Anadama bread is a traditional New England yeast bread made from a combination of wheat flour, cornmeal, and molasses. Distinguished by its golden-orange crumb, slightly sweet flavor, and tender texture, anadama bread has been a regional specialty of Massachusetts and the broader New England coast since the mid-nineteenth century.
Popular Recipes and Regional Variations
The classic anadama bread uses a base of bread flour enriched with yellow cornmeal (typically 15–20% of the total flour weight) and dark molasses, leavened with commercial yeast. The cornmeal contributes a golden color and subtle gritty texture, while the molasses adds moisture, a malty sweetness, and a distinctive dark caramel flavor that sets the bread apart from standard white or wheat loaves. Butter and sometimes an egg enrich the dough further.
Rockport, Massachusetts claims to be the birthplace of anadama bread, and local bakeries in Cape Ann continue to produce traditional versions. The Rockport style tends toward a softer, more cake-like crumb with a higher proportion of molasses and butter. Further north in Maine and New Hampshire, versions skew slightly drier and denser, sometimes incorporating whole wheat flour alongside the cornmeal for a heartier, more rustic character.
Modern artisan variations have experimented with the basic formula. Some bakers substitute sorghum syrup or dark honey for molasses, while others add seeds (sunflower, flax) or replace standard cornmeal with stone-ground or blue cornmeal for visual distinction. Anadama bread also translates well to rolls and sandwich loaves, where the slight sweetness and tender crumb complement both savory and sweet fillings.
Preparation Technology
In a medium saucepan, combine 150 g yellow cornmeal with 350 ml water and 30 g butter. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly, for 3–4 minutes until the mixture thickens to a porridge-like consistency. This pre-cooking step gelatinizes the cornmeal starch, ensuring a smooth, tender crumb rather than a gritty texture in the finished bread. Remove from heat, stir in 80 g dark molasses and 1.5 teaspoons salt. Let cool to 40–45°C.
In a large mixing bowl, dissolve 7 g (1 packet) instant dry yeast in 60 ml warm water (38°C). Add the cooled cornmeal mixture and 1 beaten egg. Gradually add 400–450 g bread flour, mixing until a soft, slightly tacky dough forms. The dough will be stickier than standard white bread dough due to the cornmeal and molasses — resist the temptation to add excess flour, as too much produces a dry, dense loaf.
Knead on a lightly floured surface for 8–10 minutes until the dough is smooth, elastic, and passes the windowpane test (a small piece stretches thin enough to see light through without tearing). Place in a greased bowl, cover, and let rise in a warm place (26–28°C) for 1–1.5 hours until doubled in volume. The molasses sugars provide extra food for the yeast, so the rise may be slightly faster than standard bread dough.
Punch down, shape into a round boule or place in a greased 23×13 cm loaf pan. Cover and proof for 45–60 minutes until the dough rises 2–3 cm above the pan rim. Bake at 190°C for 35–40 minutes until the internal temperature reaches 93–95°C and the crust is deep golden brown. The molasses caramelizes during baking, producing a darker crust than typical white bread. Cool on a wire rack for at least 30 minutes before slicing.
Tips and Common Mistakes
Pre-cooking the cornmeal is the most frequently skipped step and the most important one. Raw cornmeal in bread dough does not hydrate fully during baking, producing a gritty, sandy texture that detracts from the bread’s appeal. The brief stovetop cooking gelatinizes the starch and ensures the cornmeal integrates smoothly into the crumb. Allow the cooked mixture to cool adequately before adding yeast — temperatures above 50°C will kill the yeast.
Molasses quality varies significantly between brands and grades. Dark or robust molasses provides the strongest, most authentic flavor. Light molasses is too mild, while blackstrap molasses is excessively bitter and can inhibit yeast activity due to its high mineral and acid content. If only blackstrap is available, reduce the quantity by one-third and add 1 tablespoon of brown sugar to compensate.
The bread benefits from a slightly longer bake than visual appearance suggests. The molasses darkens the crust prematurely, tempting bakers to remove the bread too early. Use an instant-read thermometer — the internal temperature must reach 93°C for a fully baked, non-gummy interior. For more on American breads and world baking, see our A-Z Encyclopedia of Food Products and Dishes.
History and Cultural Significance
The origin of anadama bread is wrapped in New England folklore. The most popular legend tells of a Rockport fisherman whose wife, Anna, served him nothing but cornmeal mush and molasses. In frustration, he threw the ingredients into bread dough, muttering “Anna, damn her!” — hence the name. While almost certainly apocryphal, this story has been repeated in New England cookbooks and local histories since the late nineteenth century and remains part of the bread’s cultural identity.
Historically, anadama bread reflects the practical ingenuity of New England coastal communities. Cornmeal and molasses were inexpensive, shelf-stable pantry staples available year-round, making this bread an economical alternative to pure wheat loaves during periods when wheat flour was expensive or scarce. The bread’s keeping quality — the molasses and fat content slow staling — made it particularly useful for fishing families provisioning for multi-day trips.
Today, anadama bread remains a regional specialty with a devoted following in Massachusetts, Maine, and Connecticut. Several New England bakeries continue to produce it, and the bread appears regularly at farmers’ markets and community bake sales. The New England culinary heritage movement has helped preserve anadama bread as a living tradition, and food historians have documented it as one of the few distinctly American bread recipes developed before the twentieth century.