Nana’s Italian Easter Bread
This traditional Italian Easter Bread, also known as Pane di Pasqua, is an old family recipe; it's a rich brioche-style dough that is flavored with orange and anise, brushed with icing, and decorated with sprinkles. This colorful holiday bread is a wonderful addition to Easter brunch or to enjoy on the days leading up to Easter!

Years ago, when my husband and I began dating, my father-in-law talked often about his Nana's Easter bread, with orange and anise, and it seemed inconceivable that my grandma had never made it, but I had definitely never eaten it.
It's a fabulous bread - a rich and slightly sweet bread, but light and fluffy, and is flavored with orange and anise. He was generous enough to share his family's recipe with me so that I could make it on my own and share it with all of you.
When I shared this bread with my mom, she said that my grandma did, indeed, make this exact bread, and even remembered that she would set dyed eggs in the dough. However, she said my grandfather was the only one in the family who ate the bread, so my grandma stopped making it when he passed away.
I was disappointed that I had never been introduced to it before, but thrilled to know that it had been a part of my family's tradition at some point, and that it was something my grandpap loved.
A Little More History
I did some reading up on Italian Easter Bread recipes before tackling this one for the first time, and found that most are flavored with citrus (orange or lemon) and anise oil and/or anise seeds.
The bread is shaped like a wreath to symbolize the crown of thorns.
Usually, the loaves are braided and have a dyed egg nestled into the braids in various spots. I skipped the Easter eggs, but went the traditional route with braided loaves, sweet glaze, and sprinkles (because, of course).
Key Ingredients & Notes
While you will use some basic ingredients like flour, sugar, eggs, and salt, there are a few other things you’ll need that are what make this the incredible bread it is:

- Milk – I encourage you to use whole milk for the richest bread, but you can substitute 2% if needed.
- Oranges – You will use the juice and zest from two oranges. I use this microplane for zesting citrus, and this simple juicer for extracting juice (it catches the pulp and seeds!). If you want to change up the flavor, you can use lemon zest and lemon juice.
- Active Dry Yeast – You can substitute instant yeast without making any other modifications to the recipe.
- Margarine – The original recipe calls for margarine, but you can substitute unsalted butter.
- Anise Oil – If you can only find anise extract, use 2 teaspoons, as it is not as concentrated as anise oil.
While the colored eggs are a traditional touch, if you don’t usually dye Easter eggs, don’t worry, the bread is just as delicious without! Our family typically does not include them.
How to Make Italian Easter Bread
This is a traditional two-rise bread recipe. I typically mix it in a bowl with a wooden spoon and knead by hand, but you can absolutely use a stand mixer with a dough hook attachment if you’d like.
Step 1: Make the Dough – Rub together the sugar and orange zest until the sugar is completely moistened, then stir in the warm milk to dissolve the sugar, then stir in the yeast and let sit for 10 minutes. Add this mixture to the flour and stir, then stir in the margarine and orange juice. In a separate small bowl, stir together the eggs, anise oil, and salt, and add to the dough. Add more flour if needed.


Step 2: Knead the Dough – Once a sticky ball of dough has formed, turn it onto a floured surface and knead, adding a little more flour at a time if needed, until a smooth and elastic ball has formed, about 5 minutes.
Step 3: First Rise – Place the dough in an oiled bowl, turn to coat, then cover loosely with plastic wrap and place in a warm, draft-free spot until doubled in size, about 1 hour.

Step 4: Shape the Bread – This recipe makes two loaves of bread, so you will divide the dough into four and work with two pieces at a time. Roll them into 24-inch ropes, then loosely twist them together, bring the ends together, then transfer to a parchment-lined baking sheet. Twist and pinch the ends together to seal shut. Repeat with the remaining two pieces of dough to create the second loaf of bread.

Step 5: Second Rise – Brush the loaves of bread with melted butter, cover loosely with plastic wrap, and let rise until nearly doubled in size, about 45 minutes to hour.

Step 6: Bake and Glaze – Bake the loaves one at a time at 350 degrees F until golden brown, about 30 to 40 minutes. Cool completely on a wire rack, then whisk together the powdered sugar and milk and brush the glaze mixture over the loaves, then add sprinkles.
Storage and Freezing Instructions
Any leftover bread should be wrapped tightly in plastic wrap (and placed in a ziploc bag if you want extra assurance to keep it fresh) and kept at room temperature for up to 3 days. You can eat it room temperature or even toast it and add jam for breakfast!
To freeze the bread, wrap either an entire loaf or individual slices tightly in plastic wrap. If freezing a whole loaf, wrap again in aluminum foil. Place the loaf of the slices in a freezer bag and store in the freezer for up to 3 months. Individual slices will thaw easily at room temperature; I recommend moving a whole loaf to the refrigerator to thaw a day in advance of serving.

