Easy No-Knead Bread is an artisan-style bread that’s done in 3 hours from start to finish and it’s mostly rising time. This is an easy bread recipe – you don’t even need a mixer. With only 4 ingredients (flour, yeast, salt, and water), you can make a bakery-quality, super soft homemade bread.
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Easy No-Knead Bread
We love the aroma and taste of homemade bread, including our easy Dutch Oven Bread, classic French Bread with the best crust, and of course classic Dinner Rolls. My kitchen has served as a bread-making test lab for the past month. We’ve made this bread countless times. It rises beautifully every time and you will fall in love with the spongy soft texture. It reminds me of the lovely loaves that Costco has perfected.
Many no-knead bread recipes require overnight fermentation but we love that this one is done in just 3 hours (most of which is just letting the dough rise while you go about your business). You’ll get to enjoy fresh homebaked bread within a few hours of when the craving hits.
What is the Best Flour For Bread?
Bread flour typically has slightly more protein and gluten than all-purpose flour so it is the preferred flour for bread. It can give you slightly better rise and texture. We have tested this no-knead rustic artisan bread with both all-purpose flour and bread flour. The loaves turned out perfect with either flour so use what you have on hand.
Watch No-Knead Bread Video Tutorial:
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How to Make Easy Homemade Bread:
1. In a large bowl, combine warm water (100˚F) and salt. Sprinkle yeast over the top and let it sit 2 min, then stir.
2. Measure out exactly 3 1/4 cups of flour and add flour to the bowl. Stir together with a spatula just until it together (do not knead). Cover and let rise at room temperature 2 hours (until 2-3 times in volume).
3. Line a cutting board with parchment paper and generously dust with flour. Turn dough out onto the floured surface.
4. With well-floured hands, fold the dough in half, then fold in half again. Dust dough generously with flour, lift it up and form a ball in your hands. Sprinkle the parchment paper flour or cornmeal, extending 1-inch past the border of the dough since it will expand. Place dough over the flour, seam side down, and let it rise at room temp uncovered for 40 minutes.
5. Meanwhile, prepare your oven: place one rack in the middle for the bread and one rack on the bottom for the water pan. Place a rimless cookie sheet (or inverted baking sheet) on the center rack. Preheat the oven and cookie sheet to 450˚ F. Also heat 1 cup water.
6. Just before baking, score the top of the bread 3 times. Place a metal or cast iron dish* on the bottom rack with 1 cup hot water (being careful not to splash water on a glass oven door). Slide dough with the parchment paper onto the hot cookie sheet and bake at 450˚ F for 25-28 min or until golden brown.
*CAUTION: DO NOT USE A GLASS DISH to hold water or it may explode when you add water. Also, be careful not to splash water on a glass oven door to prevent shattering from strong temperature change.
Pro Tips for the Best Homemade Bread:
- Use warm water – ideally about 100˚F to 110˚F. Avoid hot water which can deactivate the yeast.
- Measure precisely – spoon flour into measuring cup and level off the top. See our best tips for How to Measure wet and dry ingredients.
- Dough Rising Temperature – A room temperature of 71˚F to 75˚F is ideal for bread rising. If your room is colder, it will take longer. Do not place dough in a hot oven to rise. If the temperature goes above 110˚F, you can deactivate and ruin the yeast.
- Don’t Rush the Rise – For the best texture and rise, do not rush the rising process. It should be 2-3 times in size when it is finished rising. If you don’t allow the full rise, the bread will be dense.
- Preheat the oven and baking sheet – putting the dough onto a hot baking sheet or pizza stone, will help form a beautiful crust.
- Scoring the bread – scoring the top of the loaf allows it to expand and creates a pretty bread that you will be very proud of. Use a sharp or serrated knife or bread scoring blade.
- Cool before slicing – If you cut freshly baked bread while it’s still hot, the steam will escape and the bread will seem doughy.
Our Top Rated Bread Recipes:
- French Bread with a true crisp crust
- Banana Nut Bread – a moist banana bread studded with nuts and raisins
- Dutch Oven Bread – A 5-seed bread with the same basic dough
- Dinner Rolls – so easy and freezer-friendly
The next day, use this bread to make the most amazing Reuben Sandwich or this restaurant copycat Chicken Bacon Avocado Sandwich.
No-Knead Bread Recipe (Easy Artisan Bread)

Ingredients
- 1 1/2 cups water, warm, at 100˚F (not hot)
- 1/2 Tbsp sea salt
- 2 1/4 tsp active dry yeast, (7 grams or 1 packet)
- 3 1/4 cups all-purpose flour, (or bread flour) plus extra flour for dusting
- 2 Tbsp cornmeal , or more flour
Instructions
- In a large bowl, stir together 1 1/2 cups warm water (100˚F) and 1/2 Tbsp of salt. Sprinkle the top with yeast and let it sit 2 min, then stir.
