Sicilian Orange Sweet Bread is a stunning citrus-infused bread. Super fluffy and worth the effort to put together. Just perfect for Christmas or Easter morning.
If you're making this Sicilian Orange Sweet Bread, be sure to also check out my Orange Glazed Polenta Cake and my Orange Poppy Seed Cake for more citrus forward Italian baking inspiration.

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If you love citrus desserts, this Sicilian Orange Sweet Bread is for you. It's soft, fragrant, lightly sweet, and made with fresh whole oranges for real flavor. No extracts. No artificial taste. Just pure, bright citrus in every bite.
This traditional Italian sweet bread is perfect for breakfast with coffee, an afternoon snack, or even a simple dessert. It's dairy-free, easy to make, and ready in about 1 hour. The texture is tender and moist, almost like a cross between a quick bread and a light cake.
This is the kind of recipe my family makes when oranges are in season and the kitchen smells like Sicily.
Sicilian Orange Sweet Bread
I love baking yeast breads. I love baking quick breads! Obviously, the quick breads are much easier to put together. There are so many variations in quick bread recipes and a very tempting part in making them is the ease and speed!
Why You'll Love This Recipe
- Uses fresh whole oranges for authentic flavor
- Naturally dairy-free
- No yeast, no rising time
- Simple pantry ingredients
- Perfect for winter and early spring citrus season
Ingredient Notes
- Oranges
Use organic oranges since you're blending the peel. Wash them well and remove any seeds. The peel gives the bread its intense citrus aroma. - Sugar
Granulated sugar keeps the crumb light. You can reduce slightly if you prefer less sweetness. - Oil
Neutral oil (sunflower or vegetable oil) keeps the bread moist longer than butter. - Flour
All-purpose flour gives structure without making it dense. - Baking Powder
Make sure it's fresh. This bread relies on it for lift.

How to Make Sicilian Orange Sweet Bread
Step-by-step Instructions
Step 1: Activate the yeast
Fit your stand mixer with the dough hook. Add warm water and yeast to the bowl. Mix briefly until blended.
Step 2: Add sugar + start the dough
Add the sugar and mix for about 1 minute. Slowly mix in 1 cup of flour until combined.
Step 3: Add eggs
Add the eggs, one at a time, mixing after each until fully incorporated.
Step 4: Add the flavor ingredients
Add 2 more cups flour, oil, salt, orange zest, orange juice, and candied orange peel. Mix on medium-low, stopping to scrape down the bowl as needed.
Step 5: Finish adding flour
Slowly add the remaining flour, scraping the sides after each addition, until a soft dough forms.
Step 6: Knead in the mixer
Mix on low for about 3 minutes until the dough looks incorporated and elastic.
- Give your mixer a quick break if it starts to heat up.
- Add extra flour 1 tablespoon at a time only if needed.
The dough should be slightly sticky but still firm.
Step 7: Oil + first rise
Remove the dough, shape into a ball, and coat lightly with canola oil. Place in a lightly oiled bowl. Swish the dough around, then flip it so it's coated in a thin film of oil. Cover with plastic wrap and let rise at room temp until doubled, about 1 to 1½ hours.
Step 8: Make the almond topping
While the dough rises, stir together egg whites, powdered sugar, and ground almonds in a small bowl. Set aside.
Step 9: Preheat the oven
Preheat oven to 190°C (375°F).
Step 10: Add the marmalade
Punch down the dough. Gently knead in the orange marmalade.
Add it one spoonful at a time, kneading briefly after each addition to keep it inside the dough (not smeared on the outside). If the dough gets too sticky, add a little flour and knead once more into a smooth ball.
Step 11: Second rise in the pan
Place the dough into a panettone paper or a 23 cm (9-inch) round cake pan lined with parchment (ideally with a removable bottom). Let rise again until the dough reaches the top of the pan/paper.


Step 12: First bake
Bake for 20 minutes.
Step 13: Add topping + finish baking
Remove the bread and spoon the almond topping over the top (some may drip down the sides, wipe gently if needed). Sprinkle with flaked almonds and pearl sugar.
Reduce oven temperature to 175°C (350°F). Return bread to the oven and bake 15 to 20 minutes more, until golden brown. Start checking at 15 minutes, since ovens vary.
Step 14: Check doneness
Tap the bottom of the loaf. If it sounds hollow, it's done. If not, bake a few minutes longer and re-check.
Step 15: Cool and serve

