This is the first in a series of posts on Fertility Diet Friendly Recipes. Most of these recipes are also Keto, Whole 30, Paleo, Banting, LCHF, Auto-Immune Protocol and Clean Eating Friendly! All recipes are gluten-free, dairy-free, sugar-free, and free of all harmful and toxic ingredients.
**Whole30 Note: Although this bread is compliant with the ingredients of Whole30, Whole30 requires that for the first 30 days you don’t bake anything with compliant ingredients. It is something about the psychological aspect of the program. So, if you’re in your first 30 days, don’t let me be the one who gets you in trouble!
Table of Contents
Keto Bread for Fertility
This High-Fat bread is a saving grace when you are on a gluten free diet but need a heavy hitting breakfast that is pre-prepared. It adheres to these diets: Keto, LCHF, Paleo, Banting, and Clean-Eating. And, of course, FERTILITY. This is especially great for women with PCOS who need to stay extra low-carb!
Whether you have it for a to-go breakfast or have it as an afternoon snack it is a great way to make sure you are getting your organic pasture raised eggs every day, even when you don’t have time to scramble them up in the morning!
This is also a very, very, simple bread to make It packs a punch with each slice having a solid 261 calories per serving. Although you can use it for sandwiches, burgers, etc., there are so many calories in a single slice that I prefer it as a stand-alone snack or breakfast. When I’ve tried to eat it with other meals I am too full to eat anything else.
This bread is a great way to help keep you on track to meet your fertility macros! If you haven’t read my blog post on the ideal macros for fertility, according to recent research, go check it out!
When I have this for a to-go breakfast, I follow up within an hour or 2 with a fertility smoothie packed with berries, greens, and more proteins and fats, so its easy to make it until lunch.
It looks beautiful, and slices even better. Personally, I think it tastes like chocolate cake, but that is probably because I’ve been off of sugar for months and months!
To be clear, this recipe is not my own, I did not originate it- I just altered it! It is slightly different from recipes I found at two blogs- Free the Animal and Cooking Caveman. They both did the heavy lifting of finding ingredients that worked.
Why should you eat a low-carb, high-protein and high-fat bread?
If you’ve landed on this website you probably already know how harmful simple white carbohyrates can be for health and fertility. Unfortunately, so many other foods can be harmful for fertility as well that at some point you start to feel like you can’t eat anything.
First of all – that simply isn’t true! While trying to conceive (both times) I ate a diet rich in variety of fats, proteins, and yes, even carbs! I just picked them very carefully. Read my post here that describes my full fertility diet.
Ultimately, you will have to tailor a perfect fertility diet to YOU and your needs. Your diagnoses- both western and eastern – can change what you should be eating. But, I’ve never heard of a single diagnosis or fertility issue where you were supposed to eat white carbs!
In fact, the Harvard Nurses Study was the first ground breaking work to show that diets lower in simple carbohydrates lessen the rates of ovulatory infertility. They even wrote a book about it- you can get it at Amazon here: The Fertility Diet.
However, newer research shows that it isn’t enough to just avoid simple carbohydrates, and that controlling the total amount of carbohydrates you eat can boost fertility.
This research, by Dr. Jeffrey Russell, in NJ, shows that once women consume 30% or more of their diet as protein, and 40% or less as carbohydrates, they had FOUR TIMES the pregnancy success rates of those who ate more carbs and less protein.
All of this is just to convince you that you need more protein and fat and less carbs.
But, I know you want bread. Heck, I want bread. Enter, this recipe.
Why is this fertility bread good for me?
When you eliminate foods such as dairy, gluten, and processed food from your diet (like I did), it gets tricky to plan means! But don’t, worry, I’m going to help you figure it out! This bread is a nice way to supplement your daily meals so that you get enough protein and fat and keep your carbs low. It fits into my sample daily fertility meal plan!
Each slice has about 24g of fat, 8 grams of protein, and 8 grams of carbs. So although this is part of my series on hitting your daily fertility macronutrient ratio goal of at least 35% protein and less than 40% carbs, you need to make sure you get plenty of other sources of protein throughout your day!
