How To Bake Homemade Bread Bowls For Soup And Dip With Frozen Bread Dough

Mary Ward
Nothing pairs better with a thick, creamy soup recipe than fresh bread bowls.

This is the time of year we all turn to our favorite soup recipes for hearty, warming winter meals. Longingly, we remember the taste of the fresh baked bread bowls often served with similar soups at restaurants, and think of how they would perfectly accompany our recipe. Unfortunately, we're not up to the task of baking bread bowls from scratch with the mixing, rising, kneading, and more kneading. If only we all knew that we could make bread bowls at home with little effort using frozen bread dough!

Purchase any frozen bread dough at the grocery store that suits your taste and your soup recipe. Generally, white bread dough is the best flavor for bread bowls.

Grease a large cookie sheet and place enough loaves of frozen bread dough onto the sheet to thaw. One standard frozen bread dough will make three bread bowls. Grease a large sheet of plastic wrap or spray it with non-stick cooking spray. Cover the loaves of frozen bread dough with the wrap.

Let the frozen bread dough thaw for forty-five minutes to an hour. You do not want to let the bread dough thaw completely and start rising; thaw just long enough until you can cut trough the frozen bread loaf with a sharp knife (it's okay if the center is still frozen). Cut the thawed bread dough into three equal portions. Smooth and round cut edges into the rough shape of a bread bowl.

If necessary, grease another cookie sheet for rising and baking the bread bowls. Stagger bread bowl bread portions on the greased cookie sheet. Leave plenty of room between bread dough sections; you do not want risen bread dough to touch. Touching bread bowl dough will leave a soft spot after baking, not a hard bread bowl shell. One large cookie sheet will fit four bread bowl dough sections adequately.

Cover the bread bowl doughs with greased plastic wrap and place the sheets in a warm place to rise for approximately two hours (time may vary depending on warmth and humidity). When the dough portions look to be the size of average bread bowls, remove the cover and bake in a preheated 350 degree oven for twenty to twenty-five minutes. Bake the bread bowls until the bread is a little darker and harder than you would normally have for bread; this makes for sturdier bread bowls.

Remove bread bowls from the oven when done baking, and cool completely on wire racks. Let bread bowls sit out, uncovered or only lightly covered with a cloth towel, until ready to serve. Do not package uncut bread bowls in plastic.

Bread bowls can be made well ahead of time before you intend to serve them. In fact, bread bowl are best served after they have hardened, open to room air, for a while. If bread bowls are used too soon after baking, they will be soft and not hold the soup well. Baking bread bowls the day before and covering them loosely with towels is ideal.

When you are ready to enjoy your fresh, homemade bread bowls with your favorite soup recipe, slice horizontally across the top of each bread bowl (do not cut those you are not sure to use). Gently hollow out the bread bowl, pulling away the soft inner bread.

Place hollowed bread bowls on a plate, surrounded with the soft hollowed out bread for dipping into your favorite soup recipe. Fill bread bowls immediately before serving. Top with sliced bread bowl tops.

Enjoy! Your are ready to enjoy a hearty meal of your favorite prepared soup recipe served in fresh baked bread bowls. The combination is an unbeatable pair, ideal for winter meals during cold winter months.

Published by Mary Ward

I am a stay at home mother of four. I have been a preschool teacher and Director, home daycare provider, served on BOD's for our preschool and community partnership for children. I craft as well and sell...  View profile

  • Frozen bread dough makes great bread bowls without the fuss of bread from scratch.
  • Bread bowls nicely round out creamy soups served up as a meal.
  • For best results, bake your bowls ahead of time.
“When it comes to white bread vs. wheat bread - what is the difference? Both breads are made from wheat flour. Whole wheat is composed of the entire kernel - the bran, germ and endosperm. White bread is milled from only the endosperm.” -www.holsumaz.com

8 Comments

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  • Danielle11/29/2010

    Gimme the frozen bread dough any day :) I'm going to try this recipe with chili next week.

  • Sandra Warner11/17/2010

    Hey Baker Man - The average person will not be able to tell the difference from frozen bread dough and homemade bread. I think frozen yeast bread is delicious!!! Go for it girls!

  • Christie Silvers10/1/2009

    Great article! I'm using dough from the bread machine and then baking in the oven in the bread bowl shape. So good!

  • julie ulvog9/3/2009

    Thanks so much never thought of frozen bread we are having that this weekend i am so excited. i am busy and dont have much time they are ready to eat by 5:00 so this is wonderful. dont listen to the negative people.

  • Kat1/16/2009

    I think this is a great idea! I cant wait to try it. Some of us are busy moms and dont have all day to mess with bread from scratch! Thanks.

  • Mary Ward12/10/2008

    Each to his own, baker man. Bread from scratch is certainly wonderful, but not everyone has that kind of time on thier hands--especially for the average dinner night. Please be a little more considerate in your commenting.

  • Baker Man12/10/2008

    FROZEN DOUGH!!!! YOU HAVE GOT TO BE KIDDING!!!
    YEAH, RIGHT,...USE GRANDMA'S SOUP RECIPE PASSED DOWN FROM PAST GENERATIONS....THEN USE FROZEN BREAD DOUGH!
    INCONCEIVABLE!

  • Mary Ward10/1/2008

    And this will be perfect, I promise! you'll never want to eat your soup without them after this, though!

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