No Knead Bread (Dutch Oven Bread)
What Is No-Knead Bread?
No-knead bread was pioneered by bread baker Jim Lahey (you can see the post here) about 10 years ago when Mark Bittman published the recipe in the New York Times. It’s basically the simplest bread recipe possible. You mix all the ingredients until just mixed, cover it, then let it rise. That’s it.
The yeast works it’s magic, then you bake it in a Dutch oven! You can get artisan style bread with little to no work. You can allow the bread to rise fully overnight, or in just a few hours. As someone who loves bread as quick as possible, we’re making the faster version today. I’ll definitely do the long version very soon, too.
My recipe is a variation of the original. It uses more flour, more liquid to balance it out, and more yeast to compensate for the shorter rise time. And it’s perfect.
No Knead Bread Ingredients
- instant yeast – You want to ensure you’re using instant yeast here since it doesn’t need to proof separately, and can just be mixed into the dry ingredients Always check to ensure that your yeast is fresh before you start (I’ll show you how to below).
- warm water – since we’re speeding up the rise time of this recipe, you want to use warm/hot water instead of room temperature water. This means that instead of rising for 8 to 24 hours, we’re only rising for 2 hours. You don’t want your water to be hotter than 120°F else you’ll kill your yeast. Just test the heat before. If you don’t have a food or candy thermometer, use touch. You don’t ever want boiling water, you want water that’s pretty warm to touch.
- flour – I use all-purpose sifted flour for this recipe. If you have bread flour, go ahead. I know some people who use half whole wheat and half white and that also works.
- maple syrup, agave, or granulated sugar – a little bit of sugar in the recipe feeds the yeast and helps with the rising process of the bread. It won’t make it taste sweet.
- sea salt – I use sea salt, and salt helps to boost/enhance flavour in this bread. If you’re using table salt, you’ll want to cut back since it has finer granules and might be too much, probably to 1 teaspoon.
- olive oil – this is optional, but I love adding 1 teaspoon of olive oil into my bread because it creates an extra beautiful crust, while helping with the moisture inside the bread. That means you can leave it out for a few days before it begins to get stale!
How To Make
- mix the dry ingredients together. You want to thoroughly combine them. Then, create a well, and add in the wet ingredients.
- Stir with a spatula to combine until you get a shaggy dough (like in the photos). Fold over into a ball and cover and let it rise on your counter.
- The dough will double in size (mine sometimes triples!) with beautiful bubbles on top. Pour the dough onto a well floured surface and then add some flour to your hands and the top. You want to fold it in on itself using a dough scraper. If you don’t have a dough scraper, you can use a large floured spatula or a large floured knife. You just want a surface that’s sturdy since the dough is so loose.
- Put the dough on your parchment, then your parchment into your preheated dutch oven. Cover, bake, remove cover, bake further, then you’re done!
- Let it cool as long as you can (what can I say, we all love warm bread right?) then tear or slice and enjoy! Slather some vegan butter on it and devour!
Key Steps for No-Knead Bread
- ensure your yeast is fresh. Your yeast is your (pun intended) bread and butter of this entire recipe, so it’s crucial that it’s fresh. You can test. You can test it by putting about a teaspoon of it into warm water (about 100°F). Stir to combine, and let it sit for about 5 minutes. It should foam or bubble slightly. You’re good to go!
- Be sure to let it rise for the full time! Just set a timer and leave it alone. If you play with it too much it’ll affect the rise.
- Ensure your dutch oven is preheated. I’ll remind you in the instructions, but I always just set a timer about 30 minutes before I know my dough is going to be done. This is the key to that stunning crust because it gets our home ovens to the temperature of bakery ovens. Feel free to preheat your dutch oven for up to 30 minutes at 450F or even longer.
- Use a kitchen scale. I can’t stress this enough – this is the single kitchen tool that’ll make you an incredible baker. All the patience, effort and hard work in the world doesn’t replace the precision of a scale. I never have to worry if I’m scooping enough flour or adding in too much water because I just follow my scale! Before your next baking project, I recommend ordering one. This is the scale I used for years.
