If you’ve ever sat down at Longhorn Steakhouse and demolished that warm, dark, honey-sweet wheat bread before your entrée even arrived — this recipe is for you. This copycat Longhorn Steakhouse bread bakes up soft and pillowy on the inside with a thin, tender crust and that signature crackly grain topping, and it tastes even better than the loaves they bring to your table. Best of all, it’s a genuinely beginner-friendly yeast bread: two loaves, pantry ingredients, and no special equipment required.

I’ve tested this recipe more times than I can count, and I’ve built in every fix for the problems that trip people up with copycat versions of this bread — especially the dreaded “my dough won’t rise” issue. If you follow the temperature tips below, you’ll get a tall, fluffy loaf on the very first try.
If you love recreating restaurant bread at home, you’ll also want to try my Air Fryer Texas Roadhouse Rolls and my easy Air Fryer Whole Wheat Bread — both use the same simple yeast-dough technique you’ll learn here.
Why You’ll Love This Longhorn Bread Recipe
- Tastes just like the restaurant. Honey, buttermilk, and whole wheat flour give it that unmistakable sweet, nutty, slightly tangy Longhorn flavor.
- Makes two loaves. One for dinner tonight, one for sandwiches, French toast, or the freezer.
- Beginner-proof. Every step includes exact temperatures and visual cues, so you’re never guessing whether the dough is “ready.”
- Rise-guaranteed tips. I explain exactly why this style of dough can stall (spoiler: honey + hot liquid + wheat flour) and how to prevent it.
- No stand mixer needed. A bowl, a spoon, and your hands will do the job — though I include stand mixer timing too.

What Kind of Bread Does Longhorn Steakhouse Serve?
Longhorn Steakhouse serves a complimentary honey wheat bread — a soft, slightly sweet brown loaf made with whole wheat flour, honey, and a scattering of cracked grains baked onto the crust. It arrives warm with whipped butter, and it’s very similar in style to the famous brown bread at The Cheesecake Factory and the sweet rolls at Texas Roadhouse.
The magic is in the balance: enough whole wheat flour for a nutty, hearty flavor, enough honey to make it taste almost dessert-like, and buttermilk for a tender, moist crumb that stays soft for days. That’s exactly the balance this copycat recipe recreates.
Ingredients You’ll Need
Here’s everything that goes into this copycat Longhorn Steakhouse bread (exact amounts are in the recipe card below):

- Whole wheat flour — The backbone of the loaf. It gives the bread its color, nutty flavor, and hearty texture. Use regular whole wheat, not stone-ground coarse flour, for the softest crumb.
- All-purpose flour — Lightens the dough so the loaves rise tall and stay fluffy instead of dense.
- Active dry yeast — One standard packet plus a little extra. Check the expiration date — old yeast is the #1 cause of flat loaves.
- Buttermilk, warmed to 105–110°F — The secret to that tender, faintly tangy crumb. Temperature matters here more than anywhere else in the recipe.
- Honey — Sweetens the dough and helps the crust brown deeply. Any mild honey works.
- Butter, softened — Adds richness and keeps the bread soft. Do not melt it in hot form into the yeast mixture — hot butter can kill your yeast.
- Sugar — Just a pinch, used to jump-start (proof) the yeast.
- Salt — Essential for flavor and for controlling the yeast so the loaves rise evenly.
- Mixed grains or multigrain cereal — This is what creates the signature speckled, crunchy topping. A 7-grain or 10-grain hot cereal blend works perfectly; rolled oats plus a few sunflower seeds are a great substitute.
Pro tip: If you can’t find a multigrain cereal blend, pulse rolled oats, sunflower seeds, and a spoonful of flaxseed in a food processor for a few seconds. It gives you that same rustic steakhouse look and crunch.
How to Make Longhorn Steakhouse Bread
This recipe makes two loaves in five straightforward stages. Full measurements and printable instructions are in the recipe card at the bottom of the post.

