You just spent a week learning tangzhong. You felt what it did to your cinnamon roll dough. You watched how it changed the texture, the softness, the way those rolls stayed pillowy hours after baking.
Now we're going to take that same technique and use it to make one of the most beautiful loaves of bread in the world.
Japanese milk bread, also called Shokupan, is the softest sandwich bread you'll ever pull out of your oven. Cloud-like crumb. Barely sweet. Tears apart in layers. Stays soft for days without any preservatives. And the secret is the exact same tangzhong you made last weekend.
This is what I mean when I say we're teaching you to think like a baker, not just follow recipes. Last week tangzhong gave you soft cinnamon rolls. This week it gives you the perfect loaf. Same science, completely different result. Once you understand what tangzhong does and why, you can use it anywhere.
Here's what the week looks like:
Tuesday: Tips for working with enriched dough (butter timing, kneading patience, reading the windowpane)
Wednesday: The science behind why milk bread stays soft for days when most homemade bread goes stale overnight
Thursday: Shaping techniques, the three-piece log that gives Shokupan its signature pull-apart look Friday: Game prep audio + recipe walkthrough so you hit Saturday ready to go Saturday: Bake-along.
We're doing this together.
If you baked cinnamon rolls with us this weekend, you already have a head start. You know tangzhong. You know enriched dough. You know what butter does to gluten development and why we add it last. All of that carries forward into this bake.
If you're new or you missed cinnamon roll week, no problem. This is a great place to jump in. The recipe walks you through everything from scratch, and we'll be here all week building up to Saturday.
Who's in? Drop a 🍞 in the comments if you're baking with us this Saturday.