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Our easy No Knead Artisan Bread recipe just uses 4 simple ingredients and creates a bakery-style artisan loaf with a crispy, golden crust and a soft, tender interior. This is the easiest bread that just requires 5 minutes of prep, anyone can make it!

I'm telling you, ANYONE can make this Artisan Bread.

This is hands-down the easiest bread recipe you'll ever make, and it looks like it came straight from a fancy bakery! You only need 4 basic ingredients–flour, yeast, salt, water–and 5 minutes of time. If you're too intimadated for sour dough (or frankly just don't have the time for sourdough) this will be your favorite artisan bread recipe.
Artisan bread bakes best in a cast iron pot (this one is a great price) but you can also make it on a basic cookie sheet, with a pan of boiling water at the bottom of your oven to create steam. I love to serve it alongside soup, salads, or really any main dish!
If you want more easy bread recipes, try my Homemade Baguettes, English Muffins, Homemade Sandwich Bread, Pita Bread, or Focaccia!
How to make No Knead Bread:
Combine and Rise: In a large mixing bowl, mix flour, salt, and yeast. Pour in the warm water and stir with a dough hook or wooden spoon until combined (the dough will be sticky). Cover the bowl and let it rise for 3-4 hours or in the refrigerator for up to 15 hours.
Shape and Preheat Pot: On a floured surface, shape the dough into a bowl then place on a piece of parchment paper. Cover with a dry kitchen towel allow it to rise for 30 minutes. Place your empty dutch oven (or baking sheet, and a pan of hot water) in the oven and let it preheat to 450°F.
Bake: Uncover dough and carefully lift the parchment paper with the bread dough on it, into the hot dutch oven. Place the lid back on the pot and bake for 30 minutes. Remove the lid and bake uncovered for 15 more minutes. Remove the bread from the pot and let it cool on a wire cooling rack.


No Knead Bread
Equipment
- Dutch Oven , or
- Dough Hook , or wooden spoon
Ingredients
- 3 cups all-purpose flour
- 2 teaspoons coarse sea salt
- 1/2 teaspoon active dry yeast, (or instant yeast)
- 1 ½ cups warm water, (about 110 degrees F)
Instructions
- In a large mixing bowl, combine flour, salt and yeast. Pour in warm water and stir with a wooden spoon until well combined. The dough will be sticky. Cover the bowl and allow it to rise at room temperature for 3-4 hours, or in the refrigerator for up to 15 hours.3 cups all-purpose flour, 2 teaspoons coarse sea salt, ½ teaspoon active dry yeast, 1 ½ cups warm water
- Scoop dough onto a floured work surface and shape into a ball. Sprinkle a tiny bit of flour on top of the dough ball and place it on a piece of parchment paper. Cover the dough with a dry kitchen towel. Allow to rise for 30 minutes. At this point you can score the bread with a bread lame, if you want, but it's not required.
- Meanwhile, place an empty dutch oven/cast iron pot*, with the lid on, into the oven and preheat oven to 450 degrees F.
- Uncover dough and lift the parchment paper, with the dough on it, into your hot pan that’s been preheating in the oven. Cover with lid and return to oven to bake for 30 minutes.
- After 30 minutes, remove lid and bake, uncovered for about 15 more minutes, until golden on top. Remove from oven and allow bread to cool on a wire cooling rack.
- Store bread in an open paper bag on the counter for up to 1 week.
Notes
- 3 large cloves minced garlic plus 2 Tablespoons fresh chopped rosemary,
- 1 cup favorite kind of shredded cheese (try adding a chopped jalapeño!)
- ¾ cup dried cranberries and/or chopped nuts.
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
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I originally shared this recipe March 2019. Updated January 2026.



Hi again! Can you clarify when and about how much honey to add. I was searching through notes but didn’t see.
Thanks Lauren!!!
The honey is optional and only for the whole wheat flour variation. If you’re making that version, add 2 tablespoons of honey to the warm water in step 1 before stirring it into the flour mixture.
Thanks for clarifying. !! I like the AP flour version just fine.
I can’t believe I made this artisan bread. Beautiful crust and airy, fluffy inside. Will be my regular dinner bread. Delicious buttered. I will try the suggested hit of honey for a subtle sweetness. Try it as it’s foolproof!!!! Used my LeCruset Dutch oven !! Love ❤️
Do not make this bread recipe with GF flour
Did not work
Suggesting
Stick to the gluten-free bread recipes
Can this bread be made with gluten free flour
We recommend King Arthur 1:1
Hey
I am tying a variation
Wish I would have read the comments about the salt
lol
I added a couple of tablespoons of sour dough starter to just under the water amount: to equal the one and a half warm water
Stirred it and added a couple of teaspoons of honey
Then did all the rest the same I will let you know how it turns out
Made this today. It came out perfect.will definitely make this again.
I think the recipe is off as far as salt goes. 2 tsp sea salt is way too much. I used less and still very very salty. Should the recipe read 1/2 tsp? Otherwise the texture and colour of bread was nice, just too salty and took longer than 4 hrs to rise probably due to high salt content. I let mine rise overnight and was proofed enough.
Ah yes—totally get how that could happen! The 2 teaspoons is correct if you’re using coarse sea salt. If you use fine salt or table salt, it’ll taste way saltier. So glad the texture and color turned out though, and love that you gave it an overnight rise—it always pays off!
I used coarse sea salt. It was too salty. I am making again today with way less salt so hopefully it turn out more to our taste.
I find that my dough is very sticky and hard to shape i added just a small amount of flour waiting the 30 mins hoping it turns out ,I also added jalapenos and cheddar.we’ll see
Has anyone tried this with a gluten free 1 for 1 flour? Maybe add a little xantham gum?
Loved this recipe!! It was easy and the bread was delicious. I’m going to make a double loaf this morning and I’m hoping that the bread will cook like the 1x loaf. Thanks and I’ll be looking at more of your recipes!