Victorian (1850s) Graham Bread Recipe - Historical Food Fortnightly - Sew Historically (2024)

Victorian Graham bread made from scratch – so easy to make and so delicious!

Graham bread is named after reverend Sylvester Graham, who invented the bread in 1829. Victorians preferred white bread bought at the bakery because homemade brown bread was considered backward – a bread eaten by poor peasants. In the Victorian era, Graham bread was promoted as ‘health bread’ since Victorian white bread wasn’t made with white flour but with bleached whole wheat flour.

What Is Graham Bread?

Today Graham bread is made with Graham flour: Graham flour is whole wheat flour with finely ground endosperm and coarsely ground bran and germ. However, Victorian Graham bread recipes don’t mention Graham flour, they use unbolted flour (unsifted whole wheat flour). ‘Graham flour is the unbolted meal of wheat […] Whole wheat flour is made out of the better grades of wheat, with half of the bran left out’ (Bakers’ Bread, 1918) Graham considered whole wheat bread to be healthier than white bread. Graham also propagated a vegetarian Graham diet, alcohol abstinence, daily tooth brushing and frequent bathing. His followers were called Grahamites.

According to many different online sources original Graham bread was made without any leavening agent, such as yeast, baking powder, backing soda, sourdough … Instead it’s made with spontaneous fermentation with wild yeasts. I searched the internet and my antique recipe books for Graham bread recipes but I found not even one Graham bread recipe without yeast or baking soda and sour milk, not even a recipe from the Victorian era. So I chose a mid-Victorian Graham bread recipe with just some yeast and molasses. Molasses are used in the production of yeast, so that may help to rise the bread dough.

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The Victorian Graham bread recipe is different to modern yeast bread recipes: it uses less yeast, it’s made without a pre-ferment or yeast sponge – all flour (and salt) is added at once – and the bread dough is not kneaded again after it’s risen. The recipe is from 1849/1850, published in Mrs. Putnam’s receipt book.

Mrs Putnam’s 1850s Graham Bread

  • 4 qt unbolted wheat (unsifted whole wheat flour)
  • teacup good yeast
  • 1/2 cup molasses
  • 1 tbsp salt
  • enough warm water ‘to make a stiff dough’

You’ll find the adapted Graham bread recipe below.

Adapting The Victorian Graham Bread Recipe

There are many difficulties in recreating this bread recipe: I don’t know what teacups and cups Mrs Putnam might have used. I found different definitions of cup measurements: A modern teacup might hold something between 90 and 115 grams water and a cup something between 200 and 250 grams water.

And I’m using modern yeast. In the Victorian era, yeast was usually brewers’ yeast, bought from a local brewer, or yeast made at home with hops or potatoes (Maybe I’ll make Victorian hops yeast when the hops are ripe in August or September.) I’m also using a modern oven. According to Mrs Beeton’s Household Management book (published in 1861): ‘Brick ovens are generally considered the best adapted for baking bread […] Iron ovens are more difficult to manage’ and it might be necessary for the bread to bake evenly to leave the oven ‘door open for a time’. Even wheat grains are different than they were in the Victorian era. Therefore I mixed wheat grains with wild einkorn wheat. Below is my adapted Graham bread recipe.

Ingredients:

  • 750g wheat grains
  • 200g wild einkorn wheat
  • cake yeast or dry yeast (enough for 500g flour)
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 2 tbsp molasses dissolved in lukewarm water
  • lukewarm water

Directions:

I ground the grains in an electric grain mill. Then I sifted half of the flour through a coarse sieve because I needed new bran for my Victorian shampoo. 😉

I kneaded all ingredients together and added enough lukewarm water for a stiff dough. The dough is smooth and not at all sticky.

Already after four hours, the dough has more than doubled in size.

I let the bread dough rise overnight covered with a kitchen towel – the Victorian recipe says to let the dough rise for about six or eight hours.

Then I greased a glass loaf pan with butter. The recipe says to wet the hands and put the dough into a pan without kneading it again. Then the bread dough should rise another inch – after about one hour the bread dough was ready for baking. As usual, the Victorian recipe doesn’t state how to bake the bread. I preheated the oven to 200°C and baked the bread for 50 minutes.

The Graham bread is my entry for the Historical Food Fortnightly challenge 16 – Foods named after people. I really like this Graham bread. It has a wonderful flavor: It tastes mild and not yeasty. Because of theunobtrusive, mild taste, the bread can be eaten with ham or with jam.

It tastes unusually saltless – compared to store-bought bread and other homemade bread recipes I tried.

The bread is fluffy and has a crispy crust. And it’s much more filling than store-bought brown bread: One slice is more filling than two or three slices of store-bought bread. I’ll definitely bake the Graham bread again. 😀

More Victorian Bread Recipes

  • 10 Victorian Bread Recipes Without Commercial Yeast

  • Victorian Damper (Ash Cake) Recipe

In the Edwardian era, Graham bread was also used as dog food – other breads were considered unhealthy for dogs.