- Measure out exactly 3 1/4 cups of flour and add flour to the bowl. Using a spatula, stir until dough comes together and is well blended. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and let it rise at room temperature 2 hours (or about 2-3 times in volume).
- Line a cutting board with parchment paper and generously dust with flour. Scrape dough out of the bowl with a spatula onto the floured surface.
- With well-floured hands, fold dough in half, then fold in half again. Dust dough generously with flour, lift it up and form a ball in your hands. Sprinkle parchment paper with more flour or cornmeal, extending about 1" past the border of the dough since it will expand. Place dough over the flour, seam side down, and let it rise uncovered at room temp 40 minutes.
- Meanwhile, prepare your oven with 2 racks - one rack in the middle for the bread and one rack on the bottom for the water pan. Place a rimless cookie sheet (or use the backside of a rimmed cookie sheet or pizza stone) on the center rack. Preheat the oven and cookie sheet to 450˚ F. Also heat up 1 cup water.
- Just before baking, score the top of the bread 3 times. Place a metal or cast iron dish (never a glass dish*) on the bottom rack with 1 cup hot water (being careful to not splash water on a glass oven door). Slide the dough with the parchment paper onto the hot cookie sheet and bake at 450˚ F for about 25-28 min or until golden brown. Transfer loaf to a rack and cool to room temp before cutting into it.
Notes
Nutrition Per Serving
Filed Under
If you make this recipe, I’d love to see pics of your creations on Instagram, Facebook and Twitter! Hashtag them #natashaskitchen
This recipe was first published in 2012. It was updated March 2020 with new photos and we improved the recipe adding slightly more flour to help with forming the loaf.
My bread didn’t rise at all:( I think I need different yeast. I used the yeast you buy bulk at winco. I also used my kitchen aid to mix it.
That could be the reason. Yeast is best stored in an airtight container that doesn’t let in light and in a cool place (mine stays in the fridge). I’ve never seen yeast at Winco in bulk, but I don’t think I would trust it.
Yeah that’s good to know. I will defiantly get some good fresh yeast and try this again! Thanks for the quick reply!
I buy mine at Costco in an almost brick-sized package and I keep it sealed and refrigerated at all times.
Awesome I always shop at Costco. I’ll try finding the one u use!
Will this turn out wrong if I use my kitchen aid with the dough attachment?
I don’t think a kitchen aid would have hurt it. Although all you really need is a spatula and a bowl since this doesn’t require kneading.
I was really excited to use my new kitchen aid:)
🙂 That’s cute 🙂 Did you get it for Christmas? What color is it?
Yes my mom got it for me:) it’s the dark gray matte color. I love it! I made the raspberry roulette from ur site with it. Turned out perfect:)
My problem is when I tried to make a bigger loaf which it appears you did(as opposed to the 1 lb. loaf(used same measurements you did=cut the normal recipe in half from Artisan bread in 5 min.), and added cheese, the middle is doughy even after 30 minutes. When I did the 1 lb. loaf it did not present a problem..Any suggestions? I put 1 cup of cheese into the dough when I’m mixing it because my family likes the cheese flavor. I also tried adding olives, but again, it made the entire bread doughy. The larger loaf came out perfectly on the sides, but was not done in the middle…
It might be the add-ins that are putting too much moisture into the dough. I don’t think it has anything to do with cutting the recipe in half.
I have been baking bread my whole life and I think that this is my favorite!
Woohoo!!! That’s music to my ears 🙂
I made this bread and it is great! Thank you a lot for sharing! I’m looking for a good recipe for baked Пироги и торт Изба. Do you have a good one to share? Thank you in advance!
There are alot of different baked pirohi. Do you mean something like this? https://natashaskitchen.com/2012/12/30/moms-poppy-seed-roulade-roulette-recipe/ Or more like this? https://natashaskitchen.com/2012/07/22/buchty-sweet-cherry-filled-buns/
I made this for dinner tonight and it is wonderful!!
I’m so glad you enjoyed it! We make this bread often.