Watch the Italian Easter Bread Recipe Video:
More Easter Breads
- Paska (Polish Easter Bread)
- Greek Easter Bread (Tsoureki)
- Hot Cross Buns
- Grandma’s Bacon and Cheese Easter Bread
If you make this Italian Easter bread recipe and love it, remember to stop back and give the recipe a 5-star rating - it helps others find the recipe! ❤️️

Italian Easter Bread Recipe
Ingredients
For the Dough
- 8 cups (1040 g) all-purpose flour
- 1½ cups (360 ml) whole milk
- ½ cup (99 g) granulated sugar
- 2 oranges, zested & juiced
- 4½ teaspoons (2 envelopes) active dry yeast
- 1 cup (227 g) margarine, melted
- 8 eggs
- 1 teaspoon salt
- ½ teaspoon anise oil
- 2 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted (for brushing)
For the Glaze
- 2 cups (227 g) powdered sugar
- ¼ cup (60 ml) whole milk
- Sprinkles, if desired
Instructions
- Make the Dough: Place the flour in a large mixing bowl; set aside.
- Heat the milk in a small saucepan over low heat, stirring occasionally, until it is warm to the touch, but not hot. If you have an instant-read thermometer, the temperature of the milk should be between 110 and 115 degrees F.
- While the milk is warming, place the sugar in a small bowl and add the orange zest. With your fingertips, rub the zest into the sugar until it is completely incorporated and the sugar is moistened.
- Once the milk reaches the correct temperature, stir in the sugar and zest mixture, stirring to dissolve the sugar. Add the yeast, stir, and let sit for 10 minutes.
- Add the milk and yeast mixture to the flour and begin to mix it into a dough (it will be shaggy at this point).
- Next, add the melted margarine and continue to mix. Then, add the orange juice to the dough and mix to combine.
- In a small bowl, use a fork to lightly beat together the eggs, salt, and anise oil. Add to the dough and continue mixing.
- At this point, you may need to add more flour to the dough, depending on how much juice you get out of your oranges. (I added quite a bit more to get the dough to come together.) Once you have a sticky ball of dough formed, turn it out onto a floured surface and knead for about 5 minutes, adding a small amount of flour at a time as needed, or until the dough is soft and elastic. It will remain slightly tacky.
- Place the dough in an oiled bowl, turning to coat, and cover the bowl loosely with plastic wrap. Place in a draft-free area and allow to rise until doubled in volume, about 1 hour. Meanwhile, line two baking sheets with parchment paper and set aside.
- Shape the Bread: Turn the dough out onto a clean surface and divide in two. Divide each half into two (you will have four pieces of dough). We will work with one pair, and then the other. Roll two pieces of dough into 24-inch long ropes. Loosely twist the ropes together. Transfer the braided rope to one of the prepared baking sheets and bring the ends together to form a ring, twisting and pinching the ends together to seal. Repeat with the remaining two pieces of dough so that you have two circular, braided loaves. Brush the tops of each with the melted butter, loosely cover with plastic wrap, and let rise until nearly doubled in size, about 45 minutes to 1 hour.
- While the dough is rising, preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Bake one at a time (unless you have the oven capacity to correctly bake both at the same time) until golden brown on top, 30 to 40 minutes. Remove from the oven and transfer to a cooling rack to cool completely.
- Glaze the Bread: Once the breads are cooled to room temperature, you can glaze them (if you desire). In a small bowl, whisk together the powdered sugar and the milk until smooth. Use a pastry brush to brush the glaze onto the top and sides of the bread, and decorate with sprinkles. The bread is best served at room temperature. If you have leftovers, wrap well in plastic wrap and store at room temperature for up to 3 days.
Notes
- Equipment – While I mix this by hand, you could certainly use a stand mixer fitted with a dough hook instead.
- Milk - I encourage you to use whole milk for the richest bread, but you can substitute 2% if needed.
- Oranges - You will use the juice and zest from two oranges. I use this microplane for zesting citrus, and this simple juicer for extracting juice (it catches the pulp and seeds!). If you want to change up the flavor, you can use lemon zest and lemon juice.
- Active Dry Yeast - You can substitute instant yeast without making any other modifications to the recipe.
- Margarine - The original recipe calls for margarine, but you can substitute unsalted butter.
- Anise Oil - If you can only find anise extract, use 2 teaspoons, as it is not as concentrated as anise oil.
- Scaling – If you wish to make only one loaf of bread, you can simply halve all ingredient quantities.
- Storage – Wrap leftover bread tightly in plastic wrap and store at room temperature for up to 3 days.
- Freezing Instructions – Wrap a whole loaf or individual slices in plastic wrap. If storing a whole loaf, wrap again in aluminum foil. Place the loaf of the slices in a freezer-safe ziploca bag and freeze for up to 3 months. Thaw a whole loaf in the refrigerator overnight; thaw individual slices at room temperature.
Did you make this recipe?
Leave a review below, then snap a picture and tag @thebrowneyedbaker on Instagram so I can see it!
Photography by Dee Frances




