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Recipe · No-Knead Loaf · Slow-Fermented

75% Hydration Slow-Fermented No-Knead Loaf

The recipe Mark Bittman made famous for a reason. Mix, wait, shape, wait, bake covered, bake uncovered. The slow autolyse develops the gluten by itself, and the result is genuinely good bread from very little fuss.

Total time

36 hours (over ~3 days)

Active

90 minutes

Hydration

75%

Difficulty

⌬○○

At 75%, you get real artisan crumb without fighting the dough. It's wet enough for visible holes in the cut loaf, dry enough that you can shape it on a lightly floured counter without the dough sticking to everything.

A 24 to 48 hour ferment is the professional approach scaled to a home kitchen. The dough rests in the refrigerator for most of its life, gluten develops without effort, and the bake produces a crust and crumb that read as serious bread.

Ingredients

1000g total dough. Yields 1 round loaf, ~900g baked.

Ingredient Grams Baker's %
Bread flour 564 g 100%
Water 423 g 75%
Salt 11.3 g 2%
Instant yeast 0.8 g 0.15%

Schedule

  1. Day 1, evening
    Mix flour and water. Autolyse 1 hour.
  2. Day 1, evening
    Add yeast and salt. Mix gently.
  3. Day 1, evening
    Three folds, 30 minutes apart.
  4. Day 1, night
    Refrigerate the bulk dough overnight.
  5. Day 2, morning
    Pull from refrigerator. Bench rest 1 hour.
  6. Day 2, midday
    Pre-shape, rest 30 minutes. Shape into a tight boule, place seam-up in a floured banneton.
  7. Day 2, afternoon
    Cover and refrigerate the shaped dough overnight.
  8. Day 3, morning
    Pull from the refrigerator. Preheat the oven and Dutch oven to bake temperature.
  9. Day 3, morning
    Score the loaf. Bake at 475°F covered for 25 minutes, then uncovered for 20 more minutes.

Method tips for this style

Mix until the flour is just hydrated, cover, and walk away for 12 to 18 hours. When you return, the dough should be wet and sticky, dotted with bubbles. Shape gently on a floured surface, rest, and bake covered in a Dutch oven.

What to expect

A balanced open crumb with visible holes and a chewy texture. The crust is thin but sturdy, and the flavor is a clean read on the flour and ferment.

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