My Parchment Paper Browned Up In The Middle Of Baking The Bread. I Used Same DegreeaAs Mentioned. I Had To Take It Out Cause I Was Worried It’ll Catch Fire Lol. And Before That, While Pan Was Preheating, The Upside Down On, It Made Some Smoke, Causing My Fire Alarm To Go Off Lol. So After That I Kept An Eye On The Paper. Does Your Brown Too? Bread Tasted Good. I Want To Try Another Load But I’m Afraid Of That Happening Again. =/
You shouldn’t put your parchment paper in until your bread is on it. Were you pre-heating your parchment paper? Did you bake in the center of the oven? Also, did you use parchment paper or wax paper? Wax paper will smoke up. Parchment should not. Hope that helps! 🙂
I love your recipes. This Artisan Bread never fails to please. For added flavor I tried adding 5/16Tbls. of Italian Seasoning…it was good but your basic recipe never disappoints. I now only use all of your recipes for a first time, great success, rave review event!
What a great idea!! Thanks Greg 🙂
can you make this in a breadmaker?
A bread maker is totally unnecessary for this. It needs time to sit and rise. I wouldn’t recommend the bread maker.
Natasha,
I bet this is good, but have you tried the overnight version that Mark Bitman made famous after getting it from a the Sullivan Street Bakery in NY? Here is his post on that from 2006: http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/08/dining/081mrex.html
It’s essentially the same recipe, however much less yeast, and the dough proofs overnight — that combination yields a flavor you might consider experimenting with in your bread test kitchen! (Speaking of, the Cook’s Illustrated/America’s Test Kitchen folks are also big fans of overnight bread dough development.)
Anya
I will have to give it a try. Thanks for the tip!
Natasha, I pinned it and WILL attempt to make it. Making bread is my Everest, it needs to be conquered. 🙂
Let me know how it works out :).
Hi Natasha and thank you so much for this recipe; tried it and loved it! Question though.. What if the boiled water is not used, will the bread taste different? Also have you used “King Arthur flour” sold at Fred Meyers? Thanks!!:))
I haven’t tried King Arthur flour but I imagine it would work well. I’ve heard good things about that brand. I don’t think it will make a difference if you use boiled water. P.s. I made this last week using whey leftover from making farmers cheese tvorog instead of water and the bread was amazing!! So soft for several days. Better thank costco. Keep that in mind next time you make cheese 😉 enjoy!
No my question was is there a way to just put it into the fridge or something and just continue making the bread from that step??
I’m sorry I didn’t reply sooner. I’m working today. I have not tried putting it in the fridge and then resuming it later. If you did try it that way, please let me know how it worked out. I’m very curious now. I know other recipes for bread will work this way but I have not tested this one. Sorry that’s not super helpful.
Hi natasha.
Im making this bread again today but im running.out of time to do the whole processes is there anything I can do to just begine fro. Letting it rise in the glass bowl?? Btw its amazing bread my sister shared your website with me and I love it thanks so much for the recipes.
I’ve tried to cut it down on time before but regretted it. It was denser and not as good. I’m so glad you enjoy the recipes 🙂
Thanks Nash!!
Great, fast, easy and delicious… I always double the recipe, add various toppings, poppy, onion flake, caraway, etc and bake it on a hot stone… perfect every time!
I need to get one of those baking stones. Do you use the same kind as you would for a pizza?
Yes, it works beautifully. Here is a link to the one I have, heavy well made product.
Thank you for sharing Dave :).
I am excited to try this. I was wondering if you knew how it would work with gluten free flour mixes, as my sister has celiac disease and cannot have wheat gluten
Honestly I haven’t tried it with gluten free flour mixes. If you do give it a whirl, please report back and let me know how it worked out 🙂 Cutting out gluten completely must be really tough 🙁
A little late to the party, butI just tried this recipe today with gf flour (my version of Cup for Cup blend) – you need to add more liquid (I would estimate about 1/8 cup? maybe more) but it bakes up very well otherwise. It doesn’t rise as much as a regular bread, so I might recommend using carbonated water in the dough to help with that but the texture was very good for GF bread. I also brushed the top with milk to help with browning.
would love to know if the carbonated water makes the difference. My DIL needs gluten free and would love to find a good bread that works. Thanks!
Great Recipe! I accidentally used White Whole Wheat Flour… Needless to say, that made it wee bit more dense =D Delicious nonetheless!
I’m glad you still enjoyed it! Thanks so much for sharing the picture from Instagram. I love that!
I made this a couple weeks ago. Came out great. I split the dough in half and made one plain loaf. The other one I added roasted garlic into the dough and then sprinkled the top with parmesan-reggiano. Was so good!
I love your creative add-ins. I’ll have to try those! 🙂
My first attempt at bread and I’m very glad I chose this easy and tasty recipe. I added a mix of Parmesan and oregano to the top it was a hit.
Oh my goodness that sounds amazing!