How to make Bread at Home & earn Rs 1,00,000/- per month in India (Work from Home Business Idea)

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How to manufacture Bread (maida) at home — Traditional hand-knead method

This method makes a classic soft sandwich loaf (pan loaf) from refined wheat flour (maida). It uses simple ingredients (maida, water, yeast, sugar, salt, fat) and an OTG / household electric oven for baking. It’s ideal for home bakers, small-scale sellers, or anyone wanting reliable, repeatable bread with minimal capital.

1) Ingredients (for one standard 400–500 g loaf)

Use a digital scale for accuracy.

  • Maida (refined all-purpose flour) — 250 g
  • Water (lukewarm, ~28–32°C) — 150–160 ml (adjust to dough feel)
  • Instant dry yeast — 4–5 g (~1 tsp)
  • Sugar — 10–12 g (~2 tsp) — feeds yeast and improves browning
  • Salt — 4–5 g (~3/4 tsp)
  • Oil / melted butter — 20–25 g (~1½ tbsp) — for softness
  • (Optional) Milk powder 10 g or whole milk instead of water for richer crumb

Yield: one 400–500 g loaf (pullman/standard loaf tin).

2) Equipment & machine components (complete list)

a) Baking equipment (OTG / conventional oven) — essential components

When you buy an OTG or home electric oven, important functional components you’ll rely on:

  • Heating elements (top and bottom Nichrome elements) — provide bake heat.
  • Convection fan (if convection OTG) — circulates hot air for even bake.
  • Thermostat / temperature controller — set and regulate oven temperature.
  • Timer / control panel — set bake duration.
  • Oven chamber / cavity and racks.
  • Glass door with seal — to view and keep heat in.
  • Door gasket, crumb tray, oven light (nice to have).
    (These components are standard across popular OTG brands in India.) Amazon India, Hindustan Times

      b) Other tools & small machines

  • Mixing bowl (stainless steel / plastic)
  • Dough scraper/flexible bench scraper
  • Measuring spoons and kitchen scale (digital)
  • Proofing cloth / damp towel or plastic wrap
  • Loaf tin (200×100×100 mm or similar) — greased or lined
  • Cooling rack
  • Thermometer (instant-read) — helpful to check internal temp (done bread is ~94–96°C)
  • Optional: Stand mixer (dough hook) — if you want to replace hand kneading
  • Oven mitts, spatula, silicone brush

      c) Machine-level suppliers (examples to check in India)

  • OTG / home oven brands — Morphy Richards, Bajaj, Philips, Prestige — widely available retail models suitable for home baking. (Check product pages and retailers for model specs and prices.) Flipkart
  • Commercial / baking equipment suppliers (if scaling) — local bakery equipment manufacturers and dealers (search “bakery oven suppliers” + your city). For household needs, mainstream appliance brands are easiest to source. Agaro

3) Step-by-step manufacturing process (detailed)

a) Preparation (15 minutes)

  • i) Weigh ingredients precisely. Accuracy improves consistency.
  • ii) Activate yeast (if using active dry yeast): mix yeast + sugar + 30 ml warm water (~35°C) and wait 5–8 min until foamy. If using instant dry yeast, you can mix directly with flour.
  • iii) Preheat oven (OTG) to 180°C about 20–25 minutes before baking — ensures accurate bake temp. For convection OTG, preheat to 180°C; for non-convection allow a slightly longer preheat. Hindustan Times

b) Mixing & Kneading (20–25 minutes)

  • i) In a large bowl, combine maida, salt (keep salt away from direct contact with yeast), (and dry milk powder if using).
  • ii) Add instant yeast and sugar (or add activated yeast mix if you proofed yeast).
  • iii) Pour in ~80% of water and begin mixing with hand or spoon until shaggy. Add oil.
  • iv) Transfer to a clean surface; hand-knead for 10–15 minutes until the dough is smooth, elastic, and slightly tacky. (Stretch test: you should be able to stretch a small piece into a thin membrane without tearing.)
    • Tips: If dough is sticky, sprinkle small amounts of flour; if too dry, add drops of water.
  • v) Form dough into a ball.

c) Bulk fermentation / first proof (45–75 minutes)

