Chia Seed Egg White Bread Recipe

This chia seed egg white bread recipe makes a soft, high-protein loaf that slices better than simple egg white bread. Egg whites build the structure, while chia seeds hold moisture and help the bread stay firm enough for toast, breakfast sandwiches, and meal prep.

What Is Chia Seed Egg White Bread?

egg chia seed egg white bread recipe

Chia seed egg white bread is a protein-rich bread made with liquid egg whites, hydrated chia seeds, and a few structure-building ingredients. It is lighter than dense seed bread and more sliceable than cloud bread.

The egg whites help the loaf rise and set during baking. Chia seeds absorb liquid and form a gel, which keeps the bread moist and helps prevent a dry, rubbery texture.

This recipe is best for people who want a bread-style option with more protein, less starch than regular bread, and a texture that works well for toast.

Why Is This Better Than 2-Ingredient Chia Egg White Bread?

A 2-ingredient chia egg white bread can work, but it often tastes seed-heavy, turns sponge-like, or slices too softly. This recipe uses a few extra ingredients to make the loaf more balanced.

Almond flour adds body, psyllium helps structure, baking powder gives lift, vinegar reduces eggy flavor, and salt improves taste. The result is a more bread-like loaf that works better for slicing, toasting, and storing.

If you want a quick experiment, the 2-ingredient version is fine. If you want a better everyday loaf, this full version is more reliable.

Recipe Snapshot

Prep time: 15 minutes
Rest time: 10 minutes
Bake time: 35–42 minutes
Total time: About 1 hour
Yield: 1 small loaf, about 10 slices
Best pan: 7.5 x 3.5 inch or 8 x 4 inch loaf pan
Texture: Soft, moist, lightly springy, sliceable
Best use: Toast, breakfast, sandwiches, meal prep

Ingredients

IngredientAmountApprox. Weight
Liquid egg whites1 ½ cups360g
Chia seeds3 tbsp36g
Warm water¼ cup60g
Almond flour½ cup48–56g
Oat fiber or coconut flour2 tbsp8–12g
Psyllium husk powder1 tbsp8–10g
Baking powder1 tsp4g
Fine salt½ tsp3g
Apple cider vinegar1 tsp5g
Olive oil or melted butter1 tbspoptional

Optional Flavor Add-ins

  • ½ teaspoon garlic powder
  • ½ teaspoon onion powder
  • 1 teaspoon sesame seeds
  • 1 teaspoon everything bagel seasoning
  • ½ teaspoon dried herbs

Should You Use Ground or Whole Chia Seeds?

Ground chia seeds make the bread softer and smoother. Whole chia seeds give the loaf a rustic texture with visible seed specks.

For the best first attempt, use ground chia seeds. They blend more evenly into the batter and make the bread easier to slice.

Chia TypeTextureBest For
Ground chiaSmooth and softSandwich slices
Whole chiaSeeded and rusticToast
Half ground, half wholeBalancedBest visual texture

Whole chia seeds should always be soaked first. If they are added dry, they may pull moisture from the loaf while baking.

How Do You Make Chia Seed Egg White Bread?

Step 1: Prepare the Pan

Preheat the oven to 350°F / 175°C. Line a small loaf pan with parchment paper.

A small loaf pan gives the bread better height. A large 9 x 5 inch pan can make the bread too flat.

Step 2: Make the Chia Gel

Mix chia seeds with warm water in a small bowl. Stir well and let it sit for 10 minutes.

The mixture should become thick and gel-like. This step helps the chia seeds hold moisture inside the bread instead of making the center wet.

Step 3: Mix the Dry Ingredients

In a bowl, whisk almond flour, oat fiber or coconut flour, psyllium husk powder, baking powder, salt, and optional seasonings.

Mix well so there are no clumps. Psyllium and coconut flour absorb moisture quickly, so even mixing is important.

Step 4: Blend the Wet Ingredients

Add egg whites, vinegar, oil, and chia gel to a blender. Blend for 20–30 seconds until lightly foamy.

You do not need stiff peaks. A light foam is enough to add air and help the batter rise.

Step 5: Combine the Batter

Pour the wet mixture into the dry ingredients. Stir until a thick batter forms.

Let the batter rest for 3–5 minutes. It should become thicker as the chia, psyllium, and fiber absorb moisture.

Step 6: Bake the Bread

Spoon the batter into the loaf pan and smooth the top. Add sesame seeds or extra chia seeds if desired.

Bake for 35–42 minutes, or until the top is firm and the center is fully cooked. For the best texture, the middle of the loaf should reach about 190°F / 88°C.

Step 7: Cool Before Slicing

Cool the bread in the pan for 10 minutes. Then transfer it to a wire rack and let it cool for at least 30–45 minutes before slicing.

Do not cut the loaf while hot. Egg white bread sets more firmly as it cools.

What Pan Size Works Best?

The pan size changes the final shape of the bread. A smaller pan gives better height and cleaner slices.

Pan SizeResult
7.5 x 3.5 inchTallest loaf, best slices
8 x 4 inchGood standard result
9 x 5 inchFlatter loaf
Muffin tinWorks for small breakfast buns

For this recipe, the best choice is an 8 x 4 inch loaf pan or slightly smaller.

What Should the Texture Look Like?

The batter should be thick, slightly foamy, and spoonable. It should not be thin like pancake batter.

After baking, the bread should feel firm on top and soft inside. Once cooled, it should slice without collapsing.

