Faster No Knead Bread {Easy Recipe} - Crave The Good (2024)

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ByAllyUpdated

30 Comments

Try this incredibly easy no knead bread recipe. This recipe takes the normal rise time from 18 hours to a mere 2. Use your oven, sous vide, Instant Pot, or dehydrator to speed up the proofing process.

Check-in on your Canadian friends, ya’ll.

We are not ok. We are COLD!

After months of reasonable temperatures, the thermometer plummeted this week. Even though we knew it was coming, it feels like a blindside.

It’s ok, though, I’m happily carb loading.

This recipe is dedicated to staying warm in cold weather.

Faster No Knead Bread {Easy Recipe} - Crave The Good (1)

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Jump to:
  • Tips + tricks
  • What can I use to proof my bread?
  • Ingredients
  • How to make
  • Recommended tools
  • Accompanying dishes
  • 📖 Printable Recipe

Tips + tricks

No. 1 –> Grease the proofing bowl. This will ensure your bread slides out easier and keeps the air bubbles intact.

No. 2 –> Don’t knead it! Just don’t! Stir it, until its well mixed. And later on, gently shape into a boule – JUST for the love of all things holy, don’t knead it!

No. 3 –> Use a *small* cast iron dutch oven for this recipe. This is a small batch, and I always cook mine in my 3 quart dutch oven.

What can I use to proof my bread?

I love using my kitchen tools for various, and often out of the box uses. So here’s a couple ideas!

Oven. If you’re one of the lucky ones with a proof setting on your oven, I’m jelly. Pop that bowl in there and get your rise on!

Sous Vide. When you think about it, using the sous vide is the perfect way to proof your bread, it will keep the water bath at the perfect temperature to rise your bread in a jif!

Dehydrator. If you’ve got a dehydrator, you’re ready to go! Set the dial at the desired temperature, and wait for the magic!

Instant Pot. The yogurt “less” setting on your Instant Pot is the perfect temperature for proofing bread.

Ingredients

  • flour
  • salt
  • sugar
  • warm water
  • yeast
Faster No Knead Bread {Easy Recipe} - Crave The Good (2)

How to make

  1. Combine the yeast and warm water in a bowl, and set aside for yeast to bloom.
  2. Whisk the dry ingredients together in a large bowl.
  3. Combine the water with the dry ingredients. I find it best to get your hands in there, give the bread a good mix until the flour is incorporated and the dough will be shaggy – that’s ok.
  4. Place the dough into a greased heatproof bowl. Cover with a damp dishtowel or plastic wrap.
  5. Place your bowl to rise for 90 minutes, either in your oven, dehydrator, over the Instant Pot, or over a sous vide water bath.
  6. After 90 minutes, place your dutch oven into the oven and preheat to 450f. At this time, turn your dough onto a floured surface and carefully form a boule. Using gentle motions, and fold the dough into a ball shape.
  7. Place the boule seam side down on a piece of parchment paper, and set aside for 30 more minutes while the dutch oven heats in the oven.
  8. Pick up the boule using the corners of the parchment paper and lower it into your preheated dutch oven. Recover the dutch oven.
  9. Bake the bread covered at 450f for 30 minutes, then remove the lid and bake uncovered for 10-15 more minutes, until perfectly golden brown.
  10. Remove the bread from the dutch oven by picking up the parchment paper corners and place it on a wire mesh rack to cool.
  11. Devour your perfect crusty bread.
  • Faster No Knead Bread {Easy Recipe} - Crave The Good (3)
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  • Faster No Knead Bread {Easy Recipe} - Crave The Good (11)

3 qt Cast Iron Dutch Oven

Much of the success of this bread depends on having a heavy ass cast iron dutch oven. It’s one of those things you should already have, and if you don’t have one, fix that! The little red one in these photos was my first piece of cast iron and something that started somewhat of a cooking revolution for us a handful of years ago.

A 3 quart cast iron dutch oven is a workhorse in the kitchen, and you’ll find yourself reaching for it often.

Faster No Knead Bread {Easy Recipe} - Crave The Good (12)

Accompanying dishes

This artisan bread is what carby dreams are made of. Nothing like a warm hunk of crusty bread on a cold day. Here are some great ideas of things to serve with your golden loaf!

