Panettone [Italian Christmas Bread]
![Panettone [Italian Christmas Bread] by @browneyedbaker :: www.browneyedbaker.com](https://www.browneyedbaker.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/panettone-33-600.jpg)
I’m not sure where I heard about panettone bread for the first time, but I was surprised at never having tasted this traditional Italian Christmas bread before. When I asked my mom about it, she said that my grandma used to make it all the time for the holidays (in coffee cans!), but that after my grandpap died, no one really asked for it anymore, so she stopped making it. It’s such a shame, because I know I would have gobbled it up year after year. If you’ve never heard of it before, panettone is a sweet bread loaded with candied citron, lemon zest and raisins, and baked in a cylindrical mold, which gives it a distinctive look. Now that I’ve made it, I realize what a holiday treasure this bread is to so many families.
![Panettone [Italian Christmas Bread] by @browneyedbaker :: www.browneyedbaker.com](https://www.browneyedbaker.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/panettone-18-600.jpg)
Knowing that I wanted to make it for Christmas this year, I started researching panettone recipes some time ago. I had a hard time finding any that looked like clear-cut “winners”, so I did some trial and error. I had a particularly awful experience with one that called for a week-long starter. On Day #4, the starter smelled like the unfortunate aftermath of a college freshman drinking a bit too much jungle juice. Yikes. Seriously, that was NOT a good morning. (It was also the day before Thanksgiving, and I spent a ridiculous amount of time burning candles and spraying Lysol into the air to try to eradicate the awful smell.)
After that, I started reading tons of blogs, forums and message boards to see what I could find about my elusive panettone. I discovered more than one reference to a recipe printed in the December 2008 edition of Gourmet Magazine. After a little more digging, I found that Andrea Meyers had made it, and just a few clicks later, I found an actual pdf of the magazine article on Sullivan Street Bakery’s website; it was actually the owner, Jim Lahey, who created the recipe. I knew immediately that it looked like the type of recipe that could be “the one” and carved out time to make it.
![Panettone [Italian Christmas Bread] by @browneyedbaker :: www.browneyedbaker.com](https://www.browneyedbaker.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/panettone-26-600.jpg)
This recipe makes a beautiful, soft, supple dough that is much like a brioche. Added to the dough is half of a vanilla bean (which is removed before baking), rum-soaked raisins, and candied orange peel. This bread is a true show-stopper. It’s stunning, and the flavor lives up to its looks. The bread is incredibly soft and sweet, and just loaded with flavor thanks to the vanilla bean, lemon zest, raisins and candied orange peel.
![Panettone [Italian Christmas Bread] by @browneyedbaker :: www.browneyedbaker.com](https://www.browneyedbaker.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/panettone-35-600.jpg)
While I found this to be a very easy dough to mix together and work with, the recipe does take some time to pull together, so you need to plan ahead. I used Andrea’s guide and it worked out perfectly for me:
Day 1 AM: Soak the raisins
Day 1 PM: Prepare the dough
Save This Recipe
Overnight: Rise 12-15 hours
Day 2 AM: Second rise
Day 2 PM: Bake
There are a few specialized items you need for this recipe, which include panettone molds (source: King Arthur Flour), candied citron (source: candied orange peel or candied mixed peel, both from King Arthur Flour), and metal skewers for hanging the cooling bread.
![Panettone [Italian Christmas Bread] by @browneyedbaker :: www.browneyedbaker.com](https://www.browneyedbaker.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/panettone-2-600.jpg)
I’ll be honest, I thought this was totally crazy when I first saw it in the original recipe. Jim Lahey says that by piercing the just-out-of-the-oven bread with skewers and hanging it upside down, it keeps the bread from collapsing while it cools. While skeptical, I followed the recipe and was pleasantly surprised when my bread didn’t tear through the skewers and end up in the bottom of the pot. I don’t have metal skewers, but I had enormous wooden skewers that I had bought for s’mores back in the summer, so I just used those and they seemed to work just fine.