This recipe is also filled with foods very beneficial for fertility. Almonds are packed with protein, healthy fats (including Omega 3s), Vitamin E, and amino acids. Coconut butter is packed with medium-chain triglyceride fatty acids that can help balance your blood sugar, manage your thyroid, up your weight loss, and help you get pregnant.
Organic, pasture raised eggs are one of the best fertility foods out there. They have high-quality protein, fats, vitamins, and minerals. When you buy organic and pasture raised you are also getting eggs packed with much needed omega-3 fatty acids. Enjoy without regret!
You can also make this recipe with ALL almond (or other nut) butter and nix the coconut butter. It ups the protein and lowers the fat a bit.
*This post contains affiliate links which at no cost to you provide me with some small change to help keep this blog running! If you decide to buy something I recommend, please consider clicking through one of my links to help support this blog and my family! Thank you!
UPDATE: My readers have been experimenting with this recipe and have found success with all sorts of fun ingredients including: berries, orange or lemon zest, ground flax (pre-ovulation only for seed cycling), goji berries, sliced almonds, and more.
Additionally, some have made these into muffins. They cook for just 15 minutes in regular size muffin tins.
The super-easy recipe for the fertility bread!
Note: You can make this we any kind of nut butter you want!
Fertility Bread
- Total Time: 50 minutes
- Yield: 10 slices 1x
Description
A delicious, super easy, high-fat, low-carb keto bread to keep you full while on the fertility diet! Good for Clean eating, Paleo, Banting, and LCHF diets, in addition to fertility and Keto! Grain free, Gluten Free, Dairy Free, but delicious!
Ingredients
- 5 organic, pasture raised eggs (4 if they are huge)
- 3/4 cup organic coconut butter
- 3/4 cup of organic, unsweetened almond butter, cashew butter, or other nut butter
- 1 1/2 Tbsp Apple Cider Vinegar (like Braggs- on that is “with the mother”)
- 3/4 Tsp Baking Soda
- 1/4 Tsp fine Sea Salt
Instructions
- Blend the coconut butter, almond butter and eggs until smooth.
- Add in other ingredients and mix.
- Grease a non-toxic 8.25 x 4.5 loaf pan (we use glass) with coconut oil, and pour ingredients in.
- Bake at 350 for 35 – 45 minutes.Check that it is done with a toothpick – if it comes out goey, it needs more time, if it comes out with just crumbs, it is done.
- Slice after it has cooled.
- Keep in the fridge- it stays good for a week!
- Enjoy!
Notes
You can substitute any amount of nut butters and coconut butters as long as you have a total of 1.5 cups of butters. I’ve made it with mixed amounts of almond butter, peanut butter, cashew butter, macadamia butter, and coconut butter. Some of my readers have made it with nut-free seed butter as well!
You can pre-slice and freeze the slices for grab-on-the-go if you can’t eat all ten slices in a week.
This recipe is incredibly flexible. You can add spices, berries, etc., and it seems to work out fine!
- Prep Time: 10
- Cook Time: 40
- Category: Keto Bread Recipe
- Method: Baking
- Cuisine: Breakfast, Healthy Snacks
Nutrition
- Serving Size: 1 Slice
- Calories: 263
- Sugar: 3.6 g
- Sodium: 260.4 mg
- Fat: 21.7 g
- Saturated Fat: 3.2 g
- Unsaturated Fat: 16.8 g
- Trans Fat: 0
- Carbohydrates: 8.9 g
- Fiber: 3.6 g
- Protein: 10.2 g
- Cholesterol: 92.5 mg
Want to get pregnant fast?
Love lists? Me too. Grab my 79 Things I did to transform my life and get pregnant in less than 3 months after 2 years of infertility and miscarriages! Totally free!
Anna Rapp is a fertility journalist and non-toxic living expert. When Anna Rapp was struggling with infertility and recurrent early miscarriage, she was diagnosed with diminished ovarian reserve, High FSH, low AMH, low follicle count, endometriosis, and an MTHFR mutation. Despite being told donor eggs were her only solution, Anna used her graduate training in research methods and analysis to read everything she could find on fertility and egg health. Ultimately, she lowered her FSH and got pregnant naturally (twice). She blogs about how she did it and encourages her readers to take charge of their fertility journey and get happy, healthy, and pregnant!
