Miracle No Knead Bread! this is SO UNBELIEVABLY GOOD and ridiculously easy to make. crusty outside, soft and chewy inside – perfect for dunking in soups!
Miracle No Knead Bread
There’s a reason we are calling this MIRACLE NO KNEAD BREAD.
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I have made this several times now and it always comes out great!! I am so nervous about cooking with yeast but this recipe is a piece of cake.
This is a fan favorite recipe that’s part of our Fall 2022 SOS Series! View the full series.
Let me paint a picture for you. It starts with a golden and ragged-looking crusty loaf of piping hot white bread being roughly torn into chunks, steam escaping, crumbs flying everywhere across the table, and it ends with that swift swooping motion as its hot n’ chewy little self dives deep into the bowl of thick soup and delivers a bit of chewy carbs sopped with flavor to your hungry, happy mouth. Honestly. The pure bliss of this moment.
Welcome to fall, bread lovers.
I have some really good news for you today.
YOU ARE ABOUT TO MAKE BREAD LIKE A BOSS.
In This Post: Everything You Need For No Knead Bread
- Watch How to Make No Knead Bread
- The Bread for Non-Bread Makers
- Ingredients for This Bread
- Make No Knead Bread
- Variations on This No Knead Bread Recipe
- No Knead Bread: Frequently Asked Questions
Prefer To Watch Instead Of Read?
The Bread For Non-Bread Makers (SOS-Friendly!)
You are going to serve this bread with your rocked-out homemade soups and the praise will come flowing from family and friends and neighbors alike, and people are not going to be able to stop. This is your moment for Martha-Stewart-level domestic greatness within the normalcy of a regular person life, and we are going to milk it.
Please scan your brain right now for these lurking thoughts: “I don’t make bread.” “Bread baking takes too long.” “Yeast-y recipes scare me.”
Friends, let the record show that I am in your club. I am on that team. I have less than zero percent patience for bread recipes and therefore I do not make bread, at all, ever, and I only have two teeny exceptions:
- I make brioche from Artisan Bread in 5, like, three times per year, because it makes for perfect tea rings and homemade French toast bakes and cinnamon rolls and for the times that the baking diva within comes alive. Also it’s VERY EASY.
- I make this Miracle No Knead Bread, inspired from my friends, fellow bloggers, Jim Lahey, and people of the internet, and I make it a minimum of 250 times every fall and winter because it is the opposite of fancy. Which is confusing because it FEELS fancy to pull a loaf of homemade bread out of the oven, especially when it is tucked into that rustic and beautiful Laura-Ingalls-Wilder-esque red Lodge Dutch Oven (affiliate link) that we swoon over every year when the leaves start turning, but seriously – I would, and do, on a regular basis, make this bread for weeknight dinners. We don’t call this Miracle No Knead Bread for nothin’.
What Is No Knead Bread Exactly?
Well, it’s exactly as it sounds!
While many bread recipes involve a lot of kneading and proofing and rising and proofing again and Great British Bake-Off levels of stress, this one requires no kneading. The most effort you’ll put in is the quick mix you’ll do to get the flour, water, yeast, and salt combined, and the strength it takes to transfer your dutch oven into the oven (but seriously, why so heavy?).
After a hands-off overnight rest on the countertop, and quick bake, the result: perfectly crusty outsides, soft and warm insides. It is, to put it simply, heaven.
Ingredients You’ll Need
Okay, are you ready for how short of a list this is?
- all-purpose flour (bread flour can work, too!)
- salt
- instant yeast
- water (but we’re guessing you have that on hand)
That’s it! That’s literally it!
How To Make No Knead Bread
Pillowy, golden-crusted, perfectly baked homemade bread is in your future! Let’s make it happen.
- Mix. Whisk together the flour, salt, and yeast in a large bowl. Stir in a bit of room temp water until the dough starts to form. It’ll look a little bit weird at first, just try us when we say it’ll all come together.
- Let the dough rest. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and let it just sit on the counter at room temp overnight. Just forget about it until morning.
