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No-Knead Dutch Oven Bread is the perfect easy bread for new bakers. This simple vegan homemade bread recipe has a short ingredients list and doesn’t require a stand mixer.

a loaf of crusty bread in a teal dutch oven

No-Knead Dutch Oven Bread is the perfect comfort food when you want homemade bread but have never actually made homemade bread before. It truly is that simple. Congrats…you’re about to be a bread baker!

What’s in this recipe?

  • Flour – a mixture of bread flour and whole wheat
  • Yeast – either rapid or active dry works!
  • Sea or table salt

Equipment Needed

Here’s How to Make It:

This recipe is broken down into three steps: the initial rise, second rise/rest, and baking. You’ll find a detailed and printable version of this at the bottom of the post.

Step one: the initial rise

Mix all the ingredients in a medium bowl. The dough shouldn’t be wet, but it will be shaggy and sticky. If it is too wet, add flour 1 tbsp at a time until the side of the bowl are mostly clean. Cover and allow to rise for 12-18 hours. The dough will be ready when it has tripled in size and is dotted with lots of air bubbles.

4 process steps showing how to mix no knead bread

If you’re pressed for time, you can let it rise in an Instant Pot fitted with a glass lid. Drizzle a bit of olive oil in the Instant Pot insert and add the dough. Press “Yogurt”, and adjust the time to 4 hours. 

Bread dough in an instant pot

Step two: second rise/rest

When the dough has tripled in size, sprinkle flour on a clean surface. Flour your hands and sprinkle a bit around the inside edges of the bowl. Grab the dough (it usually won’t come out in just one piece) from the bowl and place on top of the floured surface. Sprinkle a bit more flour on top of the dough and fold it over itself 1-2 times. Allow it to rest for 15 minutes.

Add a thin clean towel in a bowl and sprinkle liberally with flour. Flour the dough again until you can form it into a ball without it sticking to the counter. Place in the bowl and cover with the edges of the towel. Allow it to rest for 1 hour.

3 photos showing the second rise for making dutch oven bread

Step three: Baking

Fit the dutch oven with a piece of parchment paper. Place the lid on it and put it in the oven. Preheat to 450 degrees F. Once preheated, remove the lid of the dutch oven. Reduce the oven temp to 400 degrees F.

Gently tip the dough out of the bowl and into the dutch oven. Place the lid back on it and bake at 400 F for 30 minutes. Remove the lid after 30 minutes, and bake for an additional 15 minutes. Remove from the dutch oven immediately and allow it to fully cool on a baking rack. 

2 photos showing a dutch oven for bread baking
FYI, the dough is still unbaked in the right photo

Pro Tips/Recipe Notes

  • Do not attempt to cut into the bread until it has fully cooled.
  • This bread does not freeze well as it tends to get crumbly upon thawing.
  • Do not use waxed paper in place of the parchment – it will fuse to the bottom of the bread.
  • Use a day-old loaf for making Sage Sausage Stuffing.

Variations

hands holding no knead bread in a teal dutch oven
All the cool people match their fitness trackers with their dutch ovens.

More Delicious Bread Recipes

5 from 4 ratings

No Knead Dutch Oven Bread

Servings: 15 slices
Prep: 10 minutes
Cook: 40 minutes
Rise Time: 12 hours
Total: 12 hours 50 minutes
no knead bread
The perfect easy bread for new bakers.

Ingredients 

Instructions 

  • Mix all the ingredients in a medium bowl. The dough shouldn’t be wet, but it will be shaggy and sticky. If it is too wet, add flour 1 tbsp at a time until the side of the bowl are mostly clean.
    1/4 tsp active dry yeast, 2 cups warm water, 3 1/2 cups bread flour, 1/3 cup whole wheat flour, 1 1/2 tsp salt
  • Cover and allow to rise for 12-18 hours. The dough will be ready when it has tripled in size and is dotted with lots of air bubbles.
  • Flour a work surface and your hands. Sprinkle a bit of flour around the inside of the bowl, and remove the dough from the bowl.
  • Sprinkle the dough with flour, and fold it over itself once or twice. Let it rest for about 15 minutes.
  • Add a thin clean towel in a bowl and sprinkle liberally with flour. Flour the dough again until you can form it into a ball without it sticking to the counter. Place in the bowl and cover with the edges of the towel. Allow it to rest for 1 hour.
  • At least 20 minutes before the dough is ready, preheat the oven to 450 degrees F. Place a sheet of parchment inside your dutch oven and put the lid on it. Place the dutch oven in the oven while it is preheating.
  • Once preheated, remove the lid of the dutch oven. Reduce the oven temp to 400 degrees F.
  • Gently tip the dough out of the bowl and into the dutch oven. Place the lid back on it and bake at 400 F for 30 minutes.
  • Remove the lid after 30 minutes, and bake for an additional 15 minutes.
  • Remove from the dutch oven immediately and allow it to fully cool on a baking rack. 

