This tender Almond Poppy Seed Bread is a staple at our house around the holidays, but it’s really great any time of year. Sweet almond bread is dotted with poppy seeds and the loaves are drenched while hot from the oven in a delicious orange-almond glaze that sets into a thin, crackly topping you won’t be able to get enough of! It’s perfect for holiday gift plates, brunch spreads, or Sunday afternoons. You can bake is as full-sized loaves or mini loaves to suit your needs.

Ingredients Needed
This is just a preview of ingredients and method, keep scrolling for full printable recipe.
Bread
- All-purpose flour
- Granulated sugar
- Baking powder
- Table salt
- Canola oil – Or any neutral-flavored oil of your choice.
- Eggs
- Milk or buttermilk
- Poppy seeds
- Vanilla extract
- Butter flavoring – Look for this on the baking aisle near the other extracts and flavorings.
- Almond extract
Glaze
- Granulated sugar – You can also use powdered sugar.
- Orange juice
- Vanilla extract
- Butter flavoring
- Almond flavoring


How to Make Almond Poppyseed Bread
- Grease loaf pans and set aside. Place flour, salt, and baking powder in a medium mixing bowl and whisk to combine.
- In a large mixing bowl or the bowl of your stand mixer, combine eggs, extracts, oil, and sugar, and beat for 2 minutes. Alternate adding in flour mixture and milk and then mix until just combined. Add poppyseeds and mix until just combined. Pour into prepared pans. Bake.
- When done, place on a cooling rack. While they are cooling, prepare the glaze. You’ll need some granulated sugar, orange juice, vanilla and almond extracts, and butter flavoring. Whisk together the glaze ingredients. When the loaves are cool, place them on a tray or baking sheet and drizzle the glaze evenly over the loaves. Allow to cool completely; the sugar in the glaze will form a delicious crust on the bread.




Storing and Other Tips
- Store finished bread, tightly covered, at room temperature and enjoy within 3 days for best results.
- If gifting, I would recommend delivering within a day of baking. If possible, try not to package these in cellophane until ready to deliver because after awhile, the moisture will condense in the bag and the glorious sugary crust on the bread will liquify and soak into the bread. Which, don’t get me wrong, tastes great, but the slightly-crispy texture on top of the soft bread may just be the best part.
Full-Sized or Mini Loaves?
- This recipe makes 2 large (8.5″ x 4.5″ or 9″ x 5″) loaves or 5 mini loaves.
- For gifting, I like using disposable bakeware. You can find disposable aluminum pans at any grocery store, or there are lots of cute paper baking pans available online or at craft stores, especially around the holidays.

Frequently Asked Questions
Definitely! You’ll just need to watch carefully and test with a toothpick for doneness. You don’t want to over or under bake this bread!
Sure. That sounds delicious! Since lemon juice isn’t as sweet as orange juice, you may find your glaze packs more of a punch.
You can, but I don’t know why you’d want to. It really is the best part!

Almond Poppy Seed Bread
Ingredients
Bread
- 3 cups all-purpose flour (390 g)
- 1 ½ teaspoons table salt
- 1 ½ teaspoons baking powder
- 3 eggs
- 1 ⅛ cup canola oil
- 2 ½ cups white sugar
- 1 ½ teaspoon vanilla
- 1 ½ teaspoon butter flavoring (optional) look for it near the vanilla and almond extracts
- 1 ½ teaspoon almond extract pure or imitation, both work great
- 1 ½ cup milk or buttermilk
- 1 tablespoon poppy seeds
Glaze
- ¾ cup white granulated sugar or powdered sugar
- ¼ cup orange juice
- ½ teaspoon vanilla
- ½ teaspoon butter flavoring
- ½ teaspoon almond flavoring
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 350℉. Grease 2 standard-size bread pans or 5 mini bread pans. Set aside.
- In a medium bowl, sift together flour, salt, and baking powder.
- In a large mixing bowl, combine eggs, oil, sugar, and extracts/flavorings and beat for 2 minutes.
- Alternate adding in flour mixture and milk and then mix until just combined. Add poppyseeds and mix until just combined.
- Pour into prepared pans (5 mini pans or 2 standard bread pans) and bake (35-40 minutes for mini pans, 1 hour for large pans; keep an eye on them). When done, place on a cooling rack and allow to cool completely.
- While cooling, prepare glaze by combining all glaze ingredients. Drizzle over loaves while still warm and allow to cool and harden.
Notes
- Store finished bread, tightly covered, at room temperature and enjoy within 3 days for best results.
- If gifting, I would recommend delivering within a day of baking. If possible, try not to package these in cellophane until ready to deliver because after awhile, the moisture will condense in the bag and the glorious sugary crust on the bread will liquify and soak into the bread. Which, don’t get me wrong, tastes great, but the slightly-crispy texture on top of the soft bread may just be the best part.












Questions & Reviews
So totally a beginner at cooking/baking! Is vanilla extract the same as vanilla flavoring, or are they totally different? This sounds so good, I need to make it soon! 🙂
This is an amazing recipe. It is the same as I have, except we pour our batter into a bundt pan, bake for 1 hr, turn it out, and put the glaze on top and slice it up~it’s beautiful! I won a blue ribbon at the fair with it. oooohhh, I want to make it now! 🙂
oops, I’m pretty sure it’s 350!
Do that, and Kate will come add that little detail in soon!
Did I miss somewhere what temperature to cook them at? I am already to put them in the oven.
The Almond Poppy Seed Bread, was amazing as to be expected. I only had four pans so I just made the extras into muffins, which my husband LOVED!
Can you use this recipe to make muffins instead of loafs of bread?
I love almond and poppy seeds so I know I am going to ADORE this bread – can’t wait to try it.
It IS a small world -besides all of the mutual friends, we must own the same ward cookbook too! A lady in our ward was ‘famous’ for making this bread so we always had it growing up. It was the second recipe I posted on my blog when I started it, it is SO good!
OK, another “must try” recipe….. I wonder how it would be made into mini muffins. I’m always trying to make things into mini muffins for my kids to grab and go. I wonder if the top would get crusty like it does on the loaves….
I’m so hungry. How did you know bread is my weakness?