The only issue I had during baking was that one quadrant of the top actually drooped so far over that it fell off during baking (you can see in the photos above that one section is lighter than the rest of the top). The finished product didn’t seem any worse for the wear, as it browned again just fine. Plus, I had a bit to nibble on while the entire loaf cooled ;-)
![Panettone [Italian Christmas Bread] by @browneyedbaker :: www.browneyedbaker.com](https://www.browneyedbaker.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/panettone-34-600.jpg)
My Chief Culinary Consultant and I ate half of this loaf in just two days. Fabulous doesn’t even begin to describe it. I’m planning on making two more loaves before Christmas – one for each of our families – and I just might make a third for the two of us to continue to enjoy into the New Year. I may have not grown up on this bread, but it’s something that I’m going to make a part of our Christmas tradition moving forward. I wish my grandma could taste this and we could compare notes; I know she would love it!
![Panettone [Italian Christmas Bread] by @browneyedbaker :: www.browneyedbaker.com](https://www.browneyedbaker.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/panettone-39-600.jpg)
One year ago: Homemade Torrone
Two years ago: Gingerbread Men Cookies
Three years ago: Homemade Hot Cocoa Mix

Panettone [Italian Christmas Bread]
Ingredients
- 1 cup (145 g) raisins
- 2 tablespoons light rum
- 2 tablespoons hot water
- 3¾ cups (468.75 g) all-purpose flour
- ⅔ cup (133.33 g) granulated sugar
- ½ teaspoon (0.5 teaspoon) active dry yeast
- ½ teaspoon (0.5 teaspoon) salt
- ¼ teaspoon (0.25 teaspoon) lemon zest
- ½ (0.5) vanilla bean, split in half lengthwise
- 3 eggs, at room temperature
- ⅔ cup (166.67 ml) tepid water
- 1 tablespoon honey
- 10½ tablespoons (10.5 tablespoons) unsalted butter, well softened
- 1 tablespoon unsalted butter, melted
- 1 tablespoon unsalted butter, chilled
- ⅔ cup (100 g) candied citron, I used candied orange peel in ¼-inch pieces
Special Equipment:
- Panettone molds, 6x4½-inch - purchased at King Arthur Flour
- 12- inch (12 inch) metal or wooden skewers
Instructions
- In a small bowl, combine the raisins with the rum and 2 tablespoons of hot water. Allow to soak at room temperature, stirring occasionally, until the raisins are plump and most of the liquid has been absorbed, at least 8 hours or overnight.
- In a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment, mix together the flour, sugar, yeast, salt, lemon zest and vanilla bean on low speed until combined. In a medium bowl, whisk together the eggs, tepid water and honey. With the mixer on low speed, pour the egg mixture into the flour mixture. Increase the speed to medium-low and mix until all of the ingredients are combined. Add the softened butter, 1 tablespoon at a time, mixing until incorporated before adding more. Increase the speed to medium-high and beat until the dough is smooth and elastic, about 8 minutes.
- Drain the raisins, discard the soaking liquid, and stir together with the candied citron and 1 tablespoon of melted butter. Stir this mixture into the dough with a wooden spoon.
- Place the dough in a large bowl, cover with plastic wrap, and let rise in a cold oven with the door closed until it has nearly tripled in volume, 12 to 15 hours.
- Locate and discard the vanilla bean, then sprinkle the dough lightly with flour and scrape out onto a lightly floured surface. Sprinkle a bit more flour onto the dough, then fold the edges of the dough in towards the center, forming a loose ball, and place, seam-side down, into the panettone mold. Cover with a damp kitchen towel (not terry cloth) and let rise in a draft-free place at warm room temperature until the dough is just above the top of the mold, 3 to 5 hours.
- Preheat oven to 370 degrees F.
- Place the dough-filled panettone mold on a baking sheet. Use a very sharp serrated knife to score an "X" across the entire surface of the dough. Place the 1 tablespoon chilled butter in the center of the X and bake until a wooden skewer inserted into the center comes out slightly moist but not wet, 60 to 75 minutes (the panettone will be very dark).
- Remove from the oven and pierce 12-inch metal or wooden skewers all the way through the panettone (including the paper) 4 inches apart and 1 inch from the bottom so the skewers are parallel. Hang the panettone upside down over a large stockpot and cool completely before cutting. To store the panettone, wrap tightly in plastic wrap, then either place in a resealable plastic bag, or wrap again in foil. The bread will keep at room temperature for up to 1 week. (I have not tried freezing the bread, but I believe it would freeze well, wrapped in plastic, then foil, then placed in a resealable bag.)
