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You are here: Home / Blog / Depression Era Bread – Make Homemade Bread with Only 3 Ingredients!

March 29, 2010 by: Lorie

Depression Era Bread – Make Homemade Bread with Only 3 Ingredients!

Jump to Recipe

Sometimes the best foods are not the most complicated. This Depression Era Bread recipe can be made with only 3 ingredients and the end result is a delicious loaf of bread that tastes amazing!

Depression Era Bread

If you are looking for a way to save money, making your own bread is a great place to start. Before you get intimidated and click away, I promise you it isn’t as hard as you think it is.

The best place to start is with this Depression Era Bread.

This bread recipe only has 3 ingredients (with one optional ingredient for extra flavor). It is foolproof. I’m a lazy baker. I only bake things that are fairly straightforward and don’t add any extra stress to my life (no one has time for that). This bread recipe is perfect for that.

ALSO: Make these 3-Ingredient Protein Pancakes

This bread does take a bit of time to make, but in the end, you can make 7 loaves of bread for about $2.50. That’s an awesome way to stretch your food budget! It’s not all hands-on time either so you can work on one task and then get back to your to-do list.

Want to prep your freezer? Download this freezer meal plan complete with grocery list. Click here and we will send them to you.

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What is Depression Era Cooking?

Depression Era Bread

During the Great Depression, many families had to cook with basic ingredients and learn to live with less. These families learned some important lessons on frugal living and limiting waste that we can all learn from today.

Read: Use this Free Printable Grocery List to organize your grocery shopping and save.

I love hearing stories from some of the people who lived through the Great Depression. They had to get creative in the kitchen in order to put dinner on the table and what they came up with was often delicious.

I heard some of these stories from my grandmother who put together some of her favorite frugal recipes in a cookbook for us to enjoy. I’ve heard people who lived through the Great Depression say that “Everything was really bad, but the food was good.”

Cost of Depression Era Bread

Flour: $1.50 (I got on sale during Christmas and stocked up.)

Yeast:  about $1.00

Salt:  pennies . . .

Water: pennies…

So for about $2.50 I made 7 loaves of bread.  That’s cheaper than the cost of some single loaves from the grocery store.

Each loaf costs about $0.36, depending on the ingredients you use.

I served this with beef stew and it was amazing.  This goes really well with soups or as a basic sandwich bread.

The bread was really good.  It was more of a rustic type of bread, kind of like French bread, and worked well with hot foods.  My family really enjoyed this bread.  I gave several of the loaves away as gifts and they were a huge hit. What a neat inexpensive gift.  They all raved about it as well.

Give this Depression Era Bread a try and get a little taste of history for yourself!

 

 

 

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Depression Era Bread Recipe

You can make this depression era bread in your own home with only 3 ingredients plus water.

Continue to Content

Depression Era Bread - 3 Ingredients

Depression Era Bread

Sometimes the best foods are not the most complicated. This Depression Era Bread recipe can be made with only 3 ingredients and the end result is a delicious loaf of bread that tastes amazing!

Ingredients

  • 5 lb bag All- purpose flour
  • 5 TBS Yeast (I used Rapid-Rise yeast)
  • 6 Tsp Salt (optional, but I think it added flavor to the bread)
  • 6 cups warm water (more or less depending on your dough)

Instructions

    1. Pour flour in a large bowl.
    2. Make a well in the center of the flour.
    3. Add yeast to well and then add enough of the water to the well to dissolve the yeast (you can use your hands).


    4. After yeast is dissolved start adding more water and mixing in flour until you form a dough.
    5. Knead dough in the bowl for a bit.  Let the dough rise in a warm place with a towel loosely covering the top. 
    6. After it has risen double in size, punch down the dough and divide it up into 7 loaves.


    7. Shape the dough loaves and put in loaf pans.  If you do not have 7 pans, use a cookie sheet and the loaves will come out just as nice fine.
    8. Let the dough rise for 60 minutes or until doubled in size.
    9. Make slits in the top of the dough to make it look pretty.
    10. Bake at 350° until it gets brown on top, about 25 minutes (this will vary a bit based on your oven).


© Rachel Lister
Category: Bread Recipes
3-ingredient Depression Era Bread
Continue to Content

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Comments

  1. Amy says

    March 8, 2015 at 10:28 am

    Is it possible to do a smaller batch of the depression era bread? I’m single and would never make I through 5 loaves before they expired! Thanks!

    Reply
    • Rachel says

      March 9, 2015 at 11:31 am

      Amy,

      I bet you could. The other thing you could do is bake the 5 loaves then freeze the ones you aren’t going to eat right away. I’ve had great luck freezing bread. You just let it thaw completely or freeze it in slices and thaw it in the toaster before eating it.

      Reply
    • Jimmie Flowers says

      December 11, 2016 at 8:16 pm

      I make one loaf at a time all the time. Two cups flour. One cup warm water, and one tablespoon yeast.

      Reply
    • Angela says

      March 21, 2017 at 11:19 am

      Freeze Dough before baking. When you divide and dough into loaves, place extra loaves in freezer. When ready to bake, thaw and continue as directed. After thawed the fish will rise as expected. Dough sections will be smaller than baked loaves and take up less room in freezer.

      Takes about 8 hours to thaw and rise. I take one loaf out of freezer before work and by the time I get home, it’s ready to bake.

      Reply
    • Edith Delome says

      April 22, 2017 at 4:53 am

      Make them into loaves and freeze them after the first rise. I freeze them in a pan or on a cookie sheet. When I get ready for a loaf I just take one out and let it rise till double and bake. It’s fresh bread all the time. I do this with many of my breads.

      Reply
  2. Sarah Hluchy says

    May 11, 2016 at 4:59 pm

    You didn’t include how long and at what temp to bake the bread in the recipe.

    Reply
    • Rachel says

      May 12, 2016 at 11:12 am

      I’m so sorry. This was a post by a contributor and I’m not sure what temp she used. I’ll try and track her down and find the answer to this.

      Reply
      • Rachel says

        January 18, 2017 at 10:44 pm

        We added baking temperature. The original recipe was based off a family recipe and adjusts a bit based on your oven. You’ll have to watch it closely the first time and see how long it takes to brown. When the top browns a bit then it is done.

        Reply
  3. Marly says

    February 6, 2017 at 5:07 pm

    I haven’t done the math, but sour dough bread would be much cheaper because you only have to buy the yeast once. The best way to get the directions is to borrow The Tightwad Gazette 111 from the library and look on page 90.

    Reply
  4. Ty Buchanan says

    December 10, 2017 at 4:44 pm

    We made this in Australia a century before the Depression – it is called damper!

    Reply
  5. Sarah says

    October 21, 2018 at 11:23 am

    Do you know how many carbs and sugars this recipe has per slice? Would the recipe work with nut flours or Keto ingredients?

    Reply

Trackbacks

  1. Date Night- what?! – My Four Arrows says:
    March 27, 2017 at 7:48 am

    […] girls and I are making peasant bread today with plans of making this depression era bread later in the week. It is supposed to be rainy/stormy all week, so what better way to pass the time […]

    Reply
  2. Fresh Bread – My Four Arrows says:
    March 28, 2017 at 7:10 am

    […] fresh bread yesterday. I used this recipe that my younger sister sent me. I can’t wait to try this one though. I believe they are essentially the same recipe, one is just a much larger […]

    Reply
  3. Baking Bread!! – Of Mice and Men says:
    April 5, 2018 at 11:27 am

    […] of the things that I do a lot is make bread! I have a great recipe that my mom gave me. I have so much fun doing this and it’s a great way to fill my time. […]

    Reply

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