Step 1: Warm the buttermilk to 105–110°F — warm to the touch, never hot. (Buttermilk scorches and separates easily, so heat it gently on the stove or in short microwave bursts and stir well.) Whisk in the yeast and a pinch of sugar, then let it sit for 10 minutes until visibly foamy.
This step is your insurance policy. If the mixture doesn’t foam, your yeast is dead or your milk was too hot — stop and start over with fresh yeast rather than baking bricks. This single check prevents almost every failed loaf.

Step 2: In a large bowl, whisk together the whole wheat flour, 1 cup of the all-purpose flour, the remaining sugar, and the salt. Pour in the foamy yeast mixture, honey, and softened butter, and stir until a shaggy dough forms. Add more all-purpose flour a tablespoon at a time just until the dough pulls away from the bowl — it should stay slightly tacky. A too-dry dough is the second biggest cause of dense wheat bread.
Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured surface and knead for 10–12 minutes by hand (or 7–8 minutes in a stand mixer with the dough hook) until smooth, elastic, and springy. Whole wheat doughs genuinely need the full kneading time — the bran in wheat flour cuts gluten strands, so don’t shortchange this step.

Step 3: Shape the dough into a ball and place it in a lightly oiled bowl, turning once to coat. Cover with a damp towel or plastic wrap and let it rise in a warm (75–80°F), draft-free spot for 60–90 minutes, until doubled.
Best warm spots: an oven with just the light on, a microwave with a mug of steaming water inside, or on top of a running dryer. If your kitchen is cold, the dough will rise — it just needs more time, sometimes up to 2 hours. Judge by size, not the clock.

Step 4: Punch the dough down gently and divide it in half. Pat each half into a roughly 7×5-inch rectangle, then roll it up tightly from the long side, pinching the seam and ends closed. Place the loaves seam-side down on a parchment-lined baking sheet (or into two greased 8.5×4.5-inch loaf pans for taller sandwich-style loaves).
Brush the tops lightly with water and sprinkle generously with the mixed grains, pressing gently so they stick. Cover loosely and let rise 30–45 minutes, until puffy and nearly doubled.

Step 5: Preheat the oven to 375°F (190°C). Slash 3–4 shallow diagonal cuts across each loaf with a sharp knife, then bake for 25–30 minutes, until deep golden brown. The loaves are done when they sound hollow tapped on the bottom and an instant-read thermometer hits 190–200°F in the center.
Cool at least 15 minutes before slicing (I know — but slicing hot bread gums up the crumb). Serve warm with whipped butter or, for the full steakhouse fantasy, a batch of my Copycat Texas Roadhouse Butter — that sweet cinnamon-honey butter is unbelievable on this bread.

My Top Tips for Bread That Actually Rises
Copycat versions of this recipe are notorious for rise failures, so here’s exactly how to avoid them:
- Temperature is everything. Liquid above 120°F kills yeast; below 95°F it barely wakes up. Use an instant-read thermometer for the buttermilk — 105–110°F is the sweet spot.
- Always proof the yeast first. No foam after 10 minutes = no bake. Replace the yeast and try again. This costs you 10 minutes; a failed loaf costs you 3 hours.
- Don’t add honey directly onto raw yeast. In high concentration, honey can slow yeast activity. Mixing it into the flour with the other wet ingredients (as written here) keeps the yeast happy.
- Keep the dough tacky, not dry. Whole wheat flour keeps absorbing water for several minutes after mixing. If you flour the dough until it’s completely non-stick, your bread will be dense.
- Give cold kitchens more time. In winter, a first rise can take 2+ hours. The dough is ready when it’s doubled — full stop.
- High altitude? Reduce the yeast by ¼ teaspoon and expect faster rises. Watch the dough, not the timer.
Can I Make This Bread in the Air Fryer?
Yes — and if you don’t want to heat up the whole oven for two loaves, it works beautifully. Make the dough exactly as written, but shape it into one round boule (or two small loaves baked in batches). Air fry at 350°F for 22–28 minutes, tenting with foil for the last 5–10 minutes if the grain topping is browning too fast, until the internal temperature reaches 190°F.
I bake bread in my air fryer constantly — if you want to go deeper down that rabbit hole, my Air Fryer White Bread is the perfect starter loaf, and my Air Fryer Sourdough Bread will make you question why you ever preheated an oven.

