Great grandma's Dilly Bread
Family recipes give special meaning to the phrase “living history.” The following Dilly Bread recipe comes from Kaye Phillips of the Swiss Community Historical Society (SwissHistorical.org). While a similar recipe was made famous in 1960 as a winning Pillsbury Bake-Off entry, this version of a yeasted, cottage cheese-based bread has distinctly local roots. Kaye explains:
Baking Dilly Bread can give your home the aroma of years gone by. The flavor and versatility makes this recipe a favorite in our family.
Dilly bread was made with ingredients readily available on the farms and gardens of our grandparents in the Swiss Settlement. Eggs came from the hen house. Cottage cheese was made using extra cream and milk from the cows. Dill and onion were plentiful in the gardens.
Using the same ingredients as my Great Grandmother Emma Kiener Gerber and Great Aunt Lucille Gerber Hochstettler, I changed a few steps to make this bread easier to make. I grow my own dill and onion, buying all of the other ingredients at the local grocery.
Dilly Bread
1 package of yeast
1/4 cup of warm water
1 cup creamy cottage cheese
1 tablespoon minced onion
2 tablespoons sugar
1 teaspoon dill seed
1 teaspoon salt
1 beaten egg
2 1/2 cups flour
Coarse salt and a small amount of butter for the top
Use a large bowl to dissolve the yeast in the warm water. Warm up the cottage cheese to lukewarm. (I use the microwave.) Add yeast and water mixture, but do not stir. Also add onion, sugar, dill and salt. Stir this mixture together. Add in beaten egg and flour. Knead mixture in a large bowl. (I use disposable rubber gloves to make this process smooth.) Let rise for one hour.
Then stir down and shape in a bread pan that is sprayed with oil. Let rise again for one hour. Bake at 400 degrees for 5 minutes, then turn the oven down to 350 degrees and bake for 40-50 minutes. After taking out of the oven, coat the bread top with butter or margarine. (I just use a part of a stick of butter and go back and forth over the bread and watch it melt.) Sprinkle the top with coarse salt. Take out of the pan to cool. Enjoy!
Note: I usually make multiple loaves at once. I heat up the cottage cheese in the carton to save time. Each loaf has its own bowl.
Please let me know if you try this recipe or if it brings back memories. Also, if you look closely at the photograph of the dill, there is something else hiding in the photo. -- Kaye Phillips
Share your comments with Kaye on the original Facebook post.
Stories Posted This Week
Wednesday, May 14, 2025
- Classifieds cost: $1/day, minimum 10 days for money-making ads, others are free
- Bluffton softball defeats Bearcats; Cross makes 1st team NWC
- Bluffton-Pandora garden club meeting topics for 2025
- Recap of Bluffton Council for May 12
- CNB gift to Legacy Park for a U12 field
- 100-day cough: Health alert for Pertussis
- Mark your calendar: Events for BHS Seniors
Tuesday, May 13, 2025
- Ticket information for Pirate tennis, May 15 sectionals
- Pirate tennis dominates Defiance
- Historical society meets May 14 at Sportsmen's Club/LE&W Depot
- Red horse chestnut wows on Anna Circle
- Redemptorists to withdraw from region, Father John Collins to visit St. Mary
- Meet high school basketball legend Bud Beemer
Monday, May 12, 2025
- BPL's Summer Read kicks off with 2 giveaways
- Upcoming BPL events, May 12-17
- BHS girls softball sectional ticket information for May 14
- Faculty promotions, new strategic plans at Bluffton University
- Jane M. Shaw was a nurse
- Pirate baseball seeded 5th
- Letter: Join the Congressional discussion on healthcare
- Facilitators needed for victim offender dialogues
Sunday, May 11, 2025
- Pirate baseballs shuts out Arcadia in twin bill
- Bluffton boys, girls track and field sweep Ada Invite titles
- Bluffton strings section holds court
- Pirate tennis wins at Oak Harbor
- Bluffton Community Garden has a few plots left
- Four BHS students to attend Buckeye Boys and Buckeye Girls citizenship programs