Published July 7, 2026
Most low-carb loaves collapse into a sad, eggy sponge the moment they cool. This high-protein bread does not. It slices clean, holds up to a toaster, and carries a real sandwich, because almond flour builds the crumb while whey isolate and psyllium give it an honest bread chew.
It helps to know what this bread is and is not. This is a specialty loaf, familiar to anyone baking keto, diabetic-friendly, or gluten-free, and a little mysterious to everyone else. It will not pass for sourdough or rye. Think of it as its own category: a dense, seeded, high-protein sandwich bread that earns its keep toasted, not a bakery baguette in disguise.
High-Protein Bread Quick Stats
Nutrition shown is for the full High-Protein Bread. Values vary by recipe, see the individual recipe cards below.
Why This Recipe Works (and What Those Odd Ingredients Do)
Almond flour does the job of wheat flour: It is simply finely ground blanched almonds, and it keeps the carbs low. It does not have gluten, though, so on its own it will not hold a loaf together, which is why the other ingredients matter.
Whey isolate adds protein and structure: The unflavored isolate from the supplement aisle is nearly pure protein with very little carbohydrate. In bread it firms the crumb and pushes each slice to around 13 grams of protein, roughly four times an ordinary white slice.
Psyllium husk is the glue: This fiber powder is the one that sounds strange, but it does the job gluten normally would. It forms a gel that lets the loaf slice cleanly and toast instead of crumbling. Without it, low-carb bread tends to fall apart or turn cakey.
Flax and Greek yogurt handle fiber and flavor: Ground flaxseed adds fiber, a gentle nutty note, and moisture, and it is easier to find than psyllium. Plain Greek yogurt keeps the loaf moist and tames the sulfur note, so the bread does not taste like it is quietly turning into an omelet.
White Sandwich Bread vs. This High-Protein Loaf
| Per slice | White Bread | This Recipe | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Net Carbs | 13g | 2g | -11g (85%) |
| Protein | 3g | 13g | +10g |
| Fiber | 1g | 4g | +3g |
| Added Sugar | 2g | 0g | -2g |
Here is the full high-protein bread loaf with exact measurements, timing, and nutrition.
High-Protein Bread | Low-Carb & Gluten-Free
Ingredients
- 1½ cups almond flour blanched, fine
- ½ cup whey protein isolate unflavored
- ¼ cup ground flaxseed
- 2 tablespoons psyllium husk powder
- 1 tablespoon baking powder
- ½ teaspoon salt
- 4 large eggs
- ½ cup plain Greek yogurt
- ¼ cup butter melted, or olive oil
- 1 tablespoon apple cider vinegar
- ¼ cup warm water
- 1 tablespoon sesame seeds optional topping; or everything bagel seasoning or grated Parmesan
Equipment
- Loaf pan
- Mixing bowls
- Instant-read thermometer
Method
- Heat the oven to 350°F (175°C) and line a small loaf pan with parchment paper, leaving an overhang on the long sides so you can lift the loaf out later.
- In a large bowl, whisk together the almond flour, whey isolate, ground flaxseed, psyllium husk, baking powder, and salt until evenly combined with no clumps.
- In a second bowl, beat the eggs, then whisk in the Greek yogurt, melted butter, apple cider vinegar, and warm water until smooth.
- Pour the wet mixture into the dry and stir until a thick, uniform batter forms. Let it rest for 5 minutes so the psyllium and flax can absorb moisture and firm up.
- Scrape the batter into the prepared pan and smooth the top with a spatula. Scatter over the sesame seeds or your chosen topping if using.
- Bake for 35 to 45 minutes, until the top is firm and golden and the center reads about 200°F on an instant-read thermometer. Tent with foil if the crust darkens before the middle is set.
- Lift the loaf out by the parchment and cool it completely on a rack before slicing with a serrated knife. Cutting it warm makes the crumb seem gummy.
Nutrition
Notes
Tried this recipe?
Let us know how it was!Which Loaf Should You Bake First?
If psyllium husk and whey isolate are not already in your pantry, there is no need to buy a bag of fiber dust just to find out whether you like this style of bread. Start simpler.
The Simple Starter Loaf below uses only almond flour, eggs, Greek yogurt, flax, baking powder, and salt. It bakes up softer, closer to a quick bread, and it is the honest way to test the waters. It still lands at about 2 grams of net carbs per slice.
The full High-Protein Bread above is the one to make once you know you are in. The psyllium and whey turn that soft quick bread into a firm, sliceable, sandwich-worthy loaf with more protein per slice.
