Boatyard Bimini Bread

Servings: 2 Total Time: 50 mins Difficulty: Medium
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This Boatyard Bimini bread is the kind of sweet yeast loaf I make when I want bread that can sit next to breakfast, dinner, or coffee without feeling out of place. It has coconut milk, honey, dry milk powder, and a little butter, so the crumb lands soft and slightly rich.

I bake it in a Bundt pan because the shape gives more golden edges and makes the loaf easy to slice into wedges. The first time I tried a sweet dough in a Bundt pan, I under-greased the center tube and had to patch the loaf together on the plate. Now I grease every ridge.

The recipe is simple, but it is still yeast bread. I give the dough time to rise, knead until it feels elastic, and invert the loaf while it is still warm. Those three habits make the difference between a soft, tall bread and a heavy ring that sticks to the pan.

Why I keep coming back to this

  • Coconut milk gives the bread a gentle richness without making it taste like dessert only.
  • Honey and sugar sweeten the loaf, but the salt keeps it balanced enough for savory meals.
  • Dry milk powder helps the crumb brown and gives the bread a soft, bakery-style texture.
  • The Bundt pan makes a pretty loaf without any complicated shaping.
  • Leftover slices toast well and take butter beautifully.
  • Optional fruit or nuts can be added, but the plain loaf is already useful.

What you need (and what each one is doing)

  • Eggs, 3 large.They enrich the dough and help the bread slice cleanly.
  • Coconut milk, 1 cup.I use canned coconut milk when I want more body, but carton coconut milk works for a lighter loaf.
  • Honey, 3 tablespoons.It adds sweetness and helps the crust color.
  • All-purpose flour, 4 1/2 cups.This is the structure. I keep extra nearby for kneading but try not to bury the dough in flour.
  • Salt, 1 tablespoon.It looks like a lot, but this is a large sweet loaf and the salt keeps the flavor from tasting flat.
  • Sugar, 1/3 cup.It feeds the yeast and gives the bread that sweet Bimini-style lean.
  • Instant dry yeast, 2 1/4 tablespoons.I mix it straight into the dry ingredients and let the rises tell me when the dough is ready.
  • Vegetable oil and melted butter.The oil keeps the crumb soft; the butter gives flavor.
  • Nonfat dry milk powder, 1 cup.This makes the bread tender and helps with browning.
  • Canned fruit or chopped nuts, optional.I add a small amount only when I want a sweeter breakfast loaf.

How I make it

Step 1 — Prep the pan

I preheat the oven to 375°F and grease the Bundt pan before the dough is shaped. A sweet dough can grab onto the pan, so I use softened butter or baking spray and make sure the center tube is coated.

Step 2 — Mix dry and wet bowls

In one large bowl I whisk the flour, sugar, salt, yeast, and dry milk powder. In another bowl I whisk the eggs, melted butter, oil, coconut milk, and honey. Mixing each bowl well before combining keeps pockets of dry milk or egg out of the dough.

Step 3 — Bring the dough together

I pour the wet mixture into the dry ingredients and stir until a shaggy dough forms. If the bowl has dry flour at the bottom, I scrape and fold until it disappears. The dough should be soft, not runny.

Step 4 — Knead until elastic

I turn the dough onto a floured surface and knead for about 10 minutes. At first it feels sticky and uneven. As I work it, the surface smooths out and the dough springs back when pressed with a finger.

Step 5 — Let it rise twice

The first rise happens in a greased bowl for about 1 hour, or until doubled. Then I punch it down, knead for a minute or two, shape it into a ball, and settle it into the Bundt pan for another 45-minute rise.

Step 6 — Bake and release

I bake the bread for 25-30 minutes at 375°F, until golden and cooked through. After 5 minutes in the pan, I invert it onto a plate. Waiting too long traps steam and can make the crust stick.

Tips from my kitchen

  • Flour your hands lightly.Too much bench flour makes the loaf dry.
  • Use a warm rise spot.I put the bowl near the oven, not on top of a hot burner.
  • Check the center of the Bundt.The inner ring can stay pale if the bread is underbaked.
  • Cool before slicing thick wedges.Warm is good; steaming hot can tear.

Variations I have actually tried

  • Toasted coconut:I sprinkle a little toasted coconut over buttered slices instead of mixing it into the dough.
  • Raisin loaf:A small handful of raisins works if I knead them in after the first rise.
  • Nutty bread:Chopped pecans or walnuts add crunch, but I keep the pieces small.
  • Extra honey finish:I brush the warm loaf with a thin honey-butter glaze for a shinier crust.
  • Loaf pans:I divide the dough between two greased loaf pans when I do not want the Bundt shape.

