Bread Gulab Jamun — Instant Gulab Jamun with Bread

Gulab Jamun with Bread | Easy Homemade Indian Sweet Recipe
Bread gulab jamun is a quick, comforting dessert that uses everyday bread to recreate the classic Indian sweet. No khoya or milk powder is required—just bread slices, milk, ghee, and a few basic pantry ingredients. The bread is mashed, kneaded into a smooth dough, shaped into balls, fried or baked, and finally soaked in warm, aromatic sugar syrup. This recipe is ideal for festive occasions like Diwali or for satisfying sudden dessert cravings, and it’s simple enough for cooks of any level.
What is bread gulab jamun?
Bread gulab jamun is an easy version of traditional gulab jamun made by combining bread with milk and flavorings to form a soft dough. The dough is shaped into balls, cooked, and soaked in a fragrant sugar syrup until juicy and tender.
Frying vs baking
While deep-frying gives the classic texture and color, you can also bake or air-fry the bread balls for a lighter alternative. The texture will vary slightly, but the flavor remains delicious.
Storage
Store finished gulab jamuns in an airtight container in the refrigerator for 2–3 days. Reheat gently before serving to restore warmth and softness.

Which bread to use?
White bread gives the softest texture and the most neutral flavor. Whole wheat or multigrain breads can be used for a different taste and a slightly firmer texture.
Preferred method — step overview
- Prepare the jamun dough
- Make the sugar syrup
- Shape the jamun balls
- Fry (or bake/air-fry) the jamuns and soak in syrup
Notes on kneading the dough
Knead the dough gently until smooth and lump-free. Over-kneading makes dense jamuns that won’t absorb syrup well. The dough should be moist enough to form crack-free balls; if it is too dry it will crack while frying and remain hard inside. Test by rolling a small ball—if it cracks, add a little milk; if it’s too sticky, press gently or chill briefly.
Shaping the jamun balls
Cover the dough with a damp cloth and rest it for at least 10 minutes to prevent drying. Grease your palms with ghee and roll the dough into smooth, crack-free balls using light pressure. Keep the shaped balls covered until ready to cook.

Sugar syrup consistency
Use equal parts sugar and water and bring to a sticky, warm consistency. Do not overcook to a one-string stage — syrup that is too thick won’t be absorbed well. If the syrup becomes too thick, add a little water and reheat to reach a tacky, sticky texture. Syrup that is too thin can make jamuns soggy and cause them to lose shape.
Frying temperature
Heat oil or ghee to medium-hot. Test by dropping a small piece of dough: it should float up slowly and not brown immediately. Fry jamuns in small batches, reduce the flame to low-medium once they firm up, and cook gently until evenly golden. Avoid crowding the pan, as jamuns expand while frying.
Signs the oil is too hot or too cool
If jamuns brown immediately and become dark, the oil is too hot — cool it down before continuing. If the jamuns don’t float, the oil needs to be heated a little more.
Soaking the jamuns
Warm the sugar syrup before adding the hot jamuns. Avoid boiling-hot syrup that can cause cracks, and avoid cold syrup that won’t be absorbed. Let the jamuns soak for at least 4 hours for best results; refrigerate once cooled if not serving right away.
After many trials I’ve documented these tips to achieve soft, restaurant-style gulab jamun. Adjust timing and syrup consistency to your preference.

Ingredients
6 bread slices, trimmed (approx. 65 g)
¼ tsp cardamom powder
30 ml milk (adjust as needed)
Ghee for greasing and frying
For the sugar syrup
¾ cup water
¾ cup sugar
¼ tsp cardamom powder
A few strands of saffron

Step-by-step method
- Trim the crusts from bread slices and tear into pieces.
- Add milk little by little and mash/knead into a smooth, firm dough. Mix in cardamom powder.
- Grease palms with ghee and roll the dough into small, smooth balls without cracks.
- In a pan, boil water and add sugar. Stir until sugar dissolves.
- Add cardamom powder and saffron; simmer until syrup reaches a sticky, warm consistency. Keep it on the lowest flame to stay warm.
- Heat oil or ghee for frying. Check the temperature by dropping a small dough piece—if it rises slowly without browning quickly, it’s ready.
- Fry jamuns in batches until evenly golden. Drain excess oil on paper towel.
- Immediately add hot jamuns to the warm sugar syrup. Mix gently so they soak evenly.
- Optionally microwave the soaked jamuns for 1 minute to help absorption, then let them rest for 2–3 hours before serving.

Bread Gulab Jamun
Ingredients
- 6 bread slices, trimmed (approx. 65 g)
- ¼ tsp cardamom powder
- 30 ml milk (adjust as needed)
- Ghee for greasing and frying
For Sugar Syrup
- ¾ cup water
- ¾ cup sugar
- ¼ tsp cardamom powder
- A few strands of saffron
Instructions
- Trim the bread slices and break them roughly into pieces.
- Add milk little by little and knead into a firm, smooth dough with cardamom.
- Grease your palms with ghee and roll the dough into smooth, crack-free balls.
- In a pan, boil water and add sugar. Stir until sugar dissolves.
- Once the sugar melts, add cardamom powder and saffron.
- Cook until the syrup reaches a sticky, warm consistency; keep it on the lowest flame.
- Heat oil or ghee for deep frying; check temperature before adding jamuns.
- Fry jamuns until golden brown, drain excess oil, and immediately add hot jamuns to the warm syrup.
- Mix gently so they soak evenly. Optionally microwave for 1 minute to help absorption.
- Let them rest for 2–3 hours before serving for best flavor and texture.