  • i) Lightly oil a bowl, place dough in it, cover with damp cloth or plastic wrap.
  • ii) Place in a warm spot (about 25–32°C). Dough should nearly double in volume — 45–75 minutes depending on room temperature and yeast activity. (Warmer room = faster proof.)
    • Quick tip: For warm proofing in an Indian kitchen: turn oven to lowest temperature for 1 minute, switch off, place dough inside with door ajar. Don’t leave oven hot.

d) Punch down & shape (5–10 minutes)

  • i) Gently deflate dough (punch down), press air out, divide if making multiple loaves.
  • ii) Shape into a tight loaf: flatten into a rectangle, fold sides inward, roll to fit loaf tin, seam side down.
  • iii) Grease and line your loaf tin (or use baking spray). Place shaped dough into tin.

e) Final proof (second rise) — 30–50 minutes

  • i) Cover loaf tin with cloth/plastic and let it rise until dough is about 1–1.5 cm above rim (or ~75–90% of final size).
  • ii) Preheat OTG to 180°C (convection) / 190°C (conventional) while final proofing.

f) Scoring & baking (25–35 minutes)

  • i) (Optional) Brush top with milk or egg wash for better crust color.
  • ii) Place tin in preheated OTG on the middle rack. Bake 25–35 min at 180°C (convection) or 190°C (non-convection). Start checking after 20–25 minutes.
  • iii) Internal temperature of done bread ~94–96°C (use instant-read thermometer). Tap test: bottom sounds hollow. Crust should be golden brown. Hindustan Times

g) Cooling & packing (15–30 minutes)

  • i) Remove tin, unmould loaf and cool on a rack completely before slicing to set crumb (20–30 min).
  • ii) For sale or storage, pack cooled loaves in food-grade bags. Room-temperature shelf life (soft bread) ~2–3 days; refrigerating changes texture; for longer storage freeze in slices.

4) Supplier leads (India) — machines & raw materials (examples)

      a) OTG / Oven (retail/home models)

  • Morphy Richards / Philips / Bajaj / Prestige — widely sold on Flipkart/Amazon and local appliance dealers (good for 20–60 L OTGs suitable for home bakers). Check product pages & capacity specs for model selection. Flipkart

      b) Maida (refined flour)

  • Fortune (Adani Wilmar) — Fortune Maida — a widely available branded maida in India. Buying larger retail packs or contacting local flour mills for wholesale is recommended for small business margins. fortunefoods.com

       c) Baker’s yeast / instant yeast

  • Lesaffre (global baking yeast), Angel Yeast, and local distributors supply baker’s yeast in India — look for “instant dry yeast / baker’s yeast” from these brands; many have Indian distribution or importers. Buying 500 g–1 kg packs is more economical than small retail sachets. en.angelyeast.com

5) Hygiene, food-safety & licensing (brief)

  • Follow basic food-safety: clean benches, sanitized tools, hair restraint, avoid cross-contamination, store ingredients in airtight containers.
  • For selling from home in India: check your local municipal requirements — small food businesses often need a FSSAI registration (basic FSSAI registration for small businesses) and local trade/shop license depending on scale and state rules. Always confirm rules with local authorities. (FSSAI registration is commonly required for food sale.)

6) Scaling tips (if you want to sell 10–50 loaves/day)

  • Move from hand-kneading to a dough mixer (10–20 kg capacity) to save labour and get consistent dough.
  • Use larger OTGs or multiple home ovens; for higher volumes consider a small commercial deck oven / convection oven (higher cost).
  • Negotiate bulk prices for maida and yeast; packaging and reliable delivery matter.
  • Keep a production log: batch yield, proof times, oven settings, and costs — this helps standardize product and margins.

7) Troubleshooting (common problems & fixes)

  • Dense / heavy loaf — under-proofed (give more time), too little kneading, or too much salt/old yeast.
  • Very open / holes in crumb — over-proofed or too much water; shape tightly.
  • Pale crust — bake slightly hotter or brush with milk/egg wash; ensure oven reaches set temp.
  • Dry crumb — overbaked or too little fat/liquid.

8) Quick checklist before first bake

  • Scale ingredients precisely.
  • Preheat OTG for full 20–25 min.
  • Proof dough in warm area (25–32°C).
  • Use clean, oiled loaf tin and allow bread to cool fully before slicing.

