Tomato Basil No Knead Bread

Alright, we’ve all been on our New Year’s diets for two weeks now, so it’s time for a little splurge, right? I mean, it’s all about balance. If you’re going to give yourself one splurge, you need it to be this Tomato Basil No Knead Bread! I’m serious. It’s divine.

Tomato Basil No Knead Bread

Serving and Storage

This bread has a wonderfully subtle tangy flavor thanks to a handful of sun dried tomatoes and a little tomato past dissolved into the water. It’s the perfect easy bread for serving with your hearty winter soups and stews. This recipe does make a rather large loaf, but if you don’t think you can eat it all up within a few days, I suggest slicing it in half (after it has completely cooled), popping half of it into a freezer bag, and storing it in your freezer until you need more bread. This bread freezes beautifully and thaws quickly at room temperature.

2 Hr. Rise vs. 12 Hr. Rise

I decided to do a “quick” no knead bread this time, meaning it only rises for about 2 hours instead of 12-18. If you prefer to do a long dough ferment to get that really deep flavor, you can, just make sure that you reduce the amount of yeast in the bread to 1/4 tsp instead of 2 tsp. The reason the long ferment doughs use such little yeast is because as the dough sits out for 12-18 hours the yeast has time to reproduce and ends up with the same yeast power as if you had done a short rise with 2 tsp yeast.

For Best Results, Use a Dutch Oven

Using a Dutch oven produces the BEST results with this bread because it holds in steam as it bakes, which is what gives that crust it’s amazing crispy, crackle-y qualities. If you don’t have a Dutch oven it can be baked on a baking sheet, but it may expand more in an outward direction rather than up and the crust will have a slightly different texture. I am using a Lodge 5-quart Dutch Oven (affiliate link).

Print Recipe 4.89 from 17 votes Tomato Basil No Knead Bread This Tomato Basil No Knead Bread is the perfect partner for your winter soups and stews, and is half the cost of a store bought artisan loaf. Prep Time: 1 hr 45 mins Cook Time: 50 mins Total Time: 2 hrs 35 mins Ingredients 1/3 cup sun dried tomatoes* ($1.00)

3 cups all-purpose flour ($0.29)

2 tsp instant or bread machine yeast ($0.16)

1/2 Tbsp salt ($0.02)

1/2 Tbsp dried basil ($0.15)

1.5 cups warm water ($0)

1 Tbsp tomato paste ($0.06)

4 oz. mozzarella, shredded (optional) ($0.89) Instructions Chop the sun dried tomatoes into smaller pieces. In a large bowl, combine the flour, yeast, salt, dried basil, and chopped tomatoes. Stir until they are evenly combined. Stir the shredded mozzarella into the flour mixture.

Dissolve the tomato paste into the warm water. Pour the tomato and water mixture into the flour mixture, and stir until a sticky ball of dough forms. You may need to add slightly more or less water to achieve the correct consistency. The dough should be fairly wet and sticky, but not so wet that it's glossy or slimy. There should be no dry flour left on the bottom of the bowl.

Cover the bowl with the dough loosely, and let it rise for one hour, or until it is double in size.

Once risen, sprinkle the dough liberally with flour and scrape it off the sides of the bowl. Turn the dough out onto a well floured surface and fold it over on itself 5-6 times, or just until the dough looks smooth.

Place the dough on a piece of parchment paper and allow it to rise for another half hour. While the dough is rising, place your Dutch oven in the oven and set it to preheat to 425ºF.

After 30 minutes, very carefully remove the Dutch oven from your oven, and remove its lid. Lift your risen dough by picking up the parchment paper and then place it in the hot Dutch oven, paper and all. Place the lid back on the Dutch oven and return it to the hot oven.

Let the bread bake with the lid on the Dutch oven for 30 minutes, then carefully remove the lid and let it bake for another 15-20 minutes, without the lid, to allow the crust to brown.

Once baked, carefully remove the hot Dutch oven from the oven, lift the bread out using the parchment, and allow it to cool before slicing and serving. Notes *I suggest using dry packed sun dried tomatoes for this recipe instead of oil packed tomatoes. See how we calculate recipe costs here. Tried this recipe? Mention @budgetbytes or tag #budgetbytes on Instagram! Nutrition Serving: 1 Serving ・ Calories: 228.16 kcal ・ Carbohydrates: 39.96 g ・ Protein: 9.63 g ・ Fat: 2.95 g ・ Sodium: 856.73 mg ・ Fiber: 3.83 g Nutritional values are estimates only. See our full nutrition disclosure here. Equipment Cast Iron Dutch Oven Liquid Measuring Cup Parchment Paper The equipment section above contains affiliate links to products we use and love. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

Step by Step Photos

Chop about 1/3 cup sun dried tomatoes into smaller pieces, so you’ll get little bits all throughout the bread. I suggest the dry pack sun dried tomatoes rather than oil pack for this bread.

Add 3 cups all-purpose flour to a large bowl along with 2 tsp instant or bread machine yeast, 1/2 Tbsp salt, 1/2 Tbsp dried basil, and the chopped sun dried tomatoes. Stir until everything is evenly mixed.

Stir in 4oz. mozzarella (shredded). The mozzarella is optional, and honestly it just kind of melted into the bread and I didn’t notice it much in the final product.

Stir one tablespoon tomato paste into 1.5 cups warm water. Since I rarely use an entire 6oz. can of tomato paste at one time, I freeze it in one tablespoon portions just for occasions like this. :) Read more about how I freeze tomato paste here.

Pour the tomato water into the flour mixture. Because of slight differences in moisture content of flour or variations in measuring, you may need to use slightly more or less water each time, so I suggest going by the texture of the dough and not an exact measurement here. See the next photo for details on what you want the dough to look/feel like.

You want the dough to be fairly wet, sticky, and shaggy. It shouldn’t be so wet that it is glossy or slimy, but definitely too wet to handle with your hands. Also, it shouldn’t be so dry that there is dry flour left on the bottom of the bowl or on the surface of the dough. Cover the bowl loosely and let it rise for one hour, or until it’s double in size.

After it has risen for about an hour the flour will have soaked up some of that water so it won’t be quite as sticky (although still more sticky than a traditional kneaded bread dough). Sprinkle some flour on top of the dough and scrape it away from the sides of the bowl with your hand.

Turn the dough out onto a well floured surface and fold it over on itself 5-6 times, or just until it feels smooth. It should still be a very loose dough. Place the ball of dough on a piece of parchment paper and let it rise for another 30 minutes. Because the dough is so loose, it will rise more out than up, and that’s okay.

While the dough is rising, place your Dutch oven in the oven and begin to preheat it to 425ºF. Using a Dutch oven for this bread really makes a big difference in the texture of the crust and helps the dough be more of a dome shape, but if you don’t have one you can still cook the bread on a baking sheet.

When the dough has risen for 30 minutes and the oven and Dutch oven are fully preheated, CAREFULLY remove the Dutch oven from the oven, take off its lid, and then lift the entire bread dough and parchment paper into the Dutch oven. Put the lid back on the Dutch oven, put it all back into the hot oven, and bake for 30 minutes.

After 30 minutes of baking with the lid, it will look like this. Now remove the lid, return it to the oven, and bake for another 15-20 minutes to let the crust fully brown…

And at that point it should be absolutely GORGEOUS. I mean seriously. Look at that. 😍 Lift the whole thing out of the Dutch oven and allow it to cool before slicing.

There really is “no knead” for any other type of bread. Har-har-har. 🙈