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Perfect Italian Panettone Made in a Bread Machine and Baked in the Oven

Make perfect Italian panettone dough in your bread machine, then bake it in the oven for marvelous results in your own kitchen!

Perfect Italian Panettone

What is Panettone?

Panettone is a traditional Italian yeast cake which is made and eaten primarily at Christmastime.

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It’s a cross between a cake and bread, and isn’t very sweet at all. There are different kinds, but they are always lightly sweetened, and usually, dotted with candied fruit, raisins, and sometimes nuts, soft fillings, and more recently, chocolate.

top of panettone

While this is a perfect panettone recipe for a home kitchen, just know that to make proper panettone requires many steps and equipment to hang it upside down. However, this recipe creates a beautiful result that is delicious and doesn’t contain many of the chemicals and artificial ingredients you’ll find in many store-bought panettone.

Purchased panettoni are always baked in a special paper case, and you can buy them to make your own professional looking cakes at home. However, there’s no need to buy anything as long as you have a brown paper lunch bag. (If you want to make them look fancy, you can buy these on Amazon.)

A recent review (Dec 2022) “I followed Christina’s recipe to the “T” and the result was a wonderful panettone that tasted much better than anything I could find in stores. Thank you, Christina!”   – Brenda

Perfect Italian Panettone

Years ago, I wanted to make my own panettone and adapted a recipe from my Fresh Ways with Italian Cooking cookbook and made it in my bread machine. I only made the dough in the machine though, as I didn’t want a “bread-machine-shaped panettone”! Now you can follow my directions below for perfect Italian panettone like the one in the photos!

More Italian Christmas recipes can be found here.

authentic italian christmas recipes pin

How are you Supposed to Eat Panettone? (Like Italians Do)

The most popular way to eat panettone (and how you should eat it) is to slice it and enjoy it like a regular piece of cake, except you don’t have to eat it with a fork. Seeing some tips (online) on how to eat panettone has me shaking my head. PLEASE DO NOT PUT PANETTONE ON A CHEESE BOARD to dunk into dips! This cake/bread is so delicious, there’s not need to cover up the flavor by dipping it into something. I can guarantee, no Italians are doing this.

When panettone begins to get stale, and this will take quite a long time, you can toast it, serve it for breakfast with jam, or another spread. Panettone makes excellent bread and butter puddings! It’s also desirable to cut into cubes and use for a sweet fondue, like chocolate (this is an acceptable way to “dip” panettone). Do enjoy a slice with a cup of tea or coffee, or even better, some Prosecco! (I love La Marca!)

What Type of Panettone is this Recipe?

unbaked panettone in pan

The recipe is for a Venetian-style panettone, which are taller and more thin than other panettoni. It includes directions for using a brown paper lunch bag for the panettone to rise and bake in–if you don’t have a panettone pan or paper case. I’m over the moon with this Silverwood pan which I was gifted by the Bee’s Knees British Imports! They have so many interesting pans, especially for British baking, since they are made in England!

silverwood panettone pan

I don’t like candied peel or almonds in my panettone, so I omitted them and used raisins and sultanas, instead. Incidentally, this election cake is something along the same lines as a panettone given that it’s made with yeast, but is a sweet cake.

Perfect Italian Panettone with poinsettia and candelabra

You can choose to add whatever you like, as I said, chocolate pieces or chips have made their way into panettoni nowadays. If you don’t finish it off in a few days, perfect Italian panettone makes the best bread and butter pudding! Cut it into chunks and dry it off in the oven (or even in the toaster, before you cut it up into pieces).

panettone piccoli
Panettone make beautiful gifts, especially when made in miniature pans.

If you want to learn more about Venetian food, and Venice, in general, be sure to follow Luca at Luca’s Italy. You’ll love him and his site, especially because he’s British Italian, like me! :) So, he’s English Italian and not Scottish Italian, but we can’t all be perfect–just kidding!

As always, I highly recommend using a scale when baking for best results.

November 2020: I’ve been asked for directions without using a bread machine so I’m adding that option, too.

Panettone baked in a Silverwood pan
Panettone baked in a Silverwood pan

Perfect Italian Panettone (Homemade)

Adapted from Fresh Ways with Italian Cooking                                     serves 16

FULL PRINTABLE RECIPE BELOW

Ingredients

  • egg yolks
  • vanilla
  • sugar
  • lemon rind
  • orange rind
  • salt
  • unsalted butter
  • organic, unbleached flour
  • dry yeast
  • sultanas
  • raisins

Topping

  • egg white
  • sugar cubes or Swedish pearl sugar

Special equipment needed: parchment paper, a 6″ panettone baking pan OR a brown paper lunch bag and 6″ round baking pan

Directions

Prepare the dough in the bread machine.