Noemie R
I wanna try! But I don’t think I can find coconut butter in my grocery store…. Can I switch with coconut oil or it will be too liquid??
Another question… have you tried to freeze it?
Anna
Hi Noemie!! You have to try, its sooo yummy! So you have a bunch of options. You can make it just with almond butter (or peanut, macademia, or cashew butter) and skip the coconut butter altogether. You can also make your own coconut butter — google a recipe! Don’t use coconut oil- definitely too liquid.
I have not tried to freeze it, but I suspect it would be okay. It does fine in the fridge!
-Anna
Noemie R
Thank you so much! I will try it for sure!
Farheen
Hi can you make this just with coconut butter? I’m following AIP so can’t add nut or seed butter?
Emily
Made this to eat for the week and it’s great! Thanks for the easy recipe. I used the new Maranatha Coconut Almond butter since I can’t find Coconut Butter where I live, it was a nice way to get the best of both without ordering from Amazon lol!
Anna Rapp
Yum! Glad you enjoyed it!!!
Laura
It definitely looks delicious, but unfortunately, it is not a Whole30 recipe. Any paleo bread is not going to be compliant for Whole30.
Anna
Fair enough- its compliant with Whole30 ingredients, but Whole30 itself doesn’t allow for recreating anything. But for those of us who search for recipes made with Whole30 ingredients, but aren’t worried about the psychological aspects of the Whole30 program- just the nutrition- I wanted them to be able to find it. I do a lot of searching for Whole30 recipes because its hard to find a diet that is no dairy, no soy, no gluten, no sweeteners, etc., not because I am doing Whole30. Sorry for the confusion!
Diana
What would be a good egg substitute? I have an allergy
Renee
Did you ever figure it out? I also have an egg allergy.
Tracey Fitzpatrick
This recipe is not Whole30. Recreating bread with compliant ingredients is against the rules of Whole30. It is paleo and it confuses people trying to actually do a Whole30!
Anna
Fair enough- its compliant with Whole30 ingredients, but Whole30 itself doesn’t allow for recreating anything. But for those of us who search for recipes made with Whole30 ingredients, but aren’t worried about the psychological aspects of the Whole30 program- just the nutrition- I wanted them to be able to find it. I do a lot of searching for Whole30 recipes because its hard to find a diet that is no dairy, no soy, no gluten, no sweeteners, etc., not because I am doing Whole30. Sorry for the confusion!
Michele
It is not compliant. The separate ingredients may be, but once you put them together, it is a food item that is not compliant. There are tons of recipes that are W30 compliant. This is not one. This is a good example of why we tell our 75k members to not trust Pinterest recipes. Thank you.
Anna
Alright, you ladies are intense! I have changed the title, put in a note at the top to ward off people in their first 30 days of Whole30, changed the google search results, and changed the images. I have also changed the images and will not re-pin the old images, but I can’t delete the old ones that are on Pinterest. I will re-pin the new ones in an attempt to make those more visible. I’m not a food blogger- I’m a fertility blogger, so please forgive my blogging indiscretion.
Tracey Fitzpatrick
You really should remove the Whole30 title as you know it is not and if someone is new to Whole30 they trust bloggers to know the rules. Here’s the rule just in case you don’t know it.Almond Flour: Yes
Yes, you can have almond flour, coconut flour, tapioca flour, cassava flour and other non-grain-based flours, but it’s context-dependent. You can use it in place of breadcrumbs in your meatballs, to dredge a piece of chicken, or to thicken a sauce or stew. You may not use it for Paleo baking—to make muffins, pancakes, bread, cupcakes, cookies, waffles, biscuits, tortillas, pizza crust, or anything of that nature. We call those recipes Sex With Your Pants On (SWYPO) foods, and they are expressly off-limits during your Whole30.
Anna
Tracey- For the record, I don’t use almond flour, I use almond butter. But, I understand that is irrelevant. Also, Sex With Your Pants On sounds awful, I prefer sex with my pants off.