- Don’t overthink it. Yes, the dough will be loose, but together enough to pick up and put on the parchment paper. Yes, it’ll work! You got this.
Recipes to enjoy No Knead Bread with
- Chickpea Tuna
- Lentil Soup
- A good ole Grilled Cheese Sandwich
- Coconut Curry Lentil Soup
- My Vegan Lentil Stew
Look how beautiful that crumb structure is! I hope you enjoy this recipe, friends, and send me photos!
Enjoy friends! If you make these No Knead Bread (Dutch Oven Bread), please snap a photo and tag #jessicainthekitchen on Instagram! We’d also love it if you would leave a comment below, and give the recipe a rating! Thanks so much!
No Knead Bread (Dutch Oven Bread)
Ingredients
- 4 3/4 cups all purpose flour + some extra for flouring, (570g)
- 2 1/4 teaspoons instant yeast, (about 1 packet) (7g)
- 2 teaspoons sea salt, (12g)
- 2 cups very warm water (about 120°F/48°C), (472 ml)
- 2 teaspoons maple syrup, agave or granulated sugar, (13.5g)
- 1 teaspoon olive oil or any oil, (4.4g)
Instructions
- In a very large bowl, whisk the dry ingredients together until thoroughly combined. Create a well in the centre and add the warm water, maple syrup and the oil. Stir the water into the dry ingredients to form a dough. You want to stir until it’s all incorporated and the dough looks shaggy but mixed together, about 1 minute.
- Lightly grease the sides of the bowl, and turn the dough over in it to grease the dough. Cover with greased plastic wrap, an alternative wrap or light kitchen towel and let it rise on your counter for 2 to 3 hours. If your kitchen is cold, place it in your oven with the oven light turned ON and the oven OFF for a warm, draft free area for it to rise. The dough will double in size so be sure to use a bowl tall enough to manage this rise.
- In the last 30-40 minutes of rising, place your Dutch oven in the oven and preheat at 450°230°C. You want to add your Dutch before preheating so it preheats with the oven (this will ensure it doesn’t crack).
- After two hours, the dough should have bubbles on the top. Flour a surface with at least 1 tablespoon flour spread out, then pour the risen dough onto it. Sprinkle another 1/2 tablespoon of flour onto the top of the dough and flour your dough scraper/knife/large spatula.
- Using your dough scraper or large knife or spatula, fold the dough on top of itself. Do this by pulling the outer edges up and onto the centre. Rotate the dough and do it a few more times, about 6 to 12 times. You want the dough to feel a bit tighter and to start forming a shape. Feel free to lightly sprinkle more flour during this process. It should take you less than a minute.
- Scoop the dough and place onto a piece of parchment paper. Using your hands, scoop/shape it into a circle.
- When the oven is preheated, remove the dutch oven carefully with oven mitts. Take the lid off and place the dough (on the parchment paper) into the Dutch oven. Place lid back on (remember it’s hot!!) and place it all back into the oven.
- Bake for 45 minutes. After that time, open the oven, carefully remove the lid and continue to bake for an additional 15 to 20 minutes until the crust is at your desired level. If you're using a gas oven/convection oven, only do it for 5 to 10 minutes so the bottom and tips don't burn. I love mine golden brown.
- Remove from the oven, and set down. Lift up the edges of the parchment to transfer the bread to a wire cooling rack. If you want to test it for doneness, you can turn it over and lightly tap on the bottom. It should sound hollow.
- Completely cool, then slice, serve and enjoy! If you can't wait, cool it for at least 30 minutes!
Notes
Disclaimer: Although jessicainthekitchen.com attempts to provide accurate nutritional information, kindly note that these are only estimates. Nutritional information may be affected based on the product type, the brand that was purchased, and in other unforeseeable ways. Jessicainthekitchen.com will not be held liable for any loss or damage resulting for your reliance on nutritional information. If you need to follow a specific caloric regimen, please consult your doctor first.
I might not have added enough flour since it was kind of messy but easy to make and good flavor!