Place the water, egg yolks, vanilla, and grated peel into the bread machine first. Next add the sugar, salt, flour and pieces of butter around the outside of the metal pan on top of the flour (see photo below). Make an indentation in the flour and add the yeast. Start the bread machine on “dough” setting.

ingredients in a bread machine

When the machine beeps to add additional ingredients to the dough, toss in the sultanas and raisins, and allow the cycle to finish. Keep an eye on the dough after it’s finished and allow to rise until doubled in size. (Alternatively, you can remove the dough and put it in a large sealed container and allow to rise in the refrigerator overnight.)

Prepare the dough in a mixer.

In a large bowl, sprinkle the yeast over the warm water (helps if the bowl is warm, too) and let stand for a few minutes. Add the sugar, salt, 1/2 cup butter, yolks, vanilla, citrus peel and about half of the flour. Set on low speed with a dough hook until flour is moistened, then increase to high for about 5 to 10 minutes untill the dough is shiny and smooth. Add the remaining flour and continue to knead until smooth. Cover and let rise until doubled in size.

panettone dough in bread machine

Prepare the dough by hand.

Follow the mixer directions above until it’s time to turn on the mixer. Stir the ingredients with a heavy spoon. Place on a board, add the rest of the flour and  knead the dough until it is smooth and springy (about 5 to 10 minutes). It will be soft and slightly sticky. Cover and let rise until doubled in size.

You can make these cinnamon rolls in the bread machine, too!

Homemade Cinnamon Rolls

How to Make a Baking Case for Perfect Italian Panettone Using a Lunch Bag

  1. Cut a circle of parchment paper to line the bottom of the 6″ pan; butter or spray the circle of paper and place it in the bottom of the pan.
  2. Cut another piece of parchment to line the inside of the brown paper bag (so the bread will bake inside parchment without touching the brown paper) after you have cut the bottom out of the bag.
  3. Fold the top edge down to form a cuff then butter or spray (I used a coconut oil spray as it’s much easier than using butter) the inside of the parchment. It should be about 6.5″ tall when finished.
  4. Place the paper case in the pan.

Paper case for Perfect Italian Panettone made in bread machine and cooked in the oven.

Once the dough has doubled in size, punch it down and knead into a ball.

dough out of machine

Place it into the pan/paper case.

dough going into pan

Allow to rise until almost doubled. Preheat the oven to 350°F/175°C.

panettone dough

While the oven is heating, brush the top of the panettone dough with the beaten egg white and sprinkle with the crushed sugar cubes.

sprinkling sugar on panettone

Bake for 30 minutes. Then reduce heat to 325°F/160°C and continue to bake until a long, thin skewer comes out clean (about another half an hour). If the top browns too quickly, cover with aluminum foil. Remove the perfect Italian panettone from the oven and allow to cool in pan for about 15 minutes.

Perfect Italian Panettone made in bread machine

After 15 minutes, remove the panettone from the pan (my bag slipped right off). Place on rack until completely cool.

Perfect Italian Panettone made in bread machine
Baked in a paper lunch bag.

Finally, you can cut your perfect Italian panettone into tall slices and serve.

Perfect Italian Panettone made in bread machine

Now you can add perfect Italian panettone to your list of “things I’ve baked”! Isn’t it impressive?

Perfect Italian Panettone Made in a Bread Machine and Baked in the Oven

Perfect Italian Panettone Made in a Bread Machine and Baked in the Oven

Yield: 16
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Bake Time: 1 hour
Additional Time: 1 hour
Total Time: 2 hours 10 minutes

A traditional Italian cake made with yeast that's popular during the Christmas holidays!

Ingredients

  • 6 oz (175 ml) warm water (about 110°F/43°C)
  • 4 large egg yolks
  • 2 tsp vanilla
  • 1/2 c (100 g) sugar
  • 1 tsp lemon rind
  • 1 tsp orange rind
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1/2 c (115 g) good quality unsalted butter, softened and cut into pieces
  • 3 1/4 cups (454 g) organic, unbleached flour
  • 1/4 oz (7 g) or 1 pkg dry yeast (preferably for bread machines, but any type will work-I used regular)
  • 1/2 c (70 g) sultanas
  • 1/2 c (70 g) raisins

Topping

  • 1 egg white, slightly beaten
  • 4 crushed sugar cubes or Swedish pearl sugar

Instructions

SPECIAL EQUIPMENT: parchment paper, a brown paper lunch bag and 6" round baking pan.

