I figured out that rapid rice yeast is really rapid-rise yeast. But I required a couple of hours and the trying of another recipe to realize that you mean a raw egg, beaten to mix it, not an egg scrambled and cooked in a pan. So with the other trial in the oven, I will print your recipe for another try.
shobee says
Shy, as what I remember, it is 2 and 1/4 tsp but please check it in the packet if you happen to go to the grocery because I am not so sure… Also, when you let the dough rise in your oven, make sure to heat the oven on the lowest setting for 1 minute – just to get it warm then put the dough there because if you read the comment on one who made it ( comment below) she had a problem.. I hope it works for you and let me know.
Shy says
If i have large pack of yeast how many tsp should i use?
shobee says
Hmm, I am sorry it did not work for you… I used the recipe so many times and I did not get the same problem. Unfortunately, I am here ins NY for school and I cannot troubleshoot what could have been the problem. Once I get back home, which will be awhile,I will make sure to look at the possibilities that may have caused that.
UPDATE:
HELLO, HELLO, HELLO! I am here now in my own kitchen and bake this pandesal again to see what happened to your pandesal… I tried the instruction bit by bit and it came out really great,,, I am going to post a picture soon of the said result. ( Did you heat the water or the milk mixture too hot?)Anonymous says
my pandesal always flats and got holes at the top.they rise but i have that problem.i try to put in a warm place like placing inside the oven off and close but still dont work.
shobee says
I hope you will like this Pandesal as much as we do.Thanks for visiting.
Candace says
My Korean-born son married a half-Filipino woman, so I’m trying to learn about Filipino culture. Can’t wait to try these.
shobee says
Thank you for visiting.
I enjoy looking through a post that will make men and women think.
Also, many thanks for allowing me to comment!shobee says
Thank you, Thalia. I hope that you will like it.
I have never heard of pandesal before! These buns look so light, fluffy and delicious – I must try the recipe!
These are Filipino buns usually eaten/baked only in the morning and at 3 Pm – a Filipino tradition 🙂
Laura Dembowski says
I have never heard of pandesal, but it looks like a great breakfast or snack!
Raymund says
Wow you brought back a lot of memories, I love this as well with Queso or Reno.
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