Notes
Did you make this recipe?
Leave a review below, then snap a picture and tag @thebrowneyedbaker on Instagram so I can see it!



Are you sure you baked this?? Looks absolutely store-bought!?!?
Yes, I am sure that I baked this. I guess I did a good job?!
Well, I’m not sure. Because normally home-made does’t look like store-bought, it’s supposed to look better. I live in Switzerland, one part of which is Italian, so we have lots of panettones here at this time. And even those, which are baked in bakeries doesn’t look like store bought, but better. So I’m still not convinced :)
My job is not to convince you that something I made is actually something I made. I have over 1,000 recipes documented on this site over seven years, all of which I have made and photographed in my own kitchen. Merry Christmas.
Absolutely love your site.. Plus I get tons of bonus points from my wife every time I make one of your recipes!! This bread looks amazing, definitely be making it soon.
Wow Michelle, your panettone looks so professional. We’re lucky that where I live in Canada, we are able to get these at every grocery and specialty store around.They have different flavors, like lemon, chocolate, pandoro,and many more. That is quite an undertaking, comgratulations.
Looks so good. I have only tried the store bought kind
Last comment by me, not “rina”. I wondered who rina was but I am easily distracted!
SO exciting to see the results after seeing it hanging around on your IG! Makes me wonder how your grandma cooled hers if she made them in cans? Propped upsidedown?
Well it always has looked beautiful to me so now I know all the time and love that goes into it!
Can I just tell you that when I saw this I thought I would cry. I know silly but here is why, my husband is from Italy and every year we look all over for panettone, we buy it, we eat it, we enjoy it. The best years is when my mother in law actually ships us some from Italy. But to think that I could make this for him and he might feel a little bit of home on holidays when he is away from home makes me want to run and find all of these ingredients immediately. Thank you so much for making this!! I think it would be the best gift for him.
If you end up or make extras, Barefoot Contessa has a recipe for a Panettone bread pudding that always looked amazing.
I love beautiful special traditional breads at Christmas. They are beautiful to look at and the taste of something that is not peppermint, chocolate, nutty, or candy in taste and texture is so much more delightful and comforting. My Norwegian grandmother and mother made julekake every season. Eating at room temperature or toasted with butter was so good. I just wanted to keep smelling the bottle of real cardamon and wish I could have it everyday. The pleasant activity of making these breads is worth every minute of time!
I have always wanted to make Panettone but I was always scared that the recipe would be bad, so I never tried it. I am going to try this one. It looks so amazing and delicious. Look out King Arthur Flour.
Fantastic pictures! I have wanted to try making this for sometime! I have had the fiori di sicilia flavoring in my fridge for over a year! And I love that you’re making it a new tradition for you and your consultant!!
Sounds delish, but I have a problem. There is no way I can make something with raisins and have certain people in my house eat it. Any ideas for what can sub for the raisins. I know that it will no longer be authentic, but I would love to cook a “version” of the bread. Thanks.
Hi Kathy, Without knowing what your family WILL eat, it’s hard for me to make suggestions ;-) You could try any other type of dried fruit – dried cherries, dried cranberries, currants, chopped dates, etc.
Panettone is delish. Haven’t made it yet. Thanks for the info on where to purchase the molds.
I adore panettone! There’s a bakery on the Wharf in San Francisco that makes it year-round, and I always pick some up when I’m there.
Jennifer, would you by any chance know the name of that bakery???
I’m so glad you posted this! I’ve had Pannetone every year at Christmastime, but never homemade. The store-bought ones really vary in quality and freshness. This is going on my must-try list!
Here in the deep South we don’t see too much of this bread but I had noticed it few years ago around this time of year at our Publix. I certainly hope it is as good as it looks because it does seem very labor intensive!
Merry Christmas!
have always wanted to try making it, but is there any other type pan you can use? Just really don’t have the storage space for another speciality pan, thanks.
Hi Nancy, This isn’t actually a pan; they are paper disposable molds. My mom said that my grandma used to bake hers in empty (clean) coffee cans.