Thank you for alerting me to my blogging indiscretion. I am sorry. I have changed the title, changed the google search results, and changed the images to remove “Whole30.” I have also put in a note at the top to ward off people in their first 30 days of Whole30 in case they have inadvertently found my website. I’m not a food blogger- I’m a fertility blogger, so please forgive me. I’ve never actually done Whole30, I just do no gluten, no dairy, no sugar, no sweeteners, no simple carbs, no soy, no processed food, and only low-sugar fruits and veggies. Like I said before its very hard to find recipes that meet these requirements- Keto is loaded with dairy, and Paleo recipes are always adding maple syrup or honey (ugh). LCHF and Keto allow fake sweeteners (gross). So, I like searching for Whole30 recipes because I know they should be near to my requirements. Again- forgive me.
Priya
I actually like the whole 30 title – for those of us trying to make whole 30 sustainable and not a white knuckling “diet” this is excellent because I want to know how to eliminate these ingredients in my life for good but still enjoy the foods I like. So yea I agree with the labeling and thanks for the recipe!
Michele
PLEASE remove Whole30 reference. This is not permitted during a Whole30 reset. Someone eating this would have to start their round over. It looks delicious, possibly for AFTER a W30er has done their reintroduction. Thank you.
Anna
See my comment above! I have changed the title, put in a note at the top to ward off people in their first 30 days of Whole30, changed the google search results, and changed the images. I have also changed the images and will not re-pin the old images, but I can’t delete the old ones that are on Pinterest. I will re-pin the new ones in an attempt to make those more visible. I’m not a food blogger- I’m a fertility blogger, so please forgive my blogging indiscretion.
Kathy
I must try this!!! Thank you for posting. Glad I found your website. Started leaving the banana off my smoothies oh goodness the taste isn’t easy! Sorry you are dealing with those very intense comments.
Anna Rapp
Glad you found the blog!! Enjoy the “bread!” Yes, sorry about the taste of smoothies without a banana– when you get pregnant, you can add the banana back in and it will be such a treat!! It’s okay, the comments make me feel like a “real blogger” :-).
Jennifer
Do you use the “clean toothpick” to gauge if it’s done? 30-45 min. is a pretty wide range – any tips? Mine is in the oven now! 🙂
Anna
Yes, clean toothpick! But pull it after 45 minutes!
Christy
This is good. I’ll try it. But is it okay for ladies with PCOS?
Anna
Hi Christy!!!
It should be perfect for ladies with PCOS- high protein, high fat, low carb. There may be individuals who can’t handle some of the nut butters, so just be aware of what butters you do better or worse with!!
Baby dust!
Anna
Molly
Sounds great! I’m done in the baby making arena,lol, but I am doing keto & this looks amazing…have you ever added cocoa powder to this? I bet it would be fabulous! Dang the Whole30 crowd is intense😂😂
Anna
Hi Molly!
I haven’t added cocoa powder, but I have heard from readers who have experimented with it and other ingredients such as sliced almonds and fresh berries, and they all have success. It seems like a very forgiving recipe. Also, cashew butter is emerging as the winner for taste, I’ll update the post soon. Enjoy!!
And yes, they ate intense, but it made me feel like a “real” blogger, haha 😂.
Anna
Milica
Sounds easy and delicious. Do you perhaps know the measurments in grams? And are the carbs per slice total carbs or net carbs?
Sorry to be a bore, but I’m at the beginning with Keto so watching my carb intake like a hawk 🙂
Thanks!
Anna
Hi Milica!! I logged this with My Fertility Pal, and the numbers are for per slice assuming 10 slices per loaf. 8.9 grams carbs exactly per slice. It doesn’t look like it can translate the ingredients to grams for me. If you figure it out, will you leave it in a comment, please? THANK YOU!!
Lindsay
Hi, you probably have this already but for the rest of you, this may be helpful at some point. 3/4 cups is 165 g. I made it just now and worked great for me. As for teaspoons and so, just use a small spoon (like for coffee or tea) and a normal spoon for the tablospoons.
Kelly
Any suggestions for those of us ttc who are egg intolerant? Eggs by themselves or eggs in large quantities make me very sick.