Time After BakingTexture
Hot from ovenToo soft to slice
30 minutes cooledSliceable but delicate
1 hour cooledBest clean slices
After refrigerationFirmer
After toastingBest bread-like bite

The best texture comes after cooling and toasting.

Why Does Chia Seed Egg White Bread Become Gummy?

This bread can become gummy if it is underbaked, sliced too soon, or made with too much chia or psyllium.

If the center looks shiny, wet, or custard-like, it needs more baking time. If the loaf is fully baked but still soft, let it cool longer before slicing.

To fix a gummy loaf next time, bake it a few minutes longer, use the correct pan size, and measure chia seeds carefully.

How Do You Stop Egg White Bread From Tasting Eggy?

Egg white bread tastes eggy when it is under-seasoned or too wet. Salt, vinegar, garlic powder, onion powder, and herbs help balance the flavor.

Apple cider vinegar is especially useful because it softens the egg flavor without making the bread taste sour.

For a neutral version, skip garlic and onion powder. For a savory version, add everything bagel seasoning or dried herbs.

Can You Make This Bread Without Almond Flour?

Yes, you can replace almond flour, but the texture will change.

SubstituteAmountResult
Sunflower seed flour½ cupBest nut-free option
Oat flour½ cupSofter but higher carb
Coconut flour3–4 tbspDrier texture
Ground flaxseed¼ cupDenser, earthier loaf

Do not replace almond flour with the same amount of coconut flour. Coconut flour absorbs much more liquid and can make the bread dry.

Is Chia Seed Egg White Bread Low Carb?

This bread can be low carb when made with almond flour, oat fiber, chia seeds, psyllium, and egg whites. It is not zero-carb because chia seeds and almond flour still contain carbohydrates and fiber.

For a lower-carb version, avoid oat flour and use oat fiber or coconut flour instead.

Always check your own ingredient labels if you are tracking carbs closely.

How Should You Store It?

Let the loaf cool completely before storing. Then place it in an airtight container and refrigerate for up to 4 days.

For longer storage, slice the bread first, place parchment paper between slices, and freeze in a sealed bag. Toast slices straight from frozen or thaw them overnight in the fridge.

Do not store warm bread in a sealed container. Steam can make it wet.

Best Ways to Serve Chia Seed Egg White Bread

This bread works best when toasted. Toasting makes the edges firmer and improves the bread-like texture.

Good topping ideas include:

  • Avocado and black pepper
  • Cottage cheese and herbs
  • Peanut butter and banana
  • Turkey and cucumber
  • Smoked salmon and cream cheese
  • Egg white breakfast sandwich
  • Garlic butter toast
  • Cream cheese and berries

For sweet toppings, skip garlic powder and onion powder in the batter.

Troubleshooting Guide

ProblemCauseFix
Bread collapsedUnderbaked or sliced hotBake longer and cool fully
Bread tastes eggyNot enough seasoningAdd salt, vinegar, herbs
Bread is gummyToo much moistureBake longer or add oat fiber
Bread is dryToo much coconut flourUse less coconut flour
Bread is flatPan too largeUse smaller loaf pan
Seeds are crunchyChia not soakedMake chia gel first

Final Recipe Card

Chia Seed Egg White Bread

Ingredients

  • 1 ½ cups liquid egg whites
  • 3 tablespoons chia seeds, ground or whole
  • ¼ cup warm water
  • ½ cup almond flour
  • 2 tablespoons oat fiber or coconut flour
  • 1 tablespoon psyllium husk powder
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • ½ teaspoon fine salt
  • 1 teaspoon apple cider vinegar
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil or melted butter, optional
  • ½ teaspoon garlic powder, optional
  • ½ teaspoon onion powder, optional

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 350°F / 175°C. Line a small loaf pan with parchment paper.
  2. Mix chia seeds with warm water and let sit for 10 minutes.
  3. Whisk almond flour, oat fiber or coconut flour, psyllium, baking powder, salt, and seasonings.
  4. Blend egg whites, vinegar, oil, and chia gel for 20–30 seconds.
  5. Stir wet ingredients into dry ingredients until a thick batter forms.
  6. Rest the batter for 3–5 minutes.
  7. Spoon into the loaf pan and smooth the top.
  8. Bake for 35–42 minutes until firm and fully cooked in the center.
  9. Cool for at least 30–45 minutes before slicing.
  10. Toast slices for the best texture.

FAQs About Chia Seed Egg White Bread

Can I use carton egg whites?

Yes, carton egg whites work well. Shake the carton before measuring so the liquid egg whites blend evenly into the batter.

Can I use fresh egg whites?

Yes. You will need about 10–12 large egg whites to make 1 ½ cups of liquid egg whites.

Is this bread gluten-free?

It can be gluten-free if all packaged ingredients are certified gluten-free. Check baking powder, oat fiber, and seasoning labels.

Can I make it without psyllium husk?

Yes, but the bread may be softer. Replace psyllium with 1 extra tablespoon of ground chia or flaxseed meal.

Why is my bread wet inside?

It may be underbaked or sliced too early. Bake until the center is firm and cool completely before cutting.

Can I freeze this bread?

Yes. Slice it first, place parchment between slices, and freeze in an airtight bag.

Does it taste like regular bread?

Not exactly. It is lighter, higher in protein, and slightly springy, but it works well for toast and simple sandwiches.

Can I make it sweet?

Yes. Skip garlic and onion powder, then add cinnamon and a small amount of sweetener.