  • Smoked French Onion Soup
  • Smoked Turkey Broth
  • Creamy Potato Bacon Soup
  • Weeknight Chicken Noodle Soup
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Other Bread Recipes You May Like:

  • Cornbread
  • Best Bread Machine Bread
  • Whole Wheat Honey Bread
Faster No Knead Bread {Easy Recipe} - Crave The Good (18)

If you love this recipe, please give it a star rating or leave a comment below! This helps me to create more content you enjoy!

📖 Printable Recipe

Faster No Knead Bread {Easy Recipe} - Crave The Good (19)

No Knead Bread Recipe

Allyson Letal

Try this incredibly easy no knead bread recipe. It's got a perfect crust and soft crumb. This recipe takes the normal rise time from 18 hours to a mere 2. Use your oven, sous vide, Instant Pot, or dehydrator to speed up the proofing process.

4.44 from 67 votes

Print Recipe Pin Recipe

Prep Time 5 minutes mins

Cook Time 40 minutes mins

Rise Time 2 hours hrs

Total Time 2 hours hrs 45 minutes mins

Ingredients

  • 1 ½ cup warm water
  • ½ teaspoon instant yeast
  • 3 cups flour
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • ½ teaspoon sugar optional

Instructions

  • Prepare sous vide water bath, oven, Instant Pot or dehydrator for proofing. And grease the inside of a stainless steel or other heatproof bowl.

  • Sprinkle ½ teaspoon instant yeast into 1 ½ cup warm water and set aside to bloom.

  • Whisk 3 cups flour, 1 teaspoon salt, and ½ teaspoon sugar in a large bowl.

  • Stir together the water and flour mixture. I find it best to get your hands in there, give the bread a good mix until the flour is incorporated and the dough is shaggy.

  • Place the dough into the greased bowl, and cover with a damp tea towel or plastic wrap.

  • Set the bowl on the water bath, place it in the oven, or dehydrator – wherever you want to rise.

  • Allow the dough to rise for 90 minutes, then place your dutch oven into the cold oven and preheat to 450f.

  • After 90 minutes, turn the bread loaf out onto a floured surface and carefully form a boule. Using gentle motions, and fold the dough into a ball shape.

  • Place the boule in the centre of a piece of parchment paper, seam side down.

  • Remove the dutch oven from your oven. Be very careful, it’s extremely hot.

  • Pick up bread boule with the corners of your parchment paper, and lower the boule into the dutch oven.

  • Replace the lid.

  • Bake the bread at 450f for 30 minutes covered.

  • Remove the lid, and bake another 10-15 minutes uncovered – until the crust is a perfect golden brown.

  • Remove the dutch oven from the oven, and pick up the bread using the corners of the parchment paper again.

  • Place the bread on a wire cooling rack until cool to the touch before serving.

Video

Notes

If using an Instant Pot:

Add 4 cups of water to your Instant Pot and set to Yogurt Less, and place heatproof bowl on top of pot. Do not use the lid.

If using Sous Vide:

Fill water bath, set to 90F, place bowl on top of water bath. It will float.

If using Dehydrator:

Set dehydrator to 90F, and place bowl inside of dehydrator. Ensure the bowl is well sealed with plastic wrap so it doesn’t inadvertently dehydrate the bread.

If using Oven:

Set oven to proof setting, ensuring that is around 90F. Place bowl in oven to rise.

Nutrition

Serving: 1sliceCalories: 139kcalCarbohydrates: 29gProtein: 4gFat: 0.4gSaturated Fat: 0.1gPolyunsaturated Fat: 0.2gMonounsaturated Fat: 0.1gSodium: 234mgPotassium: 46mgFiber: 1gSugar: 0.3gVitamin C: 0.002mgCalcium: 6mgIron: 2mg

Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

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Faster No Knead Bread {Easy Recipe} - Crave The Good (24)

Ally

I’m the food lover and recipe creator here in the Crave Kitchen!

I aim to inspire you to step out of your comfort zone and to try new things in the kitchen. I’ll provide you with the knowledge to become a more confident, adventurous cook.

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  1. Easy, tasty first time making artisan bread!