Anna
Hi Kelly!!! I don’t a suggestion, I imagine that replacing the eggs with flax eggs or chia eggs wouldn’t turn out the same. But, if you try it with either, let me know how it turns out!!!!!
nathalie riccobono
Hi Anna congrats on your pregnancy. im working on my second tried on my own, didn’t work. finally went to the infertility like i did for my 1st ivf. didn’t think i would be on this road again. but i am. its OK i accepted it. i’m praying and now eating gluten free because my blood work came back high on the IGG (gluten). its OK too its a push for me not to eat my pastas and breads 🙁 oh and dairy free for infertility and my cholesterol is high. i lost several pounds already to jump-start my ivf cycle. my question to you is do you have more recipes on All recipes are gluten-free, dairy-free, sugar-free, and free of all harmful and toxic ingredients? i’m stuck on what to cook every night. breakfast and lunch is down-pack. thank you for all the saint prayers btw. i was big on St. Anne for my 1st IVF.
thank you .
Anna
Nathalie, unfortunately I don’t have more recipes. I’ve been planning on making a meal plan with recipes but haven’t managed to yet! Be sure to subscribe to my newsletter so you know when I do! Best wishes!!
Kay
Hi there! I make this bread weekly (egg-free) and have used both chia and flax eggs as a replacement, both work well but flax definitely has a more bread-like texture! Thank you so much for the recipe 🙂
Anna
AWESOME!!! Thank you Kay for letting us know that the egg replacer works!! Woohoo!!
Katie
Thank you so much for this recipe! Its so helpful and I can’t wait to try it! I appreciated you referencing Whole30. It was helpful to know there would be no added sugar before even opening the recipe. I’ve done Whole 30 and I knew it was the ingredients that were compliant not the bread. I feel people doing Whole 30 are responsible for educating themselves and reading the Whole 30 book which explains what is and isn’t compliant. Anyway that’s my thought on the silly matter:)
Anna Rapp
Hi Katie! Thank you for your comment, and your thoughts on Whole30! I certainly don’t want to screw up anyone’s journey to finding their ideal diet and I totally respect the way Whole30 makes an elimination/reintroduction diet accessible to so many people! Anyway, at least people have this as an option if they want to do it! 🙂
Venus
Wow. What is with this whole30 thing?
Anyway, thanks for this recipe. Can’t wait to make it.
I was wondering, do you include fish in your diet?
Anna Rapp
Venus,
I know, right? Super intense :-). But it made me feel like a “real blogger!” Enjoy the bread! I didn’t include fish because I have a crazy allergy to shellfish and mollusks and its hard to find regular fish that might not have traces from processing. BUT if I didn’t have that I would TOTALLY include fish, especially some nice wild-caught salmon!!
Anna
Chelsea
I just found your page and am very excited about all of the educational information you share and these great recipes. I’m sorry you got so much whole 30 hate, as someone struggling through my own infertility issues I very much appreciate your hard work in putting this blog together. Thank you!!!
Anna Rapp
Thank you for your kind message! You are so welcome my dear. Baby dust to you!! 🙂
Amanda
this recipe is amazing! I am doing a cleanse diet after having to take methotrexate for a suspected ectopic pregnancy 🙁 and I can’t have a whole bunch of things for two weeks as I am doing this cleanse – my biggest struggle is with 0 carbs (except veggies) – and this ‘bread’ really hits the spot while staying totally on the cleanse! Once this is over, we are moving to the 35% protein, 35-40 % fat, 25-30% carbs diet with no gluten, dairy, etc., so this will be awesome then too! I didn’t have five eggs, so I used just a little less of everything else and 4 eggs, but it is still delicious. I am thinking next time to add cinnamon and possibly ginger to ‘spice’ it 😉 THANK YOU!!! Your site gives me hope (and apparently great food recipes)
Emily
It’s been over a month since your post so I hope you’re doing well and feeling healthy. I had to have a methotrexate shot back in August for the same thing — it is SO frustrating and disheartening when you’re trying to hard for a baby. Just wanted to wish you well and support you on this journey. Take care.
Anna
Amanda,
So sorry for your suspected ectopic! I hope your diet cleanse went well and you are enjoying the fertility macros diet! I had a suspected ectopic back in 2013 and had to do a shot of methotrexate- gross stuff!! Good for you for clearing it out!! Hope you are back to wellness now!