Expert Tips
- Use thin-skinned oranges for best texture.
- Remove all seeds before blending.
- Don't overmix once flour is added. Overmixing makes the bread dense.
- If the top browns too quickly, loosely cover with foil during the last 15 minutes.
- Let it cool fully before slicing. It slices cleaner and tastes better once set.
Variations
- Orange Almond Bread
Replace ¼ cup of flour with almond flour. - Chocolate Orange
Fold in ½ cup dark chocolate chips. - Orange Glaze
Mix 1 cup powdered sugar with 2-3 tablespoons fresh orange juice and drizzle over cooled bread. - Blood Orange Version
Use blood oranges when in season for a deeper color and slightly berry-like flavor.
Storage
- Room Temperature:
Store in an airtight container for up to 3 days. - Refrigerator:
Keeps up to 5 days, but allow slices to come to room temperature before serving. - Freezer:
Wrap tightly in plastic wrap and freeze up to 2 months. Slice before freezing for easy portions.

FAQ
You can, but you'll lose depth of flavor. The peel gives authentic Sicilian intensity.
No. When blended properly, the peel adds brightness, not bitterness.
Yes. Use a 1:1 gluten-free baking flour blend.
Yes. Pane di Arancia and Pan d'Arancio refer to the same Sicilian orange bread.
Yes. Bake in lined muffin tins at 175°C for 20-25 minutes.
When to Serve It
- Breakfast with espresso
- Afternoon snack with tea
- Easter brunch
- Winter citrus season
- Holiday gifting
Here is our fantastic April-Oranges breads from the incredible #TwelveLoaves bakers:
- Blueberry Dreamsicle Orange Lower-Fat Quick Bread from Shockingly Delicious
- Brith with candied orange from Ma che ti sei mangiato
- It's Thyme for Orange Dinner Rolls from Cookistry
- Orange Biscuits from Magnolia Days
- Orange-Fennel Cake Doughnuts from girlichef
- Orange Marmalade Filled Sweet Rolls from That Skinny Chick Can Bake
- Orange Marmalade Scones from A Baker's House
- Orange Pull-Apart Bread from All That's Left Are The Crumbs
- Orange Pull Apart Bread with Orange Cream Cheese Glaze from Bakingyummies
- Orange Rolls from Basic N Delicious
- Orange Rosemary Boule from Food Lust People Love
- Orange You Delicious Honey Crescent Rolls from Kudos Kitchen By Renee
- Pizza di Pasqua from Karen's Kitchen Stories
- Rye and fennel seeds snails with blood oranges and red onion chutney from Rise of the sourdough preacher
- Sicilian Orange Sweet Bread from Savoring Italy
- Strawberry and Orange Quick Bread with Candied Orange Marmalade from Hip Foodie Mom
My husband saw me take it out of the oven and told me I needed to hang it upside down to cool or it will it will deflate. I explained to Fabrizio that this isn't a panettone recipe.
I just happened to use my panettone paper and it is actually a challah dough recipe! No butter, but vegetable oil. I did use the almond topping the baker suggests with this recipe. It wasn't very thick and it does drizzle around the sides. I wiped the sides of my bread. I happened to have pearl sugar and tossed some of that on top too! This is my riff on an Italian Colomba. My sort of faux-panettone.
Did you make this and love it? Please RATE THE RECIPE below:)
I would LOVE IT if you can leave me a star rating and a review down below and let me know your thoughts! It means the world to me to hear how you liked it.
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Sicilian Orange Sweet Bread
Equipment
Ingredients
- BREAD
- 1 package 2 ¼ teaspoons active dry yeast
- 1 cup warm water no more than 110°F [43°C]
- ⅓ cup sugar
- 4 ½ to 5 cups bread flour or 5 ½ to 6 cups bleached all-purpose flour
- 3 eggs
- ¼ cup peanut corn, or canola oil
- 2 teaspoon salt
- finely grated zest of one orange
- juice of ½ orange
- ¼ cup candied orange peel
- ½ cup orange marmalade
- TOPPING
- 2 medium egg whites
- ¼ cup powdered sugar
- ¼ cup ground almonds
- ¼ cup flaked almonds
- ¼ cup pearl sugar
Instructions
- In a mixer, with a dough hook attachment, add the warm water and yeast.
- Mix until blended. Add the sugar and mix about a minute. Slowly mix in 1 cup of the flour until combined. Mix in the eggs one at a time until they are combined.
- Add another 2 cups of the flour, oil, salt, orange zest, orange juice and candied orange peel. Mix together on medium-low speed stopping the machine to scrape down the sides of the bowl.
- Slowly add the rest of the flour and mix until combined. Stop the machine as you add each cup of the flour to scrape the sides of the bowl and incorporate the flour.
- Mix on low speed for about 3 minutes until dough is incorporated. Be sure to give your mixer a break and as you don't want to burn it out. Add flour if needed 1 tablespoon at a time. The dough will be a little sticky but also firm.
- Take dough out of mixer bowl, form into a ball and coat with a light film of canola oil.
- Form the dough into a ball and place into an oiled bowl (when I put the dough in the bowl ( I swish the dough around the bottom of the bowl and then flip it over so all of the dough is covered in a light film of oil).
- Cover with plastic wrap and let it rise at room temperature until doubled in size (about 1-1 ½ hours).
- While dough is rising, in a small bowl stir together the egg whites, powdered sugar and ground almonds.
- Preheat oven to 375 F.
- Punch down the dough. Gently incorporate the orange marmalade into the dough.
- (I added it in spoonfuls. I added a spoon at a time kneading along after each addition, trying to keep the marmalade within the dough and not around the outside of the dough.) I added a little flour at the end and gave it one final knead into a ball.)
- Add the dough to your panettone baking paper or 9-inch round cake pan with parchment paper lined around with a removable bottom. Let the dough rise until it reaches the top of the pan (or panettone paper).
- Bake the bread for 20 minutes. After 20 minutes, remove the bread. Spoon on the almond topping. Some of it may drip down the sides (you can carefully wipe it with a paper towel). Sprinkle on the flaked almonds and pearl sugar.
- Lower the heat to 350 F and return the bread to the oven. Continue baking for about another 15-20 minutes. The bread should be golden brown. Ovens may vary so check your bread after 15 minutes to see how it's doing. You test if it's done by tapping the bottom of the loaf. If it sounds hollow, it needs a bit more time.
- Remove bread. Let it cool and serve slightly warm or at room temperature.
Nutrition Disclaimer
Please keep in mind that the nutritional information presented below is an approximation and may vary depending on the exact ingredients used.






