
I will tell you that this recipe presented me with a little challenge. I’ve only had Amish Friendship Bread once before, when a friend gave me some starter and the instructions. I was nonplussed, as I’d never heard of the stuff and I wasn’t exactly sure how it would pan out, sitting on my counter for 10 days. But it made a lovely quick bread, and I did my duty and passed on the starter to three more friends. Since it was rather laborious for a quick bread recipe and I’d given away all my starter, I never made it again. What I remember was a very moist, VERY sweet bread with lots of cinnamon. When Eliza approached me about it, I initially thought it would be a snap. But then I thought about the starter. I obviously didn’t have any, and if I did, it wouldn’t be low carb or gluten free. And what was the point of the starter anyway? As far as I could tell, it was mostly a way to require friends to bake and pass it on, chain-letter style.
So I gave some thought to the purpose behind having a bag of milk, flour and sugar sitting on your counter for 10 days. Besides having to massage it daily, the milk would obviously sour and give a tangy sourdough flavour to the resulting loaf. Well, milk is going to sour when left that long no matter what it’s mixed with, so it could easily be made with low carb ingredients. I asked Eliza whether she cared whether she had starter left over to pass on, and she said she never did as she used all of her starter for loaves to give as gifts. That made my life easier! And in typical Carolyn fashion, waiting 10 days to make the bread didn’t appeal to me, so I decided to see if I could jump start the souring process with a little lemon juice. This helped me cut the counter-sitting time in half. I am hopeful this will suit Eliza as she wants to get a jump on making these for Christmas!
I didn’t make this in a way where you could pass on the starter to friends, because I really wanted to concentrate on getting the taste and texture right. Maybe someday, when I have huge amounts of time on my hands, I will figure out how to do that. In the meantime, this bread came out very moist and rich, with a cinnamon-y crust from the topping melting on during baking. My memory of eating the real thing is rather faint, so I can’t guarantee it’s exactly the same, but it was delicious and I hope Eliza will agree.

Amish Friendship Bread – Low Carb and Gluten-Free
Ingredients
Starter:
- 1 cup whole milk
- 2 tbsp lemon juice
- 1 cup almond flour
- 1/2 cup Swerve Sweetener or granulated erythritol
Bread:
- 2 cups almond flour, divided
- 1 cup Swerve Sweetener or granulated erythritol, divided
- 1/2 cup oil, I used grapeseed
- 3 large eggs
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 1 small box sugar-free vanilla pudding mix
- 1/3 cup unflavoured whey protein powder
- 1/4 cup coconut flour
- 2 tsp baking powder
- 1 tsp baking soda
- 1 tsp ground cinnamon
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 1/2 cup chopped nuts
Topping:
- 1 tbsp Swerve Sweetener or granulated erythritol
- 1 tsp ground cinnamon
Instructions
- For the starter, combine whole milk and lemon juice in a medium bowl and let thicken 10 minutes.
- Add almond flour and granulated erythritol and stir to combine.
- Transfer to a ziploc bag and remove as much air as possible. Then seal bag and allow to sit on counter for 3 days (see notes), massaging to mix ingredients 2 to 3 times a day.
- On the 4th day, preheat oven to 325F and grease a 9 x 5 inch loaf pan very well.
- Pour starter into a large bowl. Add one cup almond flour, 1/2 cup granulated erythritol, oil, eggs and vanilla extract and mix well. Set aside.
- In a medium bowl, whisk together remaining 1 cup almond flour, remaining 1/2 cup granulated erythritol, vanilla pudding mix, whey protein powder, coconut flour, baking powder, baking soda, cinnamon and salt.
- Add dry ingredients to starter mixture and stir until fully combined. Pour into prepared loaf pan.
- For the topping, in a small bowl, whisk together granulated erythritol and cinnamon. Sprinkle over batter in pan.
- Bake 50-60 minutes or until loaf is cooked through and a tester inserted in the center comes out clean. If you find that your loaf is browning too quickly, cover with foil for the last 15 to 20 minutes of baking.
- *Please note that you are trying to sour the milk in this recipe. If you have concerns regarding the safety of doing so, simply add 2 more tbsp of lemon juice and continue directly to next step. It may not be as "authentic" but it should still taste great.
Notes
Nutritional Disclaimer
Please note that I am not a medical or nutritional professional. I am simply recounting and sharing my own experiences on this blog. Nothing I express here should be taken as medical advice and you should consult with your doctor before starting any diet or exercise program. I provide nutritional information for my recipes simply as a courtesy to my readers. It is calculated using MacGourmet software and I remove erythritol from the final carb count and net carb count, as it does not affect my own blood glucose levels. I do my best to be as accurate as possible but you should independently calculate nutritional information on your own before relying on them. I expressly disclaim any and all liability of any kind with respect to any act or omission wholly or in part in reliance on anything contained in this website.
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Just baked this today and i gotta say ” WOW “so moist and delicious! Even looks like your picture !Mine took a extra 10 minutes to bake but that’s probably my oven. Will definitely make this again !! Thank you
Made this as directed. LOVED it! Cant wait to make it again. Thanks
I love this recipe! Would this still work if I used heavy whipping cream instead of milk in the starter? That would lower the carb count a little bit more.????
I can’t see why not!