- Form the dough. Remove the dough from the bowl and shape it into a ball.
- Bake. Line your Dutch oven or big oven-safe pot with parchment paper. Warm it up in the oven for a half hour or so (without the dough). Add your dough, add the lid, and bake for 30 minutes. Lift off the lid and bake for another 10ish minutes until the top gets a beautiful golden brown.
- Dunk away! Get ready to tear into this warm homemade bread and dunk and scoop it in all the things!
Variations On This No Knead Bread Recipe
Obviously we prefer this in its original, perfect form, but if you’re looking to make some changes, there are always OPTIONS.
- How to make it gluten-free: We tried this flour (affiliate link) and the results were great. A hard crust formed on the outside and the inside was soft, airy, and a teeny bit spongy – close to the real thing. Some downsides: the bread didn’t rise as much as the regular version and, of course, it didn’t have quite the same flavor.
- How to make it whole wheat: This is very similar to the original version. The texture of the dough was the same, it rose the same, and it looked the same coming out of the oven with its hard crust. The inside texture was denser with not as many air pockets. The flavor was a little bitter and texture was a bit gritty, but to be expected with whole wheat flour.
- How to add some flavor: Use whatever herbs that sound delicious to you! Mix them in the beginning to avoid kneading later.
- How to make it CHEESY: We’ve got a recipe for that! Check out our No Knead Cheese Bread.
It’s worth saying again that my motto for Pinch of Yum is RECIPES THAT REAL PEOPLE WOULD ACTUALLY MAKE. I pass all recipes that hit your eyeballs through this very practical and very important filter.
And this bread? This no knead bread that can be mixed all in one bowl with a wooden spoon in five minutes flat? This bread is on-brand. Nailed it. If you’ve never done this before, buckle up.
You’re so gonna love it in all its crispy, air-pocketed glory.
No Knead Bread: Frequently Asked Questions
You will just need an oven-safe pot or pan with an oven-safe tight-fitting lid. Please check instructions on whatever you use to ensure it can be heated to 450 degrees (empty for instruction #2).
Yep! Just make sure to activate the yeast first according to package instructions.
We’d recommend using fresh yeast for this recipe. Expired yeast can lead to bread that won’t rise.
Miracle No Knead Bread
- Total Time: 18 hours 40 minutes
- Yield: 8 servings 1x
Description
Miracle No Knead Bread! this is SO UNBELIEVABLY GOOD and ridiculously easy to make. crusty outside, soft and chewy inside – perfect for dunking in soups!
Ingredients
- 3 cups all-purpose flour
- 1 1/2 teaspoons salt
- 1/2 teaspoon instant yeast
- 1 1/2 cups room temperature water
Instructions
- DOUGH PREP: In a large mixing bowl, whisk the flour, salt, and yeast together until mixed. Stir in the water until a chunky, thick dough forms. If it needs a little more water, add a few more tablespoons, just enough to get it barely wet throughout. It’s gonna look scrappy and weird and you’re going to question me on whether or not this will work, but it will. Cover the mixing bowl with plastic wrap and let it rest for 12-18 hours at room temperature. Overnight is ideal here, kids.
- PREP FOR BAKING: When you’re ready to bake, preheat the oven to 450. Stick a 6 quart enamel coated cast iron Lodge Dutch Oven (or similar) in the oven for about 30 minutes to heat. At this point, the dough should be big and puffy and pretty loose, with little bubbles in it. Gently scrape the dough out onto a well-floured surface. (Remember: NO KNEAD.) Gently shape it into a ball with flour on the outside, set on a piece of parchment, and cover with plastic while your pan heats up.
- BAKE: Remove the plastic from the dough. Lift the dough and parchment together into the pan so the parchment lines the bottom of the hot pan (be careful not to touch the pan since it’s very hot). Bake, covered, for 30 minutes. Remove the cover and bake another 10-15 minutes to get the exterior nice and golden brown and crispy. Voila! Done. Miracle no-knead bread, you boss you.
