

No-Knead Crusty White Bread, our 2016 Recipe of the Year, is one of the most popular recipes on our website. And with good reason: I daresay millions of bakers around the country have made bread using this simple technique since it first popped up on the culinary landscape over 10 years ago.
If you're a devoté of no-knead bread, and haven't yet branched out into other interesting iterations – it's time to start. Prepare your dough as usual. Then, just before shaping, think how you might tweak the flavor with add-ins – and let your imagination run wild.
Do you love the cranberry-pecan bread at your local artisan bakery? Work those two simple ingredients into your plain dough. How about toasted walnuts and a handful of crumbled Maytag blue? Or bake up a take on pizza, with diced pepperoni and cubed mozzarella.
Need some inspiration for personalizing your own loaves? Check out our no-knead bread three ways.
Here's our basic dough: mixed, risen, refrigerated, and ready to scoop and shape.
You'll use about 1/3 of the dough (about 19 ounces) for each loaf you're making.
Look at those absolutely beautiful strands of gluten! And this is strictly from a short mix, and long, slow rise in the fridge.
I mean, it's like instead of cleaning up your kitchen at the end of the day, you cast some magic spell at night, go to bed, and next day – presto, your kitchen is a picture-perfect magazine spread of neatness. (Would that it were so...)
I'm using 4 ounces diced cheddar cheese, and one small (3") jalapeño pepper, seeded and sliced.
BTW, have you tried Cabot's new cheddars? Oh, my... SO good. And, here's something I didn't know: like all Cabot cheddars, they're lactose-free – perfect for those with lactose intolerance.
Oil or flour your work surface to keep sticking to a minimum.
Flour the top of the dough; this will help keep it moist as it rises, and make a pretty crust.
Let the dough warm up and rise for 1 to 2 hours; there's no need to cover it. It won't so much rise as expand and settle. Which is fine; it'll "pick up" when it hits the hot oven.
Preheat your oven to 450°F while the loaf rises. If you're using a baking stone – which will help give your bread super-crisp crust and light texture – position it on a middle rack while the oven preheats.
Place a shallow metal or cast iron pan (not glass, Pyrex, or ceramic) on the lowest oven rack, and have 1 cup of hot water ready to go. You're going to use the hot water to create steam in the oven, which will give the bread's crust a pretty sheen, as well as increase its crackly crustiness.
Don't hold back: be quick and bold with that sharp knife (or lame)! Your bread will appear to deflate a bit; instead of wringing your hands, quickly shove it into the hot oven – onto the baking stone, if you're using one, or simply onto a middle rack, if it's on a pan.
Carefully pour 1 cup hot water into the shallow pan on the rack beneath. It'll bubble and steam; close the oven door quickly.
Bake the bread for 25 to 35 minutes, until it's a deep, golden brown. Remove it from the oven, and cool on a rack.
That's it. Enjoy!
Check out the other variations I made –
Here's a loaf with mixed (pitted) Greek-style olives and feta cheese – about 1 1/2 cups total, your choice as to the amount of each. Kalamata or oil-cured black olives are both good; don't use anything too juicy.
How do you get the swirl in this bread? Knead in 3/4 cup golden raisins, then sprinkle your work surface heavily with cinnamon sugar. Place the dough atop the cinnamon sugar and give it a few quick kneads and turns. It'll pick up a very faint swirl in the middle, and be fairly heavily coated with cinnamon sugar on the outside.
At the end of the day, here's what became of our bucket of no-knead dough (l to r): olive and feta; cinnamon swirl-golden raisin, and cheddar jalapeño loaves.
Now go forth and create!
Have you experimented with tweaking your no-knead bread recipe? Share your innovations in "comments," below.
October 18, 2019 at 9:34pm
In reply to We're sorry to hear that your bread didn't have as much flavor … by bakersresource
Grate very cold cheese and lightly flour it then knead in. That keeps the oils in the cheese from draining off into surrounding bread dough leaving the hole.
December 30, 2019 at 12:37pm
In reply to I made the Cabot Chedder and Jalapeño twice. Both times the che… by Lynn Mastrangelo (not verified)
If your bread were only as cheesy as your inane comment. Are you joshing us?
My suggestion as a cook and baker of 50 years is : add more cheese.
July 31, 2020 at 3:16pm
In reply to If your bread were only as… by eugene sedita (not verified)
Many people, including me, are so new to baking, it seems a little daunting. Things that seem obvious to someone with your experience might stump a newbie.
September 9, 2018 at 7:50pm
September 10, 2018 at 10:43am
In reply to How are you mixing in the add-ins? Is there good video that te… by Alex (not verified)
April 6, 2022 at 12:05pm
In reply to Hi Alex, we have just what you're looking for! <a href="https:/… by bakersresource
This video helped a ton. The post said to knead in add-ins which I think was too aggressive and made my loaves very dense.
August 15, 2018 at 4:17am
August 15, 2018 at 8:48am
In reply to I’m intrigued about the cheese you used. You said it was Cabot’… by Lois Lyons (not verified)
June 5, 2017 at 2:40am
June 7, 2017 at 6:20pm
In reply to Is it possible to 'bake' this bread in a large hooded gas barbe… by Aless White (not verified)
Pagination