Thank you, will check on ordering some of the molds
I’ve tried quite a few times to make panettone and have had no success and some of the other recipes I’ve found are soooo labor intensive. This one definitely looks doable and I still have a few molds left so here goes nothing! Thanks :)
I love panettone. It is, by far, my very favorite sweet bread. I never have attempted to make it but I will now. When I was teaching kindergarten, I would read the book “Tony’s Bread” by prolific childrens’ author,Tomie dePaola. Tomie put his spin on the history of the bread in a humorous and fun way. After reading and discussing the story, I would share a loaf of the bread with the class. The following is the summary of the book from Amazon:
How did panettone , the rich Italian Christmas bread, get its name? With tongue firmly in cheek, dePaola provides this confection as a reply. Chubby Serafina, the baker Antonio’s daughter, spends her days eating candy and weeping by the window. For although her father adores her and gives her the best of everything, Tony is convinced there is no man worthy of her. Then Angelo, a wealthy nobleman, falls in love with Serafina and enlists the help of three meddlesome “aunties” to win her father’s approval. In return for Serafina’s hand in marriage, Angelo sets Tony up in his own bakery in Milano, where he becomes wonderfully rich and famous from sales of an unusually shaped bread: pan di Tonio , or panettone . The tale is a typically charming dePaolian effort, and the illustrations abound with his trademark coziness. Another nice touch: like Tony’s currant-filled buns, the story is sprinkled with Italian words and phrases, translations of which are cleverly woven into the text. Ages 4-8.
I have yet to make panettone, i have always been intimated by it size and fruit soaking. Stale panettone makes the best TRIFLE CAKE! I really hope you try it
Panettone bread pudding recipe, please! My sister-in-law made some last Christmas, and it was heavenly!
Michelle, your Panetonne looks beautiful and I bet it tastes even better! I am half German and my Great-grandfather was from the black forest region of Germany and owned a bakery. I make his stollen recipe every year at Christmas, It is a big hit with my MIL and BIL. It wouldn’t be Christmas to me until the Springerles and Stollen are made.
I just had Panettone bread for the first time yesterday and i loved it! Then today you post this recipe! I guess it was meant to be! I have to make this, this weekend! Thank you so much for sharing!
That is beautiful! Can’t wait to try it. This is a traditional Italian gift, along with a bottle of vino. By the end of the holiday, we end up with a month’s worth of pannettone. Can this be made with chocolate chips? The grown ups love the citrone, but the kids always run for the chocolate version. Your recipes always are from the heart, encompassing our Italian famiglia traditions. Love it!
Hi Dawn, I think chocolate chips would work!
I think the mini chocolate chips would probably work better, because the regular ones can sometimes make the dough too heavy in spots, where the minis are more evenly spread around.
I have success with chocolate wafers. (The melting type, about 1″ size.) On the last rise, I push wafers into the dough around the loaf. This way they do not sink to the bottom and are evenly distributed. You can also do two layers; push the first ones at a lower depth and come back slightly later and push another one closer to the top.
When you cut into the panettone, you get a yummy amount of chocolate to feast on.
I bet your Grandma was right there with you as you made it. :)
OMG I love panettone. God I can’t wait for Christmas now :)
I LOVE Panettone Bread at Xmas time, but I have never thought of making it myself! I always thought it would be too difficult, but I think I could definitely manage it! Thank you for inspiring :) My grandmother had the BEST Christmas pudding of all time that she got off a friend and tweaked a little for her own tastes. Thinking I should post it up and share the love this Christmas!
Thanks again :)
What a gorgeous finished loaf but sounds like quite the nightmare to get there….jungle juice and candles, whoa, that says it all :) Looks like it was worth it though based on that amazing fluffy texture!
Wow it’s beautiful! Gonna have to give it a try. :)
In Switzerland we get Panettone everywhere, but I’ve never tried to make it myself. I’m Norwegian, so we make our “own” version, called julebrød, which is basically a sweet bread dough with raisins and sometimes candied fruits.
I might try this recipe to compare.
Hey
I’d love to try making this Julebrød but I can’t find the recipe, could you send it to me pls? :)