We’re so happy that you enjoyed this recipe Anna! Thank you so much for reading and leaving such a nice comment!
This recipe is AMAZING! We’ve made it 4 times in 2 weeks and it has been foolproof and perfect every time. Thank you for the recipe!
We’re so happy that you enjoyed this recipe Catherine! Thank you so much for reading and leaving such a nice comment!
I’ve been making the NYTimes No-Knead for the last few months and, after making this one twice, this is my new go-to recipe! I love that the dough holds together a bit more than the other recipe, which allows you to handle it more easily. The results are great. We are on our second loaf this week! With a bread that is so fast to make with such great results, I won’t be buying bread for the foreseeable future.
We’re so happy that you enjoyed this recipe Sarah! Thank you so much for reading and leaving such a nice comment!
First timme mmaking. I had all ingrediants & it seemmed easy. I’mm not a baker by any stretch of anyone’s immagination!
I followed recipe (instructions don’t included maple syrup-I mmixed it in with water and oil) During process mmy husband who does bake and cook wonderfully was trying to supervise. I told himm that I’mm doing EXACTLY as recipe indicates and thatI don’t need a “bread baking babysitter!”😂
Well as usual, mmy process in the ALWAYS an adventure. I walked back in after 2 hours and mmy dough was overflowing out the bowl. Yeah – n3xt timme I will use larger bowl. It mmore than doubled in size!!! Thank goodness mmy husband wasn’t around when I was taking it out of the bowl. It is quite wet and sticky … I was wrestling with a stretchy blob of dough that had mme wondering if I had followed recioe correctly or if I was ever going to get untangled fromm the dough! You definitely want to be generous with fluor dusting on board and HANDS!
Mmy husband mmade a remark about mme pre-heating Dutch Oven. Again, just following recipe instructions! Mme biggest focus was on remmembering that it was going to be HOT!
End result?! Bread that was PERFECT!!! And fust bummp👊& kudos fromm mmy husband; he loved it🙃
I love it as well😊 Thank you so mmuch!!!
Isabel
Oh wow, what an amazing comment Isabel! We’re so happy you and your wonderful family enjoyed it!
This bread came out perfectly! I love how well this loaf comes together; it’s really easy to work with and is delicious. My new go-to recipe!
Made this on Sunday. I added
1/4 Cup bakers dry milk.
The bread came out excellent. Great toast.
Thank you for your recipe & Hard work.
A Bread Baker.
Joe Falcone
Amazing bread every time!!! The recipe doesn’t say when to add the maple syrup/ agave/ sugar so I just add it with the water and oil. I also have tried it without doing any of the folding over and find it is less dense and has more bubbles (which I prefer). A definite go to for delicious, easy impressive homemade bread!
Thank you Kayla! This review is so important. I’m so happy that you like it as well.
I’d like to add roasted garlic. At what point would you do that?
Hi Patricia,
Right you stick it in the oven, after it’s formed and shaped, just stick it into where you want it to go! Enjoy!!
I was terrified to make bread, but determined to try. This was my first bread recipe and I haven’t looked back. Have made it a dozen times now and it always comes out perfect. Thank you for another amazing recipe!
Oh wow! We’re so happy that you enjoyed this recipe Janna! Thank you so much for reading and leaving such a nice comment!
Is the dutch oven essential? haven’t got one. Moreover the local bakers one in every town bake bread in twenties or more at a time with no dutch ovens. Their loaves just like yours. Wood fired ovens are used.
Tks
Hi Joe We haven’t tested it with no dutch oven but will update you with instructions when we do!
Hi Joe! Here’s a method:
Yes! You’re going to want to do what I did with my pizza recipe, what I call the steam method. Add a baking dish/pan with boiling hot water in your oven under the shelf of the bread. This is similar to what the dutch oven is doing.
Shape your dough as best as possible on a parchment paper-lined baking sheet in the rack above it. Then bake! You want to work fast, so you want to shape etc first, then add in your pan with boiling hot water then close the door right away! Hope that helps!