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Victorian (1850s) Graham Bread Recipe - Historical Food Fortnightly - Sew Historically (2024)

FAQs

What is the history of graham bread? ›

The bread is named after Sylvester Graham (1794-1851), an American Presbyterian minister who advocated a healthy diet with unsifted, coarsely ground wheat flour (Graham flour) and invented the Graham cracker in 1829. The popular minister gave many lectures that provided a complete health program.

How was bread made in Victorian times? ›

Bakers would often cook the bread in hot ovens so that it would look done on the outside but remain doughy inside so that it could be sold at an increased weight. The additives that bakers used to fluff, whiten, and prolong their bread included plaster of Paris, bean flour, chalk, ground-up bone, and alum (via BBC).

What was the first bread ever made? ›

The first bread was made in Neolithic times, nearly 12,000 years ago, probably of coarsely crushed grain mixed with water, with the resulting dough probably laid on heated stones and baked by covering with hot ashes.

Why was alum added to bread? ›

Bread was adulterated with plaster of Paris, bean flour, chalk or alum. Alum is an aluminium-based compound, today used in detergent, but then it was used to make bread desirably whiter and heavier.

Who invented graham bread? ›

History. Sylvester Graham was a 19th-century health reformer who argued that a vegetarian diet, anchored by bread that was baked at home from a coarsely ground whole-wheat flour, was part of a healthful lifestyle that could prevent disease.

When was graham bread invented? ›

To combat the poor diets of Americans in 1829, Graham began making bread (and later crackers) out of whole wheat flour. At that time, consumer perception was that whole wheat bread was food for the lower class and white bread was more sophisticated.

What did they put in bread in the 1800s? ›

During the mid-1800s, bread was a stable food. Like today, there were many different types of bread and bread mixtures. Cornmeal, rye, potatoes, rice, hominy, buckwheat and other variant ingredients were used to make different kinds of bread.

How did they toast bread in the 1800s? ›

The bread was toasted on a hot stone in front of the fire. Later on, simple devices were created to toast bread in the fire such as wire frames, to cook the toast more evenly, or sticks like those we use to toast marshmallows over a campfire today.

What was the making of bread act in 1757? ›

The Making of Bread Act 1757 (31 Geo. 2. c. 29) was an Act of the Parliament of Great Britain, which aimed to protect the making of bread and punish those that adulterated it, for the purposes of protecting public health.

When was bread banned? ›

1943 U.S. ban

During 1943, U.S. officials imposed a short-lived ban on sliced bread as a wartime conservation measure. The ban was ordered by Secretary of Agriculture Claude R. Wickard, who held the position of Food Administrator, and took effect on January 18, 1943.

What is the most ancient bread? ›

The Çatalhöyük bread joins several other examples of the world's oldest bread. Arguably the world's first bakers, members of a hunter-gatherer group called the Natufians, kneaded their first loaves in Jordan 14,000 years ago.

What is the oldest grain for bread? ›

Einkorn is the oldest wheat known, with scientists believing that it was cultivated up to 10,000 years ago.

What was the dark side of the Victorian era? ›

The most familiar images of Victorian life are bleak indeed: impoverished children working long hours in factories and mines; blankets of smog suspended above overcrowded cities; frightening workhouses run by cruel governors; violent criminals lurking in the shadows.

What did Victorians put in milk? ›

Victorian Era: milk for children

In 1882, 20000 milk samples were tested and 1/5 of the total had been adulterated. In general, however, this adulteration was actually known and considered beneficial. The milk that arrived in London was almost all treated with boric acid, also known as borax.

What were the poisons in the Victorian era? ›

Despite the popularity of Cyanide and Strychnine, Arsenic was nonetheless the chief poison of the Victorian era. Readily available in a staggering array of forms from flypaper to cosmetics, it was comparatively difficult to detect.

Why is it called Graham? ›

The graham cracker was inspired by the preaching of Sylvester Graham, who was part of the 19th-century temperance movement.

What is the origin of graham flour? ›

Inventor Sylvester Graham developed this form of flour during the 1830s in hopes of diverting people away from the refined white flour. He believed that retaining the endosperm, germ, and bran of wheat during the milling process would aid in creating a healthier population after the Industrial Revolution.

Why is a graham cracker called Graham? ›

The graham cracker derives its name from the eccentric American clergyman and health reformer Sylvester Graham, who is also associated with the popularization of whole wheat bread and credited as one of the early pioneers of the American vegetarian movement.

Where did graham balls originated? ›

This popular snack and dessert ingredient was first introduced in the United States by followers of a radical minister named Sylvester Graham.

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