Make the dough.

  1. Place the water, egg yolks, vanilla, and grated peel into the bread machine first. Next add the sugar, salt, flour and pieces of butter around the outside of the metal pan on top of the flour (see photo below). Make an indentation in the flour and add the yeast. Start the bread machine on "dough" setting.
  2. When the machine beeps to add additional ingredients to the dough, toss in the sultanas and raisins, and allow the cycle to finish. Keep an eye on the dough after it's finished and allow to rise until doubled in size. (Alternatively, you can remove the dough and put it in a large sealed container and allow to rise in the refrigerator overnight.)


NOTE: BY REQUEST, I'M ADDING ALTERNATE DIRECTIONS

Prepare the dough in a mixer.

  1. In a large bowl, sprinkle the yeast over the warm water (helps if the bowl is warm, too) and let stand for a few minutes.
  2. Add the sugar, salt, 1/2 cup butter, yolks, vanilla, citrus peel and about half of the flour. Set on low speed with a dough hook until flour is moistened, then increase to high for about 5 to 10 minutes untill the dough is shiny and smooth.
  3. Add the remaining flour and continue to knead until smooth. Cover and let rise until doubled in size.

Prepare the dough by hand.

  1. Follow the mixer directions above until it's time to turn on the mixer. Stir the ingredients with a heavy spoon.
  2. Place on a board, add the rest of the flour and  knead the dough until it is smooth and springy (about 5 to 10 minutes). It will be soft and slightly sticky. Cover and let rise until doubled in size.

Prepare the pan/baking case:

  1. Cut a circle of parchment paper to line the bottom of the 6" pan; butter or spray the circle of paper and place it in the bottom of the pan.
  2. Cut another piece of parchment to line the inside of the brown paper bag after you have cut the bottom out of the bag.
  3. Fold the top edge down to form a cuff then butter or spray (I used a coconut oil spray as it's much easier than using butter) the inside of the parchment. It should be about 6.5" tall when finished. Place the paper case in the pan.
  4. Or else use a panettone pan like this one.Shape the dough
  1. Once the dough has doubled in size, punch it down and knead into a ball then place it into the pan/paper case and allow to rise until almost doubled. Preheat the oven to 350°F/175°C.
  2. While the oven is heating, brush the top of the panettone dough with the beaten egg white and sprinkle with the crushed sugar cubes.
  3. Bake for 30 minutes, then reduce heat to 325°F/160°C and continue to bake until a long, thin skewer comes out clean (about another half an hour). If the top browns too quickly, cover with aluminum foil. Remove from oven and allow to cool in pan for about 15 minutes.
  4. After 15 minutes, remove the panettone from the pan (my bag slipped right off). Place on rack until completely cool. Cut into tall slices and serve.

Notes

Stale panettone makes excellent bread and butter puddings!

Nutrition Information:
Yield: 16 Serving Size: 1 slice
Amount Per Serving: Calories: 153Total Fat: 2gSaturated Fat: 1gTrans Fat: 0gUnsaturated Fat: 1gCholesterol: 59mgSodium: 97mgCarbohydrates: 28gFiber: 1gSugar: 7gProtein: 5g

Nutrition information is only estimated.

Did you make this recipe?

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101 Comments

  1. Very pleased with the outcome, the recipe is shorter than standard Italian ones but it tasted great and was very moist. Really enjoyed making this panettone. Easy to follow, looked and smelled amazing when it came out of the oven. Definitely will try once more.

    1. Hi Julia, glad you liked the recipe, however, the panettone shouldn’t actually be shorter than traditional Italian ones. Maybe you didn’t let it rise long enough, or maybe your yeast wasn’t as fresh as it could be? Let me know how your next bake goes, but happy you enjoyed the results! (And remember it makes aweseome bread and butter pudding!) :) CC

  2. I had a sneaking suspicion that the paper bad idea was faulty. How do you keep the rising dough from oozing out of the bottom of the bag?
    Suspicion confirmed, after the work and waiting for this beautiful bread to rise, seeing it coming out of the bottom. Trying to bake it yielded even more disastrous results. Instead of rising out of the top, it just oozed out of the bottom. What a frigging waste. I dumped the mess into a loaf pan, but there’s no saving it. Talk about being mad enough to punch a wall.
    I cant be the only one who’s had this problem. I’m a pretty experienced baker. I’d love to see this issue addressed.