Equipment
Notes
Based on comments and questions, we decided to try this recipe with both gluten-free flour and whole wheat flour! A few notes for each: 1. Gluten-Free: We tried this flour (affiliate link) and the results were great. A hard crust formed on the outside and the inside was soft, airy, and a teeny bit spongy – close to the real thing. Some downsides: the bread didn’t rise as much as the regular version and, of course, it didn’t have quite the same flavor. 2. Whole Wheat: This was very similar to the original version. The texture of the dough was the same, it rose the same, and it looked the same coming out of the oven with its hard crust. The inside texture was denser with not as many air pockets. The flavor was a little bitter and texture was a bit gritty, but to be expected with whole wheat flour.
- Prep Time: 12 hours
- Cook Time: 40 minutes
- Category: Side Dish
- Method: Bake
- Cuisine: American
Keywords: no knead bread, homemade bread, easy bread
(👇🏼 pictured here dipped in Chicken Wild Rice Soup. cannot recommend that situation highly enough.)
You can read about ten other things I love to do with my adorable red Lodge Dutch Oven in THIS POST from years back. Yes, I am that much of a superfan.
Soup Recipes To Enjoy This Bread With
Truly there is nothing better than swooping a piece of this piping hot bread into some cozy, creamy soup. Here are our favorites:
- The Best Detox Crockpot Lentil Soup (healthy, creamy, YUM)
- Simple Homemade Tomato Soup (maybe even with our No Knead CHEESE Bread?!)
- Instant Pot Wild Rice Soup (our favorite pairing)
- Instant Pot Minestrone Soup (like a hug in a bowl)
- Basic + Awesome Broccoli Cheese Soup (cheese and bread, can’t go wrong)
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One More Thing!
This recipe is part of our collection of easy baking recipes. Check it out!
Could I use a 5 quart dutch oven?
THis is a very good recipie. I found something special for your with full of recipies found in Phillipines called Amber Menu.
I’ve been making this bread regularly for a long time now. It’s so easy to mix the ingredients the night before and wake up for an easy bake that fills the home with the best fresh baked aroma, It makes the weekends civilized and peaceful and it always turns out amazing, just like the photos! I’ve also been making my own jams and spreads, so with a little soft cheese, yogurt and fresh fruit, the day starts with old world romance. Thank you so much for introducing me to this and your other recipes.!
Can I just ask….. for the warmer weather areas…… what high room temp would not be conducive. In the summer it’s as warm as 26- 30°C overnight. Will this adversely affect the proofing?
I was wondering can I add honey for some added sweetness? And would I need to adjust any ingredients?
We’ve never tried this, so can’t say! If you give it a try, let us know how it goes!
Can i substitute self-rising flour for all purpose?
Worked great except for two times. One, I forgot to put the lid on the pot while it was baking. It was so hard I could have hammered nails with it. The other I think I didn’t get all of the dough fully moistened. It had hard spots in the finished product.
Funny story – We had visitors from France who were on a long term visit to the U.S. and stopped in to see us. They saw that I had made the bread and said it was the first real French bread they had found during their trip. Wanted the recipe, which I gave them. The irony of an American man showing a French woman how to make French bread still makes me laugh!
After multiple failed attempts with a sourdough starter, I gave this recipe a try. First time and perfect!
Did not work for me because my bread did not rise. It expanded and looked great before I put it in the oven so I know the yeast was alive. My guess is the step missing in the instructions is to slice the top before putting it in the oven.
Did you use a preheated Dutch oven? How long did you proof on the counter for? Overproofed bread tends to come out dense and flat. Scoring, or “slicing the top”, doesn’t have a significant effect on oven spring.
Thank you for offering your recipes. Corinne S.
It’s two years later, and I’m wondering if anyone has tried this recipe using rye flour.
Dorothy
I opened one packet of instant fast rising yeast, which measures 0.25 and put it in a bowl and it comes to really like a full teaspoon not a half teaspoon should I add the whole thing? Thank you for your quick responses I’m in the middle right now, trying to put the
I have added caraway powder from Penney’s, and it is delicious. a subtle true flavor. Also added caraway seeds and it works well.