9) Sources / further reading (selected)

  • Morphy Richards / OTG product listings and retail pages for model selection and pricing. Amazon India
  • Overview and buying guides for OTG ovens in India. Hindustan Times
  • Fortune Maida product page (brand maida in India). fortunefoods.com
  • Angel Yeast / global yeast manufacturer info (look for local distributors or Lesaffre for India supply). en.angelyeast.com

10) Simple per-loaf cost estimate (approximate, India, 2025 prices — indicative)

a) Assumptions: one 400–450 g loaf, costs rounded.

  • Maida (250 g) — Rs 10–Rs 20 (retail brand packs vary; bulk purchase lowers cost)
  • Yeast (4–5 g) — Rs 3–6 (bulk baker’s yeast is cheaper per gram)
  • Sugar, salt, oil, milk powder (pro rata) — Rs 8/- to 12/-
  • Electricity per bake (OTG) — Rs 3– Rs 6 (depends on wattage and local tariff)
  • Packaging (bag, label) — Rs 3–6
  • Manpower – Rs 5-10 per loaf

 b) Estimated recurring cost per loaf: ~Rs 30– Rs 60 depending on ingredient brands and purchase volumes.

 c) One time Cost to setup the Manufacturing Process [or One-time equipment cost (typical home setup)]:

  • OTG (good home model) — Rs 6,000 to Rs 18,000 (varies by capacity and brand). Hindustan Times
  • Loaf tins, measuring scale, bowls, thermometers, basic tools — Rs 1,000 to Rs 3,000.
  • One-time Appx setup cost used in calculation: Rs 16,000 to Rs 21,000 (OTG Rs 10,000 + tins/tools Rs 4,000 + scale Rs 1,000 + utensils Rs 1,000).

Notes: Buying ingredients in larger, wholesale packs (5–25 kg Maida; 500 g to 25 kg yeast) reduces per-loaf material costs. Electricity,        labour and packaging are the main recurring overheads for home sale.

d) Apart from One time cost, the monthly revenue and Net profit can be calculated using following method (Quick highlights from the default scenario):

  • Production: 30 loafs/day × 26 days = 780 loafs/month
  • Selling price: Rs 90 / loaf
  • Manufacturing cost per Loaf = 30 to 60Rs
  • Appx selling price per Loaf = 90 to 110 Rs per loaf
  • Profit per Loaf (if Sold as 90Rs per loaf) = Rs 90 – Rs 60 = Rs 30
  • If 30 Loafs are sold per day
  • Working days per month = 26
  • Loafs sold per month = 26 * 30 = 780 loafs per month
  • Net Profit per month (if 780 loafs are sold monthly): 780 (loafs per month) * 30 (INR) = Rs 23,400/-

 e) To earn Net Profit of Rs 1,00,000/- per month: 

  • As mentioned above, if you sell 780 Loafs per month, You get Net monthly profit as Rs 23,400/-
  • Individual Profit per loaf = Rs 30 /-
  • To get Net Profit of more than Rs 1,00,000 /-, You need to sell 130 loafs in a day (or 3900 loafs in a month)
  • So if you are selling 3900 loafs in a month, you net profit will be:
  • 3900 * 26 = Rs 1,01,400/-

f) First Month net profit, and consecutive next month profits

i) As you will have to pay money to setup manufacturing process, so in first month your net profit can be low. So your Manufacturing expenses needs to be deducted from Net profit, to get details of net profit that you will get.

ii) In first month your profit will be:

1st month Profit = Net Monthly Profit (-) Manufacturing set up cost

= Rs 1,08,000  (-) Rs 21,000 (appx)

= Rs 87,000 (Appx)

iii) Net profit from next month onwards:

2nd month Net Profit = Total Monthly revenue (-) Monthly expenses

= [Rs 90 * 26 days * 130 loafs per day] – [Rs 60 * 26 days * 130 loafs per day]

= Rs 1,01,400 (Appx) per month

Please comment if you have any doubts or questions.

11) Appx list of Permits/License that you may need to start/run business (Please validate from Local authority sources or Financial consultants or any other professionals as per your suitability)

a) Licenses & permits to consider (list)

  • FSSAI registration (mandatory for selling food products) — either basic registration or license depending on scale.
  • Local municipal / health trade license (Check if compulsory) (varies by city).
  • Shop/establishment registration (Check if compulsory)  (if you employ people or have a dedicated place).
  • GST registration (Check if required/compulsory)  (if your turnover exceeds the threshold or if you want to claim input tax credits).
  • Any other local/state-specific food business rules (Check if required/compulsory)

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