Notes

Courtesy of Mother Earth News, adaptations by me.
 
If you're pressed for time, you can let it rise in an Instant Pot fitted with a glass lid. Drizzle a bit of olive oil in the Instant Pot insert and add the dough. Press "Yogurt", and adjust the time to 4 hours. 

Nutrition

Serving: 1sliceCalories: 115kcalCarbohydrates: 23gProtein: 4gFat: 1gSaturated Fat: 1gSodium: 233mgPotassium: 39mgFiber: 1gSugar: 1gCalcium: 5mgIron: 1mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Additional Info

Course: Side Dish
Cuisine: American
Tried this recipe?Mention @sustainablecooks or tag #sustainablecooks!

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About Sarah

Helping you serve up budget-friendly sustainable recipes with a side of balanced living.
Come for the food. Stay for the snark.

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34 Comments

  1. Umm…it appears that your “fitness tracker” wrist strap is attached incorrectly. The strap is inside out and it’s much too loose.
    Pretty much all flour contains fat, by the way.
    Just sayin’

  2. Hey girl, hey! Possible silly question: Can I make a baguette with this recipe using a french bread pan? If not, don’t you have a french bread recipe? I could have sworn that you raved about a french bread pan that you found at a second hand store about a hundred years ago. Am I making things up, again? Thanks for your time!

    1. You’re not making things up and I definitely have a french bread pan from Goodwill.

      I haven’t tried this recipe in it; I use one from a cookbook that I have. But I do think it would probably work!

      1. K. I found a no knead baguette recipe online. Cross your fingers.

        Have you given any thought to the walkie-talkies? They would really help me out! (-;

  3. Lovely recipe. But how does each slice contain 2% saturated fat, when there’s no fat in the ingredients? Curious 2 know. Thank you.

    1. Kani, the nutrition details are automatically generated by our recipe card…but it’s a solid question and I have no idea where that fat is coming from! I’ll have to run the details again. 🙂

  4. This was SO GOOD and so easy. We plowed through it so fast, I’ve already started a second batch. Thank you!!5 stars

  5. Hi there! So the ingredients have been in my pantry and I’ve been getting the courage to make this for about a month now, because baking is NOT my strength. But I finally did it, and I’m about an hour away from putting in the oven and I’m overwhelmed at how sticky and wet it is. I’ve added flour as I’ve gone along and it does not seem to help.  Do you think I did something wrong? The only thing I did differently was use all purpose flour.  Thanks!

    1. This sadly is not a recipe where you can replace the bread flour with all-purpose and expect the same results. Bread flour has more protein and thus more gluten. You need all that extra gluten to produce the “rise” of this bread.

      I would say go ahead and bake it, but don’t expect too much.

      If you had used bread flour and it was still sticky, I would have a few other suggestions about what was wrong (too long of rise time). But this is one where ingredient substitution isn’t intended.

  6. Does the Instant Pot method of rising give the same results as the12-18 hours? I never think the night before about making bread!5 stars

    1. In terms of taste, it’s exactly the same. But I find it doesn’t get as rounded when baked as the long rise time.

  7. I miss bread! My elimination diet revealed that I have a gluten sensitivity aka major gas, bloating & gastric unhappiness 🙁 Wonder if I could find a way to make this gluten free.

    1. So I think what makes this bread rise over time is the gluten in the bread flour. I’m so sorry.

      Have you tried sourdough or soaked grain bread? Often times people who have gluten issues do better with sourdough and soaked grains.

      1. Oh well, I’ve only baked real bread once so I’m not very seasoned in this department.