My kitchen smells amazing!
I made this bread for the first time last Easter!! It is phenomenal, making it again on Good Friday!
I am defiantly familiar with this one! great recipe! My mother would always take a couple of the easter eggs we would dye and use them as decoration in the bread (you’d obviously cut around them) Thinking about it now though, I’m not sure how safe that dye was when I was growing up… Sprinkles are a much better idea haha!
This bread is fantastic!! I was able to do the first rise and shapping the night before, and then baked it straight from the fridge the next morning. Perfect fresh Easter tradition!
Hi Michelle! Quick question. Do you think this can be refrigerated after the first rise and then baked the next day?
Hi Jennifer, I’ve never done that so I couldn’t say for sure how it would impact the rise or final bake. If you try it, let me know how it turns out!
I made this bread last night. Since half the people I was serving it to don’t like anise, I subbed it out for a vanilla bean with great success! I also refrigerated the dough after the first rise and after shapping the dough. I baked it first thing this morning straight from the fridge. It worked out very well! The bread has a great texture and is extremely soft and fluffy; it’s utterly delicious! Don’t let the margarine scare you off! Thanks for a great recipe!
If I want to use anise seeds instead of anise extract or anise oil, how much do you think I should use?? They look beautiful Michelle!
Thank you, Rita! And good question… I had to Google it… looks like you’d need to use 2 tablespoons + 2 teaspoons of anise seed to substitute for the anise oil.
What kind of margarine do you use. And may i ask why margarine and not butter for baking?
Hi Ashley, I used Imperial margarine. I think probably margarine since that was most common a long time ago, but I’m pretty sure butter would work just as well.
I love the handwritten recipe! I was born and raised in Italy and this reminds me of the way my grandma used to write her letters or notes. It is a mix of Italian and Sicilian dialect. Since I moved here in the States 6 years ago, I have been trying to keep my Italian traditions alive so I will definitely make this bread next weekend!
My Russian grandmother used to make this, too. I’m not crazy for citrus flavor in things, unless it’s a martini, but everyone else seemed to love it.
I can’t believe this was in my inbox this morning! My gram also made them when I was a child (with the eggs), then she just started buying them- never as good. No one makes or buys them anymore. I wanted to try, I guess for tradition’s sake, and have been searching for a recipe. Always trust an old family recipe! The hand written picture is so great! I would frame it, just to have for a momento.
Your nana writes like my mamma. :-) And the traditional Easter Bread I make has colored eggs tucked into the dough. The eggs cook as the bread bakes. Mamma made it for years and then I took over with my kids. I describe it as a rich brioche type dough. I wish I had more of my mamma’s recipes but she had them all in her head. Your bread turned out beautiful!! Have a great day! Buona Pasqua!
Im Italian and love this bread <3
But that handwritten recipe is definitely NOT italian. I guess it's a mix. She probably had been living in the US for a while when she wrote it so it's sort of a wrecked italian. ;)
But still…impressive!
Such a beautiful bread and a lovely holiday tradition story. My former classroom assistant is Portuguese and she would make a similar bread…topped with colored hard boiled eggs …every Easter. I never tried to make it but I pan to try this recipe. I do have a question…I gather this bread is very large given it has 8 cups of flour and 8 eggs. The recipe looks like it can be halved pretty easily to make a smaller loaf. Do you agree and or any suggestions?
Hi Nancy, The recipe actually makes two loaves of bread, if that helps! They are each large loaves, and you could scale down further I think without an issue.
Have made this bread for years, although my mother-in-law’s version (from her Italian immigrant mother) used only orange and not anise, which is fine with me because I don’t care for anise flavor. So if anyone’s thinking of trying the bread and doesn’t care for anise, just leave it out. I do a slightly smaller version that makes 2-3 loaves round, not braided loaves that I can mix on the dough cycle of the bread machine (still heating the milk ahead). I usually also add a little bit of Orange Oil or Fiori di Sicilia, a wonderful vanilla/citrus extract from King Arthur Flour. I may try this larger version in my stand mixer with the dough hook – my wrists can’t take long periods of kneading. The bread is well worth the effort!
I’m replying to my own note, I made this recipe and the bread and crumb came out beautifully. I made 4 medium size round loaves. I did add the Fiori di Sicilia. I had to add a LOT more flour to make a slightly sticky dough. The first rise took quite a while, but the 2nd rise was a little quicker in a very low warm oven.