Emily- So sorry for yours last summer also! Hope your journey is going well!
xo Anna
Rose
Thank you so much for this amazing bread recipe! I have made it twice now and the first time was a flop because I thought if I added a little turmeric tonic it would be edible. It was so gross! So I decided to add raw cacao powder and agave nectar (still waiting on my lakanto syrup to arrive). I also added chia seeds and chopped dairy free dark chocolate. NOW it tastes like chocolate cake! I can’t wait to play around with the recipe to come up with more variations. I also seed cycle and made up my own recipe for seed muffins so I might try to incorporate that into this bread.
Anna Rapp
Rose,
Note to self- no putting turmeric in the bread!!! 🙂 So glad you figured out how to make it taste like chocolate cake for you! What is your seed muffin recipe???
Anna
Jane
I can’t beleive this recipe tastes so good and is so easy!! Why aren’t there copycats all over the internet??
Anna
Jane, agree!! Tastes good, easy, meets so many different diet guidelines!!
Hannah
Love this recipe! I have made it twice and it came out perfect both times. This has been a lifesaver for me in the mornings!
Anna
Yay! So glad you love it, Hannah!
Jenna
Is the apple cider vinegar essential or is there a substitute? Unfortunately I’m allergic but I’d love to try the recipe 🙂
Anna
Hmmm good question Jenna! I think it’s probably pretty essential. But maybe it would work with lemon juice???? If you try it, let us know!!
Jen
Hi Anna, any idea for egg substitutes as I just found out I have moderate reactivity to egg white and mild reactivity to egg yolk. Thanks for all you do!
Anna
Jen,
Try looking up things like flax seed egg substitutes- but unfortunately I don’t think my readers have had much success with egg substitutes in this recipe!
Aileen
Hi Anna,
How would you recommend the best way to store this bread so that I can eat it throughout the week? Thank you 🙂
Anna
Aileen,
Good question! Between hubby and I we ate it so quickly it wasn’t a problem. My readers have devised a clever solution to solo eaters, however. When it has cooled, pre-slice, and freeze the individual slices. Then just grab one out in the morning to take to work, and it has defrosted by the time you get there!
Anna
Aileen
Thanks for the tip! Unfortunately my husband didn’t like the taste of the bread too much so I’ll be eating it alone. It seems to last me almost a whole week.
Anna
Definitely do the slice and freeze then!!! 🙂
Maritza
Thanks so much for taking the time to post these free, and incredibly helpful recipes. I’ve been trying to conceive my 2nd for the last 3 years with several unsuccessful IUI’s and failed IVF. Although I eat relatively healthy, I’ve been holding off for so long on getting too strict with my diet because I didn’t want to drive myself (further insane). But something about your blog and writing convinced me. I’m going to try this recipe this week! 🙂
Anna
🙂 I hope my blog is helpful but definitely doesn’t drive you insane!!! 🙂 xoxoxo baby dust!
Cathy
Hello Anna,
I just love your blog and I appreciate so much all your help to guide the couples to recover their health and to get some new hope. I’ve been studying it for almost one week, I’m making changes every day, order new products, try recipes (trying to conceive for 6 years, endo, fybroms).
I’ve just made the bread. Everything was very easy and it turned out very nicely. My only concern is: Could the loaf be too greasy, oily? Mine it is. I made the simple recipe with almond butter and coconut butter for cooking. I don’t digest the fat well and I am a bit worried that this is too fatty.
Or maybe it is different when it gets cooled.
I also want to check. Which kind of almond butter shall we use? I bought the Meridian one, but it is made with roasted almonds, skin on. Is it OK?
❤️
Anna
Hi Cathy!!
So glad you are loving the blog! YES, the bread is very, very fatty. It is totally a high-fat bread. It is part of what makes it so good for fertility. How did it go with your stomach? Are you sure its really fats that you have a hard time digesting? Is your gallbladder okay? Have you consulted with a doctor or naturopath?
Xo,
Anna
JS
How many grams are in 1 slice of the bread? I’m trying to track foods with My Fitness Pal (referred to above by someone as My Fertility Pal, lol 🙂 ) and want to be sure I get the right quantity… Also, for some reason the nutritional breakdown of this recipe in MFP differs from the breakdown you list above. Which is correct? Many thanks and looking forward to trying it soon!