My honest suggestion: bake the starter loaf once. If you want a chewier, sturdier crumb next time, buy the psyllium and graduate to the full version.
And here is the pared-down starter version for a first attempt.
Simple Almond Flour Starter Loaf | Low-Carb
Ingredients
Equipment
- 1 Loaf pan
- 1 Mixing bowls
- 1 Whisk
Method
- Heat the oven to 350°F (175°C) and line a small loaf pan with parchment paper.
- In a large bowl, whisk together the almond flour, ground flaxseed, baking powder, and salt. Whisk in the optional whey isolate and psyllium now if you are using them.
- In a second bowl, beat the eggs, then stir in the Greek yogurt until smooth.
- Fold the wet mixture into the dry until you have a thick, even batter. If you added psyllium, let the batter rest for 5 minutes so it can hydrate.
- Scrape the batter into the pan, smooth the top, and bake for 30 to 40 minutes, until golden and firm and a toothpick comes out mostly clean.
- Cool completely on a rack before slicing. This loaf is softer than the full version, so a clean cool is what keeps the slices intact.
Nutrition
Notes
Tried this recipe?
Let us know how it was!Chef Tips for Perfect High-Protein Bread
Use whey isolate, not concentrate: Isolate is nearly pure protein with very little residual lactose or carbohydrate, so it firms the crumb without adding sweetness or extra carbs. Concentrate holds more moisture and can leave the center gummy.
Let the batter rest before baking: Give the mixed batter a full five minutes so the psyllium and flax can hydrate and swell. Skip this and the loaf bakes up dense and damp, because those two ingredients are still pulling water while it is in the oven.
Bake to temperature, not just color: Almond flour browns fast, so the top can look done long before the middle is set. Pull the loaf when the center reaches about 200°F on an instant-read thermometer, tenting it with foil if the crust darkens too early.
Cool completely before the first slice: The crumb keeps setting as it cools, and cutting into a warm loaf makes it seem gummy and fragile. Let it come to room temperature on a rack, then slice with a serrated knife.
Lean into toasting: This style of bread is at its best toasted, where the edges crisp and the crumb firms up. Butter, cream cheese, egg salad, tuna, smoked salmon, turkey, or avocado all belong on top.
High-Protein Bread Storage and Serving Suggestions
Refrigerator Storage: Keep the cooled loaf in an airtight container in the fridge for up to five days. This bread holds moisture, so room-temperature storage shortens its life quickly.
Freezer Storage: Slice first, then freeze the slices with parchment between them for up to three months. You can drop a slice straight into the toaster from frozen, no thawing needed.
Meal Prep Strategy: Bake one loaf on the weekend, slice the whole thing, and freeze it. You get grab-and-toast bread all week without babysitting a fresh bake each morning.
Complete the Meal: Toast a slice for cream cheese and smoked salmon, layer it with egg salad, or pair it with a bowl of cream of zucchini soup. For a lighter no-flour option on other days, the keto cloud bread loaf is a good companion in the rotation.
High-Protein Bread Q&A
Is this high-protein bread actually keto?
Yes. At about 2 grams of net carbs per slice, it fits comfortably within a keto or low-carb day. The almond flour, psyllium, and flax keep the carbohydrate load low while the fiber content stays high.
Can I make low-carb bread without psyllium husk?
You can, and the Simple Starter Loaf in this article does exactly that. Expect a softer, more cake-like crumb without it. Psyllium is what gives the loaf a firm, sliceable, bread-like structure, so add it once you want that chewier texture.
Why did my low-carb bread turn out gummy?
A gummy center usually means the loaf was underbaked or sliced while warm. Bake until the middle reaches about 200°F and let the loaf cool completely before cutting, because the crumb finishes setting as it comes to room temperature.
How much protein is in each slice?
The full loaf carries roughly 13 grams of protein per slice from the almond flour, whey isolate, eggs, and Greek yogurt. The simpler starter loaf, without the whey, lands closer to 8 grams per slice.
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Once you have a loaf that slices and toasts like the real thing, low-carb eating stops feeling like a compromise. Bake it once, freeze the slices, and you have honest bread ready whenever the sandwich craving hits.
Medical Disclaimer: The nutritional information provided in this article is for informational purposes only. While we strive for accuracy, individual responses to foods vary. Always consult with your healthcare provider or registered dietitian about dietary changes.