    1. Hi Jennifer, it’s obvious to me from your comment that you definitely did something wrong. I have no clue how the dough would ever ooze from the bottom of the bag unless you failed to put the bag into a pan? I’m guessing you didn’t use a scale and that may have resulted in the actual dough being softer than it should have been. Sorry you were so upset that you wanted to punch a wall, but I can assure you, the fault is NOT in the recipe. From the other reviews, it does sound like you’re the only one who has had these issues.

      My final comment will be that I did not photo shop my photos in any way, shape or form so this is proof that this recipe (which I adapted from a Sunset recipe) is solid, tried and true. In fact, I’m making another one today and have never had any issues in the past.

      Christina

  3. I also dislike candied fruit so I make it with dried apricots. Pineapple, cranberries etc. golden raisins too, all soaked in brandy for a bit. Get rave reviews but I love your paper bag solution, I’m doing that this year!!

    1. Love that fruit option, Katie! And yes, those panettone liners look lovely, but they can be expensive, especially if you want to make a lot to give as gifts. The paper bag works perfectly!

  4. Can you confirm how much a PKG of yeast is please? I have various sizes packets! I really want to try the recipe, thanks

  5. Dear Christina,

    This recipe is fabulous. It’s *the one* for me! I have one question though: would it work if instead of 4 yolks i put 2 whole eggs? Some of my family members need to watch their cholesterol a bit…

    I just made homemade candied organic orange peel and i can’t wait to try your recipe with it 😋

    Thank you,
    Bea

    1. Hi Bea, I’m glad you’re going to try it, but to answer your question, I honestly don’t know because I’ve never tried it. However, I will add that the amount of cholesterol in two yolks throughout such a large cake will be negligible assuming they’re not going to eat half the cake in one go! :) If you try it, do let me know, but I just think it’d be a shame if it didn’t turn out as well. Good luck!

      1. Dear Christina,

        So i tried the 2 eggs instead of 4 yolks… Not a good idea ! The dough was too wet. I have another question. Is it bread flour that is needed for this recipe or just the regular one? I made it yesterday with the flour i use for bread and it turned out differently (the top was not rounded. It sunk in). Or maybe it is because i let the raisins soak in water and vanilla extract before adding them to the dough, and they were too wet – although i let them drain for 5 minutes? I am not sure what made the panettone look like that. Could it be too much rising?

        Thank you for your help :)
        Beatrice

        1. Hi Beatrice, since you changed a major part of the recipe (eggs vs yolks), that is probably the reason the panettone didn’t turn out for you, in addition to the wet fruit. I don’t think it matters very much whether you use bread or regular flour, but yes over proofing can ruin the bread, too. I would suggest following the directions explicitly the next time, then decide which changes you’d like to make, if any. Good luck! :) CC

          1. Thank you Christina.
            Actually i just figured out why my dough was so wet when i measured with cups: your recipe says one pound (about 453 grams) of flour equals 3 1/4 cups but it doesn’t. 3 1/4 cups equals 353 grams so there are 100 grams missing which is why the doigh comes out too wet :)
            One pound is the right weight of flour to use for this recipe, now i didn’t check how many cups that is.

            Happy Holidays 🎄
            Beatrice

          2. Beatrice, this is the exact reason I took cups out of the recipe for my doughnuts. If readers would only use a scale, there would be almost NO mistakes at all. It’s so frustrating as all the converting from cups to ounces to grams, when it’s just so easy to weigh the proper amount and get a great outcome. The weight of one cup of flour varies greatly depending on the flour used, whether it’s sifted, and even who is measuring. I get different results myself! Please invest in a scale and you’ll see that you won’t have problems with baking anymore! (Can you see a pastry chef using cups?) 👩🏻‍🍳 Happy holidays to you too, and hope you end up with a good panettone soon! :)

          3. Born and raised in France, i do use a scale. The only couple of time i used cups to make it was because i was in a hurry :)

    1. Hi Joe, I’m glad you found my site interesting, but I would like to respond to the part of your comment regarding advertising.

      You see, I am posting all my recipes for FREE, yet I still have to pay for all the ingredients, site hosting and a plethora of other costs that are involved in having a blog. Not to mention the absurd amount of time I spend cooking the recipe, shooting the photos, editing them, writing the post and sharing them on social media so readers can actually find my recipes. I hope you understand that the small amount of payment that I receive from the advertising on my site (which is significantly less than many other blogs) is negligible compared to the amount of time and money I put into its upkeep. I’m sorry that they were intrusive to you. Christina