Storing and make-ahead notes

I wrap cooled bread tightly and keep it at room temperature for 2 days. For longer storage, I slice it and freeze the slices so I can toast only what I need.

To refresh a slice, I warm it in a 300°F oven for a few minutes or toast it lightly. The coconut milk aroma comes back as soon as it warms.

How I like to serve it

I like this bread with salted butter and a drizzle of honey at breakfast. At dinner, I serve plain wedges with spicy chicken, beans, or grilled fish because the sweetness balances heat.

If I add fruit or nuts, I treat it more like a coffee bread and serve it with tea. Plain, it is flexible enough to sit in the bread basket.

The texture I look for

This dough should feel soft and elastic after kneading, not tight like bagel dough and not wet like batter. When I press it with a fingertip, the dough should slowly push back. If it tears right away, I knead a little longer. If it smears across the counter, I dust with a small amount of flour and keep going.

The baked bread should have a tender, slightly sweet crumb with a golden outside. I let it cool just enough to slice neatly, but I still like the first piece warm because the coconut milk and honey are easiest to taste then.

Frequently asked questions

Is this supposed to taste strongly of coconut?

Not strongly. I taste a soft coconut note, especially when the loaf is warm, but the honey and butter share the stage.

Why did my bread stick?

Bundt pans need careful greasing, especially around the center tube. I also avoid cooling too long in the pan.

Can I reduce the yeast?

Less yeast may work, but the rise will take longer.

Can I use active dry yeast?

Yes. I dissolve it in part of the coconut milk if it is warm, then continue with the recipe.

How do I know it is done?

The loaf should be golden, firm, and a toothpick inserted near the center should come out clean. If it looks pale, I give it a few more minutes.

If you bake this Bimini bread, I would like to know whether you served it plain, toasted, or with a little honey butter.

Boatyard Bimini Bread

Prep Time 15 mins Cook Time 35 mins Total Time 50 mins Difficulty: Medium Servings: 2 Calories: 2135 kcal Dietary:
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Description

A sweet coconut milk yeast bread inspired by Bimini-style island loaves, baked in a Bundt pan until golden. I like it warm with butter, honey, or a spoonful of jam.

Ingredients You’ll Need

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven to 375°F. Grease a Bundt pan well and set it aside.
  2. In a large bowl, whisk the flour, sugar, salt, yeast, and dry milk powder.
  3. In a separate bowl, whisk the eggs, melted butter, vegetable oil, coconut milk, and honey until smooth.
  4. Add the wet ingredients to the dry ingredients and mix until a dough forms.
  5. Knead on a floured surface for about 10 minutes, until smooth and elastic.
  6. Place the dough in a greased bowl, cover, and let rise in a warm place for 1 hour or until doubled.
  7. Punch down the dough, knead briefly, shape into a ball, and place in the greased Bundt pan. Cover and rise 45 minutes or until doubled.
  8. Bake at 375°F for 25-30 minutes, until golden and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. Cool 5 minutes in the pan, then invert to serve.

Nutrition Facts

Servings 2


Amount Per Serving
Calories 2135kcal
% Daily Value *
Total Fat 94g145%
Saturated Fat 45g225%
Trans Fat 0.8g
Cholesterol 409mg137%
Sodium 3032mg127%
Potassium 774mg23%
Total Carbohydrate 281g94%
Dietary Fiber 10g40%
Sugars 64g
Protein 43g86%

Calcium 125 mg
Iron 16.8 mg

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.

Note

Grease the Bundt pan thoroughly. Sweet dough sticks in every ridge if I rush that step.

Knead until smooth. The dough starts shaggy but should turn elastic after about 10 minutes.

Invert while warm. I wait 5 minutes, not 30, so the bread releases before the sugars glue it down.

Keywords: Bimini bread, coconut milk bread, sweet yeast bread, Bundt bread, island bread, honey bread, homemade bread

Frequently Asked Questions

Expand All:
Can I make the dough ahead?

Yes. After the first rise, cover and refrigerate up to 2 days. Shape, let rise until puffy, then bake.

Can I use bread flour?

Yes. Bread flour makes a chewier loaf. I use all-purpose when I want the crumb softer.

Can I skip coconut milk?

You can use dairy milk, but the bread loses some of its island-style sweetness and aroma.

Can I freeze it?

Yes. Slice, wrap tightly, and freeze up to 3 months. I thaw slices and warm them in a low oven.

Can I add fruit or nuts?

Yes. I keep add-ins modest so the loaf still rises well. A small handful of chopped nuts or dried fruit is enough.

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