When I try to transfer the raised dough to the dutch oven the dough collapses and I don’t get the bubbles in my finished loaf.
Any ideas?
Thanks
Jeff
Try reshaping it just before you transfer it. Make sure there’s some tension in the dough ball.
Easy Peary and delicious!
I loved this recipe and so floor my kids! It’s super easy and completely fool proof! I wish we could post pics of the outcome because they turned out looking amazing!
Made this bread today. Left it overnight to rise and followed the baking instructions. It turned out really yummy; crunchy exterior, soft and chewy interior as you described. Topped it with butter and honey and then tomato sauce, mozzarella and turkey pepperoni later. 😋
However, I would bake it for 35-40 minutes next time as the interior was ever so slightly sticky. Not raw, but you could tell it needed just a little more time.
Hi there- just wondering if the bake time is different if I double the recipe? I have a 5 quart Dutch oven.
First, The loaves look AND taste amazing! This recipe has become the best gift to friends and neighbors I want to show appreciation to!
For a double loaf in my 6qt cast iron, I have upped the covered cook time to 38 min and then 15 min uncovered.
Lately I have been baking a double loaf and a single loaf at the same time (Triple batch). For 2 vessels, I up the covered time to 40min and 20 uncovered(keeping an eye on it to make sure it doesn’t get overly brown)
I have gone to weighing the flour. 400g per loaf. Makes it easier to do triple and quad batches too.
We’ve never doubled it so can’t say! We’d probably opt for just making two loaves.
I love this recipe! I make it often. For anyone wondering, it still works without the Dutch oven. I don’t have one because money. Lol I put a baking tray on the rack beneath the bread and toss a handful of ice cubes in it when I put the dough in to bake. Comes out great
Do you cover the tray?? (Since when using a dutch oven you put on the lid)
You mention that whole wheat flour can make it bitter/gritty. Do you have any thoughts on doing whole wheat + honey to make it a “honey whole wheat” loaf?
I make this with all purpose flour at least once a week and love it; interested in changing it up a bit!
Simple, natural ingredients and easy prep. This bread gives us the nutrients of homemade bread and keeps away chemical and synthetic additives that make us unhealthy.
Thank you!
I don’t have a Lodge dutch oven but 😮 I already mixed it up and it’s sitting. I DO have my mother’s old Pyrex w/cover. I hope that will work bc I don’t want to have to go buy the Lodge d.o. for this bread. I’m not a big cooker. What do you think about the Pyrex?
Oooh this recipe is sooo good! Super simple for a busy mum and the kids looove it 🙂 looking forward to trying out some flavour variations on this recipe. Thank you pinch of yum for the inspiration 😋
I am not aware of Pyrex being able to handle 450 degrees temperature. Cast Iron can. Heat is important as is a lid to keep the bread moist on the inside. If you figured out an option, let me know. I have a Le Creuset Dutch oven and it works beautifully.
Amazing!! The flavor of this recipe is the best, I’m guessing it’s the overnight method?!
I used a pie dish and just covered with parchment and it was perfect.
I used Pyrex 10 years! My friend from Czech Republic send me this recipe more than 10 years ago!!very good European bred!!!
Right after I plop the dough into the Dutch oven, I use kitchen scissors to snip a crisscross pattern in the dough. It doesn’t change the flavor, but makes the loaf look more professional. I also sprinkle a little sea salt on top of the dough after creating the crisscross, my family likes it that way. I have also sprinkled on Everything Bagel seasoning before putting the lid on.
Hey! I’m not sure if it’s a conversion issue, but the amount of water in ml is too much, if makes a very wet dough. For my fellow European bakers, I would say add the water a little at a time until it looks about right. I had to add more flour to even it out, very delicious and crispy bread either way;) thanks <3
Can you list the amount of flour and water in grams?
Hi, I’d like to ask what kind of flour you use. My dough looks extremely wet compared to your video . I use metric measures.
I’m sorry, I meant is there a particular brand of all purpose flour that you use. Cheers!
All-purpose flour!