The results? A recipe I will definitely make again! I think I would add another more sugar, I don’t like really sweet bread but I think 1/2 cup sugar to 8 cups of flour wasn’t quite enough. I think I would also add a bit more orange flavor, maybe some orange juice or some orange extract or oil. But that’s to my taste. My husband loved the bread but agreed it could use a little more sugar.
This is so gorgeous and festive. I have never tried making a bread like this but it’s definitely on my list now.
Hello,
I really want to make your recipe for Italian Easter Bread, but I am wondering if there is a substitute for the anise oil or if it is needed at all? I really do not care for anise flavor. Maybe it is slight enough so I can’t tell? Please respond so I can plan for this accordingly.
Thanks, Linda
Hi Linda, If you don’t like anise flavor, I would simply omit it; it is a very distinct flavor in the bread, not subtle.
This looks lovely! Can another flavoring be used as my family doesn’t like anise? thanks
Hi Karen, Sure, I don’t see why not!
My boyfriend is allergic to anise, so I don’t want to buy a bottle of anise extract or oil, because it wouldn’t be used very much. We do, however, have a jar of whole star anise that was purchased before he learned he was allergic. I was wondering if I would be able to substitute the oil for seeds (should I grind them with a mortar before adding or prepare them some other way? and how much should I use?) in order to make this for work, so those seeds can be used up.
Ahhh I truly have no idea, I’ve never tried to grind up star anise and use it in place of anise oil or extract. I’m sorry I can’t help with this!
I had the same issue. Trying it for the first time right now. I was just looking under comments to see if someone else had the same issue and found you. Thank you for asking.
Many years ago there was an old bread company that used to be on Grant Avenue in San Francisco. I have learned that they are now South San Francisco. Their anise bread toast was one that could not be copied. I don’t know how the toast was made however, does anyone know how this could be copied. I in the process of making the Anise bread and when completed I will attempt to slice it and then reenter the slices in the oven to toast. Do anyone think this may work
I have been looking for this recipe for a long time , my grandma was Nana too, she baked like no other ! at least i thought this… Thanks
I have been searching for a recipe like this to replicate the one made by my grandmother when I was a child. As kids, my brother and I especially loved the confectioner’s sugar icing with the sprinkles. This recipe is so close I have stopped looking! I made 4 loaves last week for my Easter brunch; I gave 3 away to my family and you would have thought I gave them gold. This recipe will be a new family tradition. Thanks so much.
Aww I’m so happy to hear this! Thank you so much for sharing :)
I have for years made a version of Italian Easter bread very similar to this. The recipe was in a McCall’s paperback cookbook that originally belonged to my mom. The version I’ve made has lemon instead of orange and it is delicious. I may have to try this version, just to compare.
Did you use margarine sticks – 2 sticks would be 1 cup. I’ve had trouble with butter measurements before. Or do you use a tub of margarine and spoon out some into a measuring cup? Thanks!
I couldn’t find anise oil – will extract work the same in the same amount?
Hi Jennifer, I used margarine sticks. And yes, the anise extract would work as well!
Looks amazing but…no colored egg?? lol
Hi
This recipe looks awesome!!! I was wondering if I could substitute lemon juice & zest for the orange? Should I drop the anise oil then? I like the brightness of lemon and was wondering how it would be in the bread. I love the addition of the sprinkles on top – I found some Easter themed ones I can’t wait to use. On the other loaf I plan to put toasted almond slices – for the “adults”!
Hi Kevin, Yes, you could do lemon flavor instead of orange. I don’t think you’d need to reduce the anise unless it’s a personal preference. Enjoy and Happy Easter! :)
Looks awesome! Regarding step # 9 – is the bowl oiled with anise oil or something different? Thanks!
Hi Jennifer, It should be oiled with vegetable oil or canola oil.
My mother made these every Easter in much larger quantities. I hope I can make it as nice as my mom does but I’m not good at bread making..Let me try :)
I made this Easter bread And it’s the best recipe. The bread was soft and delicious. This will be my only recipe for Easter bread.
This is the exact recipe I’ve been looking for and will be trying it out today! I’ve seen so many but these are the traditional ingredients that have been used in family recipes that I can’t get my hands on! Thank you so much.. oh I can taste it now!
I just made your Easter Bread and it’s awesome!!!!! Thanks for sharing the recipe.