This Gluten-Free Vegan Oat Bread is soft on the inside, crusty on the outside, nutty and slightly chewy. It's not dry or crumbly, slices well, and is perfect for toast and sandwiches. There's no kneading or proving time needed, it comes together in one bowl, and requires just 15 minutes to put together before baking! It's also no-knead, yeast-free, oil-free, nut-free optional and free from sugar!
How to make this recipe
Scroll down to the bottom of the post to see the full recipe.
- Mix together all the ingredients in a glass mixing bowl.
Tip: Use a measuring jug to measure out the plant-based milk.
- Transfer the batter into a one-pound loaf tin.
Tip: Line the tin with greased baking paper to make the bread easier to remove after.
- Sprinkle over oats to decorate, if desired.
- Bake in the oven for 40-45 minutes.
- Transfer the loaf to a cooling rack to cool down on completely before packing away to store because otherwise the steam from the warm bread will get trapped and you'll end up with soggy bread!
How long does this Oat Bread keep for?
This bread keeps well covered in the fridge for a good few days. If not eaten on the day it's made, it's best toasted before eating.
Can you freeze it?
Yes. Slice it before putting in the freezer. Then when you want to eat it you can just pop the slices of bread in the toaster straight from frozen.
Substitutions you can make
- You can replace the ground almonds with ground walnuts.
- If you're not gluten-free, you can use plain flour.
- You can replace the almond milk with any other plant-based milk.
- You can replace the apple cider vinegar with lemon juice.
- For a nut-free version, replace the ground almonds with ground sunflower seeds and use a nut-free plant-based milk.
Ingredients you can add to the bread dough
- Mixed seeds: poppy seeds, sunflower seeds, pumpkin seeds etc.
- Chopped nuts: walnuts, pecan nuts etc.
- Dried fruit: dried cranberries, raisins etc.
How you can decorate before baking
- Oats.
- Poppy seeds.
- Sunflower seeds.
- Chopped nuts.
More gluten-free vegan bread recipes
- Gluten-Free Vegan Chickpea Bread
- Gluten-Free Vegan Blueberry Banana Bread
- Gluten-Free Vegan Irish Soda Bread
- Gluten-Free Vegan Almond Bread
- Gluten-Free Vegan Dinner Rolls
- Gluten-Free Vegan Seeded Buckwheat Bread
- Gluten-Free Vegan Cornbread
- Gluten-Free Vegan Carrot Bread
If you try out this recipe or anything else from my blog, I’d really love to hear any feedback! Please give it a rating, leave a comment, or tag a photo @rhiansrecipes #rhiansrecipes on Instagram! Thank you.
Watch how to make this recipe
Gluten-Free Vegan Oat Bread
Ingredients
- 150 g (1 ¼ cup) ground almonds (almond meal) *
- 150 g (1 ¼ cup) gluten-free flour blend (or sub plain flour if not gluten-free)
- 75 g (¾ cup) rolled oats (ensure gluten-free if necessary)
- 2 heaped teaspoons baking powder (ensure gluten-free if necessary)
- ¼ teaspoon bicarbonate of soda (baking soda)
- ¼ teaspoon salt to taste
- 300 ml (1 ¼ cup) unsweetened almond milk (or sub any other plant-based milk)
- 1 tablespoon apple cider vinegar ** (ensure gluten-free if necessary)
To decorate (optional):
- Rolled oats (ensure gluten-free if necessary)
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 180 degrees Celsius (350 degrees Fahrenheit).
- Place the ground almonds, gluten-free flour, oats, baking powder, bicarbonate of soda and salt in a large bowl and mix well.
- Add the milk and vinegar and mix again.
- Transfer the mixture to a loaf tin (I used a one-pound loaf tin) lined with greased baking paper.
- Sprinkle over more oats to decorate, if desired.
- Bake in the oven for 40-45 minutes, until risen and an inserted skewer comes out clean.
- Leave to cool on a wire rack before putting away to store.
- Keeps well in the fridge for up to a few days.
Video
Notes
- If you’ve kept your bread in the oven for the right amount of time and it’s still not done in the centre and the outside is becoming hard/burnt, then I would recommend covering it with a piece of baking paper to prevent the outside from becoming burnt, and and continuing to bake it until an inserted skewer comes out clean.
- Make sure to leave the bread to cool down completely on a cooling rack before packing it away to store because otherwise the steam from the warm bread will get trapped and you’ll end up with soggy bread, which nobody wants!
- Keeps well covered in the fridge for a good few days. If not eaten on the day it’s made, it’s best toasted before eating.
- If you’re freezing it, you can just slice it up and put the whole thing in the freezer. Then when you want to eat it you can just pop the slices of bread in the toaster straight from frozen.
Disclosure: This posts contains affiliate links to Amazon. If you purchase any of these products, a small percentage will come to me with no extra cost to you! This income will go towards the running of this blog – thank you.
Terri Reh
Can this be made in a bread machine?
Rhian Williams
Yes should be ok!
Anja
Hy Rhian! I just tried the recipe and the flavour is sooo good, but the bread is soggy in the middle. I gave 110g of ground almonds and 40g of almond flour. I had also ground a little bit of oat, because I didn't have rolled but the micture was to dry so I added a little bit more of oat milk (didn't have almond). What do you thing I did wrong for the bread to has soggy middle?
Rhian Williams
Hi - thank you for your feedback. I'm sorry to hear that. Did you remove the bread from the tin and leave it to cool down completely on a wire rack? And did you use enough baking powder?
Joshua Howard
I've made this oat bread and now this recipe is my favorite! If there exist people who haven't tried this bread I highly recommend this recipe. Thank you~
Rhian Williams
Thank you so much, so glad you like it!
Ava
So my loaf did not rise. I added a couple teaspoons of flaxseed but otherwise followed the recipe. I also had to back for 60 minutes. Any ideas on the rising? Smells and tastes great!
Ava
So my loaf did not rise at all. I followed the instructions and added 2 tsp flaxseed to help the bind. Any ideas?
Rhian Williams
Hi - thank you for your feedback. I'm sorry to hear that but it was the flaxseed that prevented it from rising properly. The recipe didn't require any extra binding agents. I hope that helps!