Vegan Spanish Bread Recipe (2024)

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Vegan Spanish Bread Recipe (1)

I love vegan Spanish bread. Well, my own at least. I’ve never tried anyone else’s vegan version of the addictive Filipino Spanish bread. For those unfamiliar, Filipino Spanish bread is a delicious baked good in the Philippines. For anyone who’s ever had pandesal, it’s similar but instead is rolled up like a croissant and has a sugar and buttery filling that makes me think of toasted caramel and bread crumbs.

I first tried Spanish bread at my baby shower in San Francisco. They had it because I’d seen loved ones back in the Bay Area posting photos of the delicious treat. So when I traveled there for my baby shower, my gracious hostess made sure to have a box ready for me. It was absolutely wonderful and everyone at the shower also got to happily treat themselves to roll after roll of the Spanish bread as they referred to it as “señorita bread”. Yes, this is also called señorita bread.

Vegan Spanish Bread Recipe (2)

It’s been six years since that day and I am now vegan and have my own little family. So I decided to make my own vegan Spanish bread to accommodate my family’s needs. But not only do my family members like my vegan Spanish bread but so do our friends and neighbors!

My daughter loves helping me make this vegan Spanish bread. Her favorite part is rolling the dough. So if you have a little one who likes to help when baking, this easy recipe will be perfect for you.

I present to you my Vegan Spanish Bread recipe, adapted from the talented baker and blogger, Sanna at Woman Scribbles. Thank you, Sanna! I hope you like this vegan Spanish bread version of your own!

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Easy Vegan Spanish Bread

★★★★★5 from 1 reviews

This is my vegan version of the addictive Spanish Bread, a sweet and popular baked good in the Philippines. In the US it’s also known as Señorita Bread. Recipe adapted from Woman Scribbles.

  • Author: Jan Carlisle @ Bakeroise
  • Prep Time: 30
  • Cook Time: 20-25
  • Total Time: 45-55 minutes + 2 hours rise time
  • Yield: 16 rolls 1x
  • Category: Breads
  • Method: Baking
  • Cuisine: Filipino

Ingredients

Scale

For the Vegan Spanish Bread Dough:

For the Vegan Spanish Bread filling:

  • ½ cup or 65 grams all-purpose flour
  • 1 cup or 120 grams bread crumbs
  • ⅔ cup or 154 grams vegan butter
  • 1 ⅓ cup or 216 grams organic light brown sugar
  • ⅔ cup unsweetened vegan milk

For assembling the Vegan Spanish Bread into rolls:

  • ¾ cup or 90 grams bread crumbs
  • Aquafaba from can of chickpeas

Instructions

Make the Bread Dough:

  1. In a stand mixer bowl, add the yeast first and pour the warm vegan milk over it. Stir gently and then let stand for 5 minutes or until foamy.
  2. Add the vegan eggs, cane sugar, vegetable oil and salt. Use rice paddle or spatula to combine just until mixed.
  3. Using the paddle attachment, turn on the mixer on the lowest setting and gradually add the 4 cups of the flour. Do this for about a minute until everything is just mixed. Then turn off mixer.
  4. Attach the dough hook attachment to your mixer. Knead the dough at lower setting at 2-4 (at most) and it takes me 2-3 minutes to get it nice and elastic and only very slightly sticky.
  5. Shape the dough into a ball and put it back in the stand mixer bowl. Then cover with a damp towel and let rise for 1 to 1.5 hours or until size has doubled.
  6. Cover with damp towel and let rise for 1 and ½ hours, or until the size is doubled. Start cleaning up and making your filling.

Making the filling:

  1. Heat the vegan butter in a medium saucepan on low. Careful not to burn.
  2. Add and thoroughly stir each ingredient into pot one at a time in this order: brown sugar, flour, vegan milk, bread crumbs (so add ingredient, stir, add ingredient, stir, etc)
  3. Once all ingredients are in the pot, cook low for one minute, don’t let it get all bubbly and start reducing.

Assembling and baking the Vegan Spanish Bread:

  1. When the dough has risen to double the size, gently but firmly punch the dough down and divide it into 16 equal pieces. I use a scale for this to weigh each piece.
  2. Using a rolling pin, flatten each portion into more of an oval shape about 6 inches long. Try to put them all on the parchment paper or another floured surface so that they’re not piling on top of one another.
  3. When all the balls are flat ovals, start filling each one. The dough is pretty elastic so if it shrank while it was waiting to be assembled, just hold one edge up until gravity pulls at the bottom and stretches out the dough to the length you originally rolled it out to.
  4. Lay out each oval vertically. Using 1 tablespoon cookie scoop, take a heaping scoop of filling and place it in the middle of the dough. Then spread with spatula to evenly cover as much of the surface area as possible, right up to the edges.
  5. Roll each piece of dough croissant style (so starting from the wider side with the thinner side being visible when done).
  6. Arrange the rolls, none touching, in the baking tray lined with the parchment paper. They will rise quite a bit.
  7. Use a pastry brush to a layer of aquafaba on the top of each roll.
  8. Put each roll in the bed of breadcrumbs and gently sprinkle the milky tops to cover as much as of the surface possible.
  9. Cover baking tray with plastic wrap and let the rolls rise for another hour but set a timer for 45 minutes.
  10. After 45 minutes, preheat the oven to 350°F. When the oven is at 350°F and it’s been an hour since the bread started its second rise, bake the Spanish bread for 20-25 minutes, or until the rolls are golden.

