Introduction: Halloween Brimstone Bread
I love making brimstone bread. Between the dark crunchy topping and the soft inner core, it’s perfect for everything from sandwiches, to burgers, to just slathering with butter and eating warm from the oven.
Rumor has it, when demons in Hell make this bread, they roll the dough in the deep pits of sulfur and soul dust and cook them in the hot brimstone vents. Unfortunately, as you are mortal and have neither access to soul dust or brimstone vents, I’ve had to make a few adjustments to the recipe for you.
While these rolls aren’t actually “Hell Authentic,” they’re close enough to get the job done.
Step 1: Gather Your Ingredients
To make your own brimstone bread you will need:
- 1 box instant bread mix
- 2 Tablespoons active dry yeast
- 1 cup warm water (between 105/115F)
- 2 Tablespoons sugar
- 2 Tablespoons vegetable oil
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 1 1/2 Cups rice flour
- Black food coloring or activated charcoal*
- Red food coloring
*Activated charcoal can present problems for anyone who is on certain medications. While the activated charcoal does turn food a fantastically dark black color, it's better to be safe than sorry. For more information on charcoal and how it interacts with medication, check out this link. When in doubt, use a black liquid or gel food coloring.
Step 2: Get the Dough Ball Rolling
Start by first making your boxed bread mix according to the directions. Add enough red food coloring to the dough to bring it to a deep dark blood red.
Divide your dough into 12 small balls. Place the balls onto a cookie sheet and cover with a damp towel.
Allow to rise for as long as the directions on your box mix indicate.
Step 3: Brimstone Black Topping Is the Secret to This Bread
While your bread balls are rising, it’s time to make the topping. In your mixer, combine the yeast, sugar, oil, salt and rice flour. Mix your black food coloring in with your water and add that to the mix. You want your topping to be as black as you can make it, so feel free to be liberal with the food coloring. You can also augment the blackness with activated charcoal if you have that, but I wouldn’t add more than three capsules as that can change the flavor of the bread later on (please see the disclaimer in step 1 if you plan on using charcoal and are on any medications).
The topping should be thick and sticky, but still fluid enough to slowly ooze and drip off the end of your whisk.
Cover and allow to sit for 15 minutes.
Take a big old wad of your black topping and smear it all over the top and sides of your red dough balls. Don’t worry about it being too thick, you’re better off erring on the side of too much than not enough. If the topping is too thin, it won’t crackle the way you want it to. You could do this with a knife or a spoon, but trust me when I say it’s so much easier to just use your (clean, washed and dried) hands.
Let stand, uncovered, for another 15 minutes. This allows the topping to really adhere to your dough balls.
Step 4: Mmm...disgustingly Delicious!
Cook your bread according to the directions on your box mix, making sure that the pan is on the center rack of your oven.
As it cooks, your topping will crisp up and shrink back, creating the deep cracks and fissures that make brimstone bread so distinctive.
Once they’re done cooking, allow to cool until they are comfortable to handle. Once you can touch them without burning yourself, crack one open, slab on a fat slice of butter, and enjoy your brimstone bread!
If you want even more creepy recipes like this for Halloween, swing by my main Instructables page or check out my horror themed food blog, The Necro Nom-nom-nomicon.
Bone appetite!

Grand Prize in the
Baking Contest 2017

Participated in the
Halloween Contest 2017
46 Comments
1 year ago
Does this work just as well with homemade bread dough? I don’t know how that would compare in rising to a box mix as I’ve never used one. Should it double in size for the effect to work?
2 years ago
Hi,
I tried this recipe with red food colouring but the dough was more magenta/pink and I used half the bottle. Any suggestions?
Thank you
Reply 2 years ago
Hello! What type of dye did you use? I've noticed that some dyes tend to be less intense than others. For really good solid colors, I suggest giving a gel dye a try if the store-bought liquid ones aren't giving you the color you want. Not only is the color more intense, but as a gel, you aren't adding as much liquid to your mix which can sometimes cause issues with the recipe as well. Wilton makes amazing gel colors. I really like either the Wilton Christmas Red or the Wilton No-taste Red. Both are fabulously deep in color and a little bit goes a long way.
I hope this helps!
Reply 2 years ago
Thank you!! I will give the gel a try. I just used the Club House Red Food Coloring.
5 years ago
I'm doing this for Halloween! Awesome!!
5 years ago
Those look great! Definitely will be making this next Halloween
5 years ago
Your instructables are centered on food a category I mostly ignore. That said very well executed. I like the cover photo
5 years ago
we r huge fans of Hallowe'en so this is so helpfu!
Reply 5 years ago
Yay! Glad to help!
5 years ago
ok I tried the blondie base and it worked! But we ate it to fast so I couldn’t take a picture. But it tasted good though ! I credited u in my Diary.
,
5 years ago
Just WOW! You are a pro at all Halloween foods :D
Reply 5 years ago
Thank you! It's my passion. :) Glad to share!
Reply 5 years ago
I have a question.why if you put to much food coloring,you can taste it?
Reply 5 years ago
It depends entirely on how much you use and what kind you use. For some colors, specifically red, it can have a very bitter taste. If you're using a lot of red to bring a food to a deep hue, it's entirely possible to taste the bitter food coloring. For this reason, I use gel food colors from Wilton. They are so concentrated that a little goes a long way and you run a much lower risk of tasting them.
Reply 5 years ago
wilton has no taste red gel color . use that !
Reply 5 years ago
Thank you!
Reply 5 years ago
ok thank you!
5 years ago
Wow! Those look amazing, I'd have never have thought of doing that - well done.
Is it perhaps worth adding a note about being cautious with activated charcoal if you are on certain medications? There is a long list of common and not so common drugs which do not play nice with charcoal:
https://www.drugs.com/drug-interactions/charcoal,a...
Reply 5 years ago
You are absolutely 100% correct and this should be included. Thank you! I'm putting it into the Instructable right now.
5 years ago
I thought it was a brownie... I just really like desserts xD