Serving Suggestions
This honey wheat bread is the ultimate steakhouse-dinner-at-home side. My favorite pairings:
- A full Longhorn copycat night: Serve it alongside my Air Fryer Longhorn Parmesan Chicken or my Air Fryer Parmesan Crusted Steak — with warm bread on the table, nobody will believe you didn’t order out.
- Texas Roadhouse-style: Pair with a Texas Roadhouse Loaded Sweet Potato and slather every slice with cinnamon honey butter.
- Breakfast: Day-old slices make phenomenal French toast — the honey in the dough caramelizes at the edges. Or keep it simple, like my Air Fryer Honey Toast.
- Sandwiches: Baked in loaf pans, this bread slices cleanly for turkey, ham, or grilled cheese.
- Holiday tables: Skip the tube of store-bought rolls — one batch of this plus my Air Fryer Herb Butter Dinner Rolls covers the whole bread basket.
Substitutions and Variations
- No buttermilk? Stir 2 teaspoons of lemon juice or white vinegar into ¾ cup of regular milk and let it sit 5 minutes. Works perfectly.
- Instant yeast: Swap 1:1. You can skip the proofing step, but I still recommend it — it’s your quality check.
- Molasses twist: Replace 1 tablespoon of the honey with molasses for a darker, Cheesecake-Factory-style loaf, similar to my Air Fryer Boston Brown Bread.
- Dinner rolls: Divide the dough into 16 pieces instead of 2 loaves, and bake 15–18 minutes at 375°F.
- Dairy-free: Use plant butter and unsweetened oat milk + 2 teaspoons vinegar in place of the buttermilk.

How to Store, Freeze, and Reheat
- Storing: Cool the loaves completely, then store in a bread bag or airtight container at room temperature for up to 4 days. Don’t refrigerate — the fridge stales bread faster.
- Freezing: This bread freezes like a champ. Wrap whole loaves (or pre-sliced portions) tightly in plastic wrap, then foil or a freezer bag, for up to 3 months. Thaw at room temperature.
- Freezing the dough: After the first rise, shape the loaves, wrap tightly, and freeze. Thaw overnight in the fridge, let rise at room temperature until doubled (2–3 hours), top with grains, and bake as directed.
- Reheating: Wrap in foil and warm at 300°F for 10 minutes, or toast individual slices. A 2–3 minute pass in the air fryer at 320°F brings back that fresh-from-the-basket warmth.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Longhorn Steakhouse bread free? Yes — Longhorn serves its honey wheat bread complimentary with dine-in meals, along with whipped butter. This recipe means you never have to ration your slices again.
Why didn’t my dough rise? Nine times out of ten it’s one of three things: the buttermilk was too hot and killed the yeast, the yeast was expired, or the kitchen was too cold and the dough simply needed more time. Always proof the yeast first (Step 1), verify liquid temperature with a thermometer, and judge the rise by dough size rather than the clock.
What are the “mixed grains” on top of Longhorn bread? A multigrain blend — cracked wheat, oats, barley, millet, and seeds. Any 7-grain or 10-grain hot cereal mix from the baking aisle recreates it, or make your own with rolled oats, sunflower seeds, and flaxseed.
Do the grains go on before or after baking? Before. Brush the shaped loaves with a little water, press the grains on, then bake — the water glues them to the crust so they toast up crunchy instead of falling off.
Can I use only whole wheat flour? You can, but expect a denser, shorter loaf. The all-purpose flour is what keeps this bread soft and fluffy like the restaurant version. For a 100% whole wheat method, see my Air Fryer Whole Wheat Bread — it’s built for that flour from the ground up.
Can I make the dough in a bread machine? Yes — add the ingredients in your machine’s recommended order, run the dough cycle, then shape, top with grains, rise, and bake in the oven as written.
How many calories are in Longhorn Steakhouse bread? A full restaurant loaf runs roughly 1,400+ calories, but a homemade slice from this recipe comes in around 145 calories — and you control every ingredient.
Is this the same as Texas Roadhouse or Cheesecake Factory bread? They’re cousins, not twins. Texas Roadhouse rolls are white, buttery, and glazed (get my Air Fryer Texas Roadhouse Rolls here), and Cheesecake Factory’s brown bread leans on molasses and cocoa for a darker color. Longhorn’s is the honey-forward wheat version — the one this recipe nails.