Notes

  1. This can be time consuming because the dough has to rise and proof. You have two options to make it a two day process instead (way less stressful).
    1. Make the dough and let it rise overnight in the fridge and then assemble the rolls and let it rise the second time the next morning on the counter before baking.
    2. Make the dough and let rise on the counter in the evening and then assemble the rolls that same evening. Then you can stick it in the fridge overnight for the second rise. All you’d have to do the next day is bake! I like this option better.
  2. This is not an overly sweet bread. It tastes more like pandesal (another even more popular Filipino baked good) but with filling. I don’t like too much filling because it’s too sweet so if you need to double the recipe to make it sweeter, go for it.
  3. Divide the dough into 16 even pieces. I like to weigh it and make sure each piece weighs the same. (1136 grams/16=71 grams per dough ball)
  4. After dividing, you do still have to shape it into an oval and not roll it when it’s still in the original triangular shape after dividing or else it’ll just be too thin and frustrating to spread filling on.

Keywords: spanish bread, vegan spanish bread, vegan baking, vegan filipino food

Vegan Spanish Bread Recipe (9)

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Vegan Spanish Bread Recipe (16)Rossana Velasco says

    Hello there, Jan! These vegan spanish bread looks very delicious. The pictures are so beautiful too! Thank you for sharing this delicious version. Yum!

    • Vegan Spanish Bread Recipe (17)Jan says

      Thank *you*, Sanna! I love your blog!

Vegan Spanish Bread Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is Spanish bread filling made of? ›

The sweet and buttery filling in this Spanish bread recipe is made of a delicious combination of sugar, breadcrumbs, and margarine. Some versions of this recipe use water or milk, flour, sugar, butter, breadcrumbs, and a little salt.

Is Spanish bread the same as Senorita bread? ›

Señorita bread, also known as Spanish bread or pan de kastila, is a Filipino bread roll characteristically oblong or cylindrical in shape with a traditional sweet filling made of breadcrumbs, butter or margarine, and brown sugar.

What is the traditional bread of Spain? ›

The Spanish bread known as mollete is so called because of the sponginess of its crumb (muelle means "soft, spongy"), which is achieved thanks to a very hydrated dough. Today molletes can be found in very different variants in Bolivia, Cuba, Mexico, Honduras or Guatemala.

What is the name of the sweet Spanish bread? ›

What Are Conchas? Conchas are traditional Mexican sweet bread rolls (a.k.a. pan dulce). Its name comes from the roll's seashell-like appearance. Conchas consist of a sweet bread base and crunchy sugar topping.

Why is Spanish bread called Spanish? ›

Why is it called that? Ironically, despite the vast number of our local breads descending from the ones brought over by our Hispanic conquerors, Spanish bread is the one example that's completely our own. It has been theorized that it's called thus because of its similarity to the ensaymada.

Why is Senorita bread so good? ›

Senorita Bread is a labor of love, crafted with precision and care. The dough is created by skilfully blending flour, yeast, eggs, sugar, butter, and milk. The ingredients are carefully measured and mixed to achieve the perfect consistency that contributes to the bread's airy and soft texture.

What is a bread is eaten at Christmas in Spain? ›

Roscón de Reyes (Spanish Christmas cake)

The roscón is a sweet bread (almost like a brioche) that is baked into a circle or an oval shape. It isn't always filled, but traditional fillings include whipped cream, chocolate cream, meringue or custard cream.

What do you eat with Spanish bread? ›

The bread is great for any meal, my favourite being breakfast, served with butter, jam, orange marmalade or with ham & or cheese.

What are Rosca de Reyes made of? ›

Prepare bread: Mix flour, eggs, egg yolks, sugar, water, dry yeast, orange zest, lime zest, and salt in the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with a dough hook. Add 1/2 cup plus 1 tablespoon butter; mix until dough is elastic and shiny, about 5 minutes. Form dough into a ball.

What is Mexican bread made of? ›

The most common breads sold are still basic white breads for sandwiches and other meals. These are made with a simple flour dough with only a little salt and/or sugar for flavoring.

What is Senorita bread made of? ›

To Make the Dough: Combine the all-purpose flour, sugar, instant yeast, salt, milk, and oil in a large mixing bowl or the bowl of a stand mixer and mix until a shaggy dough forms. Knead until the dough is smooth and elastic.

Why is it called Spanish bread? ›

Why is it called that? Ironically, despite the vast number of our local breads descending from the ones brought over by our Hispanic conquerors, Spanish bread is the one example that's completely our own. It has been theorized that it's called thus because of its similarity to the ensaymada.

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