Hi. Where did you purchase the panettone baking paper, the size that will fit this recipe?
Thank you.
Hi Gina-Back when I baked that I believe I found the mold at Sur la Table. I see they have them all over Amazon now. hope that helps!
I made some of my own orange marmalade. I decided to make this to test it out for Easter and used my marmalade, and it was really lovely. A very easy dough to work with!
Can I use butter instead of oil?
Hi Rita...I've only used a mild flavored oil to make this bread. You could try with softened butter...it should turn out fine!
Yes, let it rise again until it reaches the top of the pan (or panettone paper). It took mine about another 1.5 hours to rise enough. Enjoy the bread!
The recipe intrigues me especially the addition of orange marmalade. I am thinking that after the addition of the marmalade there is a second rise? It is not clear in the method. Looking forward to making the bread. Yours looks so tempting.
[…] Sicilian Orange Sweet Bread from Cake Duchess […]
Lori,
I almost missed the party this month but l found a lovely quick bread recipe. Hope you like it as much as I do.
Annamaria
[…] Sicilian Orange Sweet Bread from Cake Duchess […]
ciao Joann! I start it at 375 F and then for 2nd 1/2 of baking it's at 350F. Hope you had a nice Easter! Buona Pasqua!! grazie. 😉
This looks delicious!! One question, though. I didn't see the initial baking temperature? Did I miss it? Thanks!
[…] #TwelveLoaves bread baking group is baking with oranges all month long! You could bake a quick or yeast bread and join us in our love of ORANGES. Even if […]
Thanks, Julie! We'd love to have you!!
What a great recipe, looks so beautiful, I just want to smell it, I bet smell so good.
Wow- this is a stunning bread and perfect to celebrate Easter! Sur la table has recently opened near me and I will add panettone papers to my list of treasures to buy there!
Whoa, no butter in there? Only oil? That's amazing! Your Sicilian orange sweet bread is absolutely beautiful, Lora. I'm in love with your dishes and the cake slicer. You are truly the queen of bread baking, lady. I'm always in awe of the things you make. And I totally need to hear more about hanging panettone upside down. I've always wanted to try making one because of how much I love eating them!
I'd be anxious too, just thinking about making this lovely loaf. You are a master bread baker, Lora! This is worthy of a magazine cover or the front cover of a cookbook!! STUNNING!
Wow. I don't even know what else to say. The bread has such a beautiful ... well, everything. I love the color, the height, the topping, all of it. I'm curious about the hanging upside down thing though.
Lora, this is absolutely stunning!! Gorgeous! The texture does look more like a brioche than a panettone, but don't I just prefer it that way! I must try this recipe!
Ha, I'm busy taking the easy way out and you set yourself up for a new challenge each month. LOVE YOUR BREAD! The topping is to die for.