More Copycat Restaurant Recipes to Try
- Air Fryer Longhorn Parmesan Chicken
- Air Fryer Parmesan Crusted Steak (Longhorn Style)
- Air Fryer Texas Roadhouse Rolls
- Copycat Texas Roadhouse Butter
- Texas Roadhouse Loaded Sweet Potato
Made this bread? Leave a ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ rating and a comment below — and tell me whether your loaves survived until dinner. Mine rarely do.

Longhorn Steakhouse Bread (Copycat Honey Wheat Bread)
Description
Ingredients
Dough:
- ¾ cup buttermilk, warmed to 105–110°F
- 2¼ teaspoons active dry yeast, 1 packet
- 1 teaspoon granulated sugar, divided
- 1⅓ cups whole wheat flour
- 1 to 1½ cups all-purpose flour, divided
- 1 teaspoon fine sea salt
- ⅓ cup honey
- 2 tablespoons unsalted butter, softened
Topping:
- ¼ cup mixed grains or multigrain hot cereal blend, 7-grain or 10-grain
- 1 tablespoon water, for brushing
Instructions
- Proof the yeast. Warm the buttermilk to 105–110°F. Whisk in the yeast and a pinch of the sugar; let stand 10 minutes until foamy. If it doesn’t foam, start over with fresh yeast.
- Make the dough. In a large bowl, whisk the whole wheat flour, 1 cup all-purpose flour, remaining sugar, and salt. Add the yeast mixture, honey, and softened butter; stir into a shaggy dough. Add remaining all-purpose flour 1 tablespoon at a time until the dough pulls from the bowl but stays slightly tacky.
- Knead. Knead on a lightly floured surface 10–12 minutes by hand (or 7–8 minutes on medium in a stand mixer) until smooth and elastic.
- First rise. Place in an oiled bowl, turn to coat, cover, and rise in a warm (75–80°F) spot for 60–90 minutes, until doubled.
- Shape. Punch down and divide in half. Pat each half into a 7×5-inch rectangle and roll up tightly from the long side; pinch seams closed. Place seam-side down on a parchment-lined baking sheet or in greased 8.5×4.5-inch loaf pans.
- Top and second rise. Brush tops with water and press on the mixed grains. Cover loosely and rise 30–45 minutes, until puffy.
- Bake. Preheat oven to 375°F (190°C). Slash 3–4 shallow cuts across each loaf. Bake 25–30 minutes, until deep golden and 190–200°F internally.
- Cool and serve. Cool 15 minutes, slice, and serve warm with whipped butter or honey cinnamon butter.
Equipment
- Large mixing bowl (or stand mixer with dough hook)
- Instant-read thermometer (highly recommended)
- Baking sheet + parchment paper, or two 8.5×4.5-inch loaf pans
Notes
- Air fryer method: Shape into one boule; air fry at 350°F for 22–28 minutes to 190°F internal, tenting with foil if browning too fast.
- Buttermilk sub: ¾ cup milk + 2 teaspoons lemon juice or vinegar, rested 5 minutes.
- Storage: Room temperature up to 4 days; freeze up to 3 months.
- Rolls: Divide into 16 pieces; bake 15–18 minutes at 375°F.
Nutrition
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