No-Knead Sourdough Bread
This full-flavored, no-knead sourdough bread is made with minimal effort (no kneading!) and a ripe (fed) starter.
- Total time
- 12 hr 35 min
- Active time
- 20 min
- Yield
- 16 servings, 1 large loaf
- Difficulty
- Medium

Ingredients and Constraints
Ingredients
- Optional
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Diastatic Malt Powder
2 teaspoons diastatic malt powder, optional for a more golden color and stronger rise
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Details and source
Source: No-Knead Sourdough Bread
Additional ingredient notes
Method Timeline
Prep
ActivePrep
20 min
Prep time from the source recipe card.
Cook
ActiveCook
1 hr
Cook time from the source recipe card.
Total
PassiveTotal
12 hr 35 min
Total time from the source recipe card.
Step 1
To make the no-knead sourdough bread, start by weighing your flour; or measure it by gently spooning it into a cup, then sweeping off any excess.
Step 2
In a large mixing bowl or a large (6-quart) food-safe plastic bucket, combine all the ingredients.
Step 3
Mix and stir everything together to make a sticky, rough dough. If you have a stand mixer, beat at medium speed with the paddle attachment for 30 to 60 seconds. If you don't have a mixer, just stir with a big spoon or dough whisk until everything is combined.
Step 4
Leave the dough in the bucket or 6-quart bowl, cover it with the bucket’s lid or a piece of plastic wrap, and let it rise for 1 hour.
Step 5
Gently pick up the dough and fold it over on itself several times, cover it again, and let it rise for another hour.
Step 6
Repeat the rising-folding process one more time (for a total of 3 hours), folding it again after the last hour. Then, place the bucket or bowl in the refrigerator, and let the dough rest for at least 8 hours (or up to 48 hours).
Step 7
When you're ready to make bread, turn the dough out onto a well-floured work surface, and shape it into a rough ball. Leave the dough seam-side up, cover it, and let it rest on a floured surface for 15 minutes.
Step 8
Next, shape the dough to fit the vessel in which you’ll bake it: a 13" log for a 13" pain de mie pan or long covered baker, such as our glazed long covered baker; or a large boule (round) for a round baker or Dutch oven, such as our bread baking crock. Lightly grease the inside of your baker, or dust the inside with semolina; alternatively, place the dough on a sheet of parchment. Place the shaped dough in the baker (along with the parchment, if using), and cover it with the lid.
Step 9
Let the loaf warm to room temperature and rise; this should take about 2 1/2 to 3 hours. It won't appear to rise upwards that much, but will relax and expand.
Step 10
With a rack positioned in the middle, start preheating the oven to 500°F one hour before you’re ready to bake.
Step 11
Just before baking, dust the loaf with a fine coat of flour and use a lame or a sharp knife to make one or several 1/2” deep slashes through its top surface. If you're baking a long loaf, one arched slash down the loaf lengthwise is nice, or if baking a round, a crosshatch or crisscross pattern works well.
Step 12
Cover the baker with its lid and place it in the oven. (If you're using a pain de mie pan, leave the lid off.) Reduce the oven temperature to 450°F and bake the bread for 45 minutes.
Step 13
Remove the cover of the baker and bake the bread for 10 to 15 minutes longer, until the bread is deep golden brown and crusty, and a digital thermometer inserted into the center of the loaf reads at least 210°F.
Step 14
Remove the bread from the oven and transfer it to a rack to cool completely.
Step 15
Store leftover no-knead sourdough bread, well wrapped, room temperature for several days; freeze for longer storage.
Learn More
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Why this works
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Tips from our Bakers
Don’t have any starter?
Here’s a recipe for homemade sourdough starter. If you're making it from scratch, you'll need to feed it for 5 to 7 days before it’s ready for baking.
Recipe structure
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Main recipe
Recipe card ingredients and steps.
16 servings, 1 large loaf
Dough
Source step 3 creates or uses dough.
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Source and Origin
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Adapted from source
Imported from the king-arthur-baking page for dev review.
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No-Knead Sourdough Bread
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