Anna
Hello! The nutitional info at the bottom should be correct for the ingredients I listed in the recipe– it would be different if you used different butters! Also, it is so weird that the numbers are different, because I used My Fitness Pal to figure out the nutritional information! So they should be exactly the same!!! I’ll try and figure it out, but I’d go with the info on the blog post for now!
Rupa
Hi Anna, this recipe looks very interesting to try. Could you please let me know if this can be made even without eggs? I am allergic to eggs and diary.
Eli
Dear Anna I need to bake my own version of bread. Please tell me what type of materials are ok. I mean the type of flour, bran and any thing else. Can I use baking powder or leavin in my bread? Would you please answer me soon? I don’t have enough time to prepare for my ivf cycle
Kenna
Im in love!! I made it today for my first time ever making any kind of bread. It has everything I ever wanted! Easy to make, husband approves, very good, healthy!! Thank you, thank you, thank you for sharing this recipe!
Rebekah
Thank you so much for keeping Whole 30 in the description.. I wanted a bread recipe that excludes dairy, sugar & grains (mainly for the sake of my husband). I’ve done the Whole 30 diet before, but this time just want to follow the basic idea of eliminating certain foods, without being so strict. This is super helpful!! Excited to find your site. Facing secondary infertility after the death of our baby has been very hard. This brings some welcome hope!
Brittani
Thank you so much for this recipe! I’ve been craving bread and this totally hit the spot but without the guilt. I put crushed walnuts on top, which was delicious. I also just tried a PBJ style where I put cashew butter and fresh crushed raspberries on top… so good! Love how versatile it is!
Kayla
This is really good and filling! I used the coconut almond butter blend, I love it!
Katelyn
I love your blog! I know I’m late to the party but I’m here now!
The Whole30 haters must still be in week 1. It’s a tumultuous moment for all of us.
Wondering if you have any thoughts on using almond pulp with some oil? I have so much of it after making my own almond milk and this would be a great way to use some of it!
Thank you so much!
Anna
Glad you found the blog! 🙂 I have no idea if the almond pulp would work but it sounds like a GREAT zero waste alternative to try! Let us know how it works out!!!
Deanna
Question: after blending butters you say add other ingredients and mix. Do you me mix with mixer or stir in. Sorry if I’m obtuse but I’m not that familiar with baking.
Chrissie
I have a short question before preparing – Is it not better for fertility to consume the nut butters raw, as when they are baked the unsaturated fats would turn to transfats, and this is what we shall avoid, (source: your ebook on the optimal fertility diet). Could you please explain how much trans-fats you think the bread has ? Coconut oil or butter should not transform into them, as it is very heatstable fat. But what about those nut butters… ?? Thank you for your explanations.
Anna
Hi Chrissie! Processed peanut oil used in frying is different than home cooking nut butters. Per the FDA website: “Most of the trans fat in the foods we eat is formed through a manufacturing process that adds hydrogen to vegetable oil, which converts the liquid into a solid fat at room temperature. This process is called hydrogenation. Trans fat also occurs naturally in food products from ruminant animals (e.g., milk, butter, cheese, meat products, etc.). “
Sonja
cannot wait to try!
Anna
I hope you enjoyed it!
Laura
Love this recipe. I made it before my 2 boys and added it to a grazing table and for my boys after. My whole family loves this recipe!
Anna
I’m so glad to hear it!! Reminds me I should make it for my kiddos!
Krissy
So… I started making this this week and my man has named it “sex bread” because it “better than sex”. Pretty high praise though now I have to make 3 loaves a week to ensure there is enough for me lol I thought you all would get a laugh out of that or at least be convinced to try it.
Anna Rapp
lol this may be the best comment my blog has ever received 😀
Kay
I had a miscarriage last year and have been struggling to get pregnant ever since. THE EXACT CYCLE that I made the changes you recommended on your blog, including eating this bread (sunflower seed butter and coconut butter), I got a pregnant!! THANK YOU!!
I also highly recommend The Infertility Cure by Randine Lewis, I got it on Amazon. It’s acupressure & was immense helpful!
Erin
I can’t find a nut butter that doesn’t have saturated fats. Any recommendations?