I’m making this right now, and seem to have run into a problem. It’s been in the oven about twice the cooking time and it’s still not quite set. The only thing I did differently was to substitute out the coconut flour for oat fiber. (That’s my normal swap and haven’t had a problem in the past.) I’ve checked over everything else and can’t figure out what I’ve done wrong. Any ideas? Thanks for any help you can give me!
That would be a problem, because coconut flour is about two times as absorbent as oat fiber. So yes, that’s exactly what you did wrong…you should have reduced the liquid.
Thanks so much for your help!!!
Can I use soy milk instead of reg. Milk in in your low carb Amish friendship bread? I’m dairy intolerant and only like soy milk. I just can’t get my taste buds to like almond milk.
I honestly can’t say, I don’t use soy milk.
Can I use all almond flour, and what amount would I use? Thank you I love all your recipes. I at your blog every day.
I have a coconut sourdough starter.How can I make this bread with my starter
I have no idea!
Great recipe – but how do you divide it to share?
This looks so good! But I was wondering…..can I use cream instead of milk to lower the carb count?
I know this is a year and s half later, but try the filtered milks now on the market (Fairlife). They are higher protein, lower carb.
Hi Carolyn,
I went looking for a healthy Amish Friendship Bread recipe, and came upon yours–thank you! I have a couple questions. I am wanting to make this for Christmas to be able to give away a baked good that I love and that is not terribly unhealthy, so thanks again! We have a friend coming right after Christmas that is gluten free and dairy free!
1. What I could substitute for the whole milk that would still work well–almond milk? rice milk? then would I also add an oil?
2. I don’t see anything else in the recipe that is dairy, is that right?
3. Why do you use whole milk? Why not lowfat at least? If I want to use skim or 1% fat milk, how should I adjust the recipe?
Thank you for helping me,
I think you could use almond milk and not have to add anything. But the vanilla pudding mix may have dairy in it so I am not sure how that would do.
As someone on a low carb diet, I avoid low fat dairy. It has far more carbs and far less nutrition. Fat is good for you.
Thanks Carolyn! I’ll check out the pudding mix. Thanks too for your take on lowfat dairy.
Another question–I’m thinking the whey protein powder is dairy. Am I correct? What would you suggest in replacement?
Egg white protein powder.
Hey Carolyn! was thinking….what about just using buttermilk instead of having to sour the milk? It seems that would be the same. Especially if a person just wanted to make these without sharing a starter. My daughter just made the “Friendship Fruit Cake” that uses a starter of juices and fruit with sugar added for 30 days. They turned out so nice and I was wondering what we could do there for a replacement starter. The cake part itself, I’m sure, could be made with the recipe above minus the cinnamon. That starter is going to be the peel in the jam!!! Do you think cranberries mashed and let sit with swerve added would ferment the same and maybe a small amount of pineapple or fresh peach? Thanks for any help you can give me on this!!
I am pretty new to your blog, but I am not new to type II diabetes. I, too, had gestational diabetes that later became type II. Discovering your blog is one of the best things that has happened to me! I wish my doctor could have told me about your blog. I will, instead, tell him about it! And I will tell my friends with and without diabetes. I have often felt deprived of sweets since becoming diabetic. Your recipes have changed that. My non-diabetic husband is crazy about them too. So far, I have made Amish friendship bread twice and tonight I baked the mini loaves with cranberries and lime. I have my eye on the almond coated pound cake next. I’m going to look at entrees and and breakfast food too. Probably will try category! Thanks so much for helping me and others like me! My quality of life is better because of you!
Thank you, Suzanne, for telling me this! I really love hearing that my recipes help people.
I love your variation!
Wow, I can’t believe you were able to take that bread (which we love) and make it low-carb friendly. It looks and sounds amazing. One thing that the recipes for regular Amish friendship bread does now is use cinnamon sugar in place of flour for preparing the pans. It gives the sides and bottom the same yumminess as the top.
I love your recipes, and try out a lot of them, to my delight, but this one has me a bit worried. Sugar is a preservative, and when I have baked sugar free goods I find they need to be refrigerated or they go bad MUCH quicker than baked goods with sugar. Is it safe to use a mixture with milk on the counter, unrefrigerated for 4 days? Sugar would cause alcohols to form and that would make it safe to eat. Couldn’t there be a potentially high bacteria count in this mixture? I wouldn’t risk this one. I do love the idea though. I advise caution.
My whole family ate this without any problems. Keep in mind that it is baked after the milk has soured. But you could also simply double the lemon juice to get a sour taste more quickly and then make it, if you like. I was trying to stay true to the original recipe.
One other thought…sugar is a preservative for some things, but it also encourages bacterial growth, not inhibits it, particularly in a moist environment. So I don’t think that the original amish bread starter would be any safer! 🙂 But there are work-arounds here, like souring the milk more in the beginning and skipping the counter phase.
Oh wow. In my high-carb vegetarian days, I made an Amish loaf at least once a week. It was tremendously addictive.
I have been experimenting with fermenting low-carb batters like this lately (e.g. yeast waffles), so this bread method comes at a great time for me. I just hope I can resist the urge to eat entire loaves of this at a time…!
I am concerned about the sugar free pudding mix used in this recipe. Most of these mixes contain Splenda which is an absolute no-no.
I am not a fan of Splenda either, but this was a requested recipe and I chose to make it for my reader. I think it doesn’t hurt once in a very long while, but to each his own. You could skip it…it would probably still be very good.