    Reply

    1. Awesome! So glad to hear <3

      Reply

  2. Making the bread now as a gift for Some FRIENDS.

    Reply

  3. In my experience, using parchment paper to transfer the risen dough into the dutch oven from the proofing bowl is no better than sliding it in. It loses some of its rise and my too-large dutch oven further encourages it to spread out and flatten. Instead, I came up with the idea to proof in an oiled stainless steel bowl that is the size I want the bread to be (and fits inside the dutch oven with enough room for risen bread on top). When the dough is ready to bake and the dutch oven is hot, I place the entire stainless steel bowl in the dutch oven. As a bonus, cleanup is easier, since only the smaller bowl really needs cleaning. It just occurred to me that I could make more steam by putting some hot water inside the dutch oven when I preheat it – not enough to make the bowl of bread float, but the steam would encourage even more crustiness. I’ll try that next time.

    Reply

    1. That’s a really good workaround! Almost all my stainless steel bowls are actually rubber bottomed so I can’t use them under heat, unfortunately, but so glad to hear it’s working for you!

      Reply

    2. @Lois,
      My SS bowls are smaller at the bottom so bread will come out looking like a bowl shape loaf. Might need to find a deep, flat bottomed SS bowl/pan?
      How did your loafcome out?

      Reply

    3. @Lois, what a great idea! I’m making this today for my first time, my Dutch oven is bigger as well. I guess you could always double the recipe too!

      Reply

  4. Faster No Knead Bread {Easy Recipe} - Crave The Good (31)
    Made this today. It was delicious! Creamy texture and crispy crust. Thanks for the recipe

    Reply

  5. It turned out great ! I let it rest in front of the fireplace, follow directions, easy and delicious!

    Reply

    1. Great to hear! I hope you took a moment to “proof” by the fireplace too !

      Reply

  6. Love this bread. I make it often now. Never fails. I use leftovers for roast in the mornings.

    Reply

    1. So glad to hear that! It really is easy and delicious!

      Reply

  7. Any way this will work at high altitude.

    Reply

    1. That is a great question. I am not an experienced high-altitude baker so I can’t help you but hopefully, someone here can chime in! What is your elevation?

      Reply

    2. We live at 8500′ and this recipe works wonderfully. My loaf does flatten some in my too large dutch oven, so I plan to try the stainless steel bowl method next time. I’m making another loaf today!

      Reply

  8. I made this I weighed the flour 370g 3 cups out and used instant yeast as per recipe, it was a very soft sticky dough it rose but flatten out and hard to work into mound, it stayed flat during baking ☹️

    Reply

    1. Interesting, this is kind of a sticky dough, but that shouldn’t have happened. What kind of flour did you use? How was your yeast?

      Reply

  9. Can active yeast be used instead by proofing it first and then adding to dry ingredients and letting dough rise?

    Reply

    1. That shouldn’t be a problem!

      Reply

  10. Faster No Knead Bread {Easy Recipe} - Crave The Good (32)
    The recipe worked just as described and tasted delicious!

    Reply

  11. Made yesterday and so pleased making again today for a friend. I didn’t have yogurt setting on my instapot so I just put in oven with light on for about 4 hours. It rose well.

    Reply

    1. Great to hear! Thanks for sharing, Shirley!

      Reply

  12. Once the boule is shaped and placed on parchment, doesn’t it need some rise time before being placed in the hot pot??

    Reply

    1. Hey Donna, the boule gets a quick second rise while the dutch oven is heating for about 30 minutes, though you could stretch it a bit longer if you wanted!

      Reply

  13. Hi! I don’t have an insta pot, a dehydrator, or a proof setting on my oven, what would be an alternative method for success with this recipe. I’d really love to try it. It’s snowing today, so, perfect day for bread baking!

    Reply

    1. Hey Krystal! Here’s a couple alternatives, pop it in the oven with the light on, put it on top of the fridge, or my personal favorite, prop open the microwave door with a piece of paper towel so the light comes on but the door is actually shut.

      Stay warm during the winter storm – we’re on the tail end of the polar vortex and we saw temperatures as low as -65f (-54c) windchills!

      Reply

  14. Did anyone ever figure out if the bread works in high altitude ?

    Reply

    1. Very good question Janet, I’m going to publish it and hopefully a fellow high altitude dweller can chime in for you!

      Reply

    2. Yep, works great at 8500′. It does flatten out a bit, tho.

      Reply

      1. Thank you!! I can mimic quite a few situations in my kitchen but altitude is not one LOL

        Reply

Faster No Knead Bread {Easy Recipe} - Crave The Good (2024)

FAQs

What are the pros and cons of no-knead bread? ›

No-knead (Passive): In this mix-to-combine, long-fermented method, time is used to maximum effect for developing both flavor and strength. Pros: Dough develops flavor during extended fermentation. Easy. Cons: Uncontrolled fermentation may cause variable impacts to crumb structure and flavor.

Why is my no-knead bread not rising enough? ›

Editor: Shani, it sounds that your yeast may be too old and expired, or perhaps you're not letting the dough rest adequately after shaping and before baking.

What makes no-knead bread different? ›

No-knead bread is a method of bread baking that uses a very long fermentation (rising) time instead of kneading to form the gluten strands that give the bread its texture. It is characterized by a low yeast content and a very wet dough.

What happens if you don't knead bread? ›

If you don't knead your dough, your baked bread won't rise as high, and the overall texture and appearance will be dense. Properly kneaded dough promises a softer, fluffier, taller, and chewier bread.

Why is my no knead bread too chewy? ›

Usually your bread will be chewy when there isn't enough gluten formation or you're using a low-protein flour. Make sure you let your bread dough rest for at least 12 hours to give it enough time for gluten formation.

Does no-knead bread need a second rise? ›

In the classic no-knead bread recipe, it calls for letting the dough rise once for 12-18 hours, then folding it on a work surface and letting it rise again for two hours.

Can I let dough rise for 24 hours? ›

Once you've made your pizza dough, you can place it in the fridge and let it rise overnight for up to 24 hours. Take it out of the fridge 20-30 minutes before you intend on using it to let it come to room temperature.

What makes homemade bread so dense? ›

There may be several reasons for a dense, cake like texture in bread. It may indicate the kneading wasn't enough for the gluten to develop properly, or the dough was proved for too short a time or the dough may have been too dry. It is also worth checking the flour you used.

Should you fold no-knead dough? ›

Better Structure

Folding the dough during its long rise improves the dough's structure dramatically. No longer a sticky, shaggy mess, it becomes smoother, easier to handle, and most importantly, better able to contain the gasses produced by fermentation.

What is the best hydration for no knead bread? ›

No-Knead bread, especially when using the No-Touch technique is very forgiving as long as you stay between 70 and 90 percent!

How do you keep no knead bread from sticking? ›

Oil or flour your tin or baking tray

You can use olive or vegetable oil, lard or butter to grease your tine and prevent your loaf from sticking. If I am using a baking tray for a free form loaf then I will dust it with flour, rice flour or semolina to prevent any sticky bits of dough cementing themselves to the tray.

Can I use my dough hook instead of kneading? ›

A dough hook is the best tool you can use to knead dough. It does everything your hands would do, but more quickly. Not only does a stand mixer and dough hook do all the work—but you're more likely to get better results if you use them instead.

Can you over mix bread dough? ›

Bread Loaves made with over-kneaded dough commonly end up with a hard crust and dry interior. Often upon cutting, slices will crumble. If your perfect bread loaf turns into a crumbly mess, don't worry. The overworked dough will work great when used as croutons or breadcrumbs.

What is the advantage of no-knead bread? ›

It's easy to see the appeal of the “no-knead” approach in bread baking: minimal effort produces maximum flavor. By simply mixing up your dough and giving it an extended rising period, you can enjoy gorgeous, golden loaves without having kneaded a thing.

Is no-knead bread good? ›

No-Knead bread is justifiably popular due to its ease and good results. In side-by-side tests, we discovered that 90 seconds of extra work, plus a few tweaks to the ingredients, takes no-knead bread from good to great.

Is kneaded bread better than no-knead? ›

Given a few folds a no-knead dough can be just as strong as a dough that has been kneaded. In some cases, like with doughs that contain a lot of whole grain flour, kneading can even have a negative effect on gluten development.

What are the disadvantages of kneading? ›

The main disadvantage of hand kneading is that it can be a physically demanding process. Kneading dough requires repetitive motions that can cause strain on your wrists and hands. If you're not careful, you can develop carpal tunnel syndrome or other wrist injuries.

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