With only 5 ingredients, this Easy Garlic Cheese No-Knead Bread recipe makes a delicious loaf with no kneading and very little work.
Long time readers of Thrifty Jinxy may know that I am a big fan of making no-knead bread. Actually, the first recipe I published on Thrifty Jinxy, way back in May of 2008, was the basic Easy No-Knead Bread Recipe.
Well, this weekend I did a little experimentation and came up with this twist – a Garlic Cheese No-Knead Bread Recipe.
It’s got a great texture, like the original, but is a little bit more dense and is fantastic toasted and used for sandwiches.
I used cheddar cheese, but I think you could substitute another favorite instead. I do recommend that you grate your own cheese rather than using pre-shredded from a bag. Use these tips to grate cheese with less mess.
This cheesy garlic bread is delicious to eat “as-is” spread with butter and is also perfect for making sandwiches with an extra kick of flavor.
For delicious, hot cheesy garlic bread to serve with pasta, slice this bread and toast with shredded mozzarella or a slice of fresh mozzarella on top. It’s so delicious!
Garlic Cheese No-Knead Bread Recipe
Ingredients:
3 C all-purpose flour 1/4 tsp. instant yeast 1 1/4 tsp. salt 1 tsp. garlic powder 1 1/4 C shredded sharp cheddar cheese 1 5/8 C Water
Combine dry ingredients in a large bowl. Stir in 1 cup of the cheese and then add water until well blended. Cover bowl with plastic wrap and leave in a warm place to rise for a minimum of 12 hours (16-24 hours is better).
Remove the dough from the bowl and place on a generously floured work surface, sprinkle with flour, and fold it in on top of itself three or four times. Turn the bowl you were using at first upside down over the dough and let it rest for 15 minutes.
After 15 minutes, form the dough into a ball. Wash and thoroughly dry the original bowl and then return dough to bowl and cover bowl with a cotton dish towel. Let rise for 2 hours. The dough should double in size.
30 minutes before the dough is ready, heat oven to 450 degrees and put a 6 to 8 quart heavy pot with a cover (pyrex, cast iron, enamel or ceramic work best) in to heat.
I use an 8 quart enamel-coated cast iron dutch oven. Remove the pot from the oven and dump the dough ball into the pan. Cover the pot and bake for 30 minutes.
Then remove the lid and sprinkle the remaining 1/4 cheese on top. Bake another 15 to 30 minutes or until the loaf is nicely browned.
Remove from oven and cool on rack.
Easy Garlic Cheese No-Knead Bread Recipe
Chrysa
With only 5 ingredients, this Easy Garlic Cheese No-Knead Bread recipe makes a delicious loaf with no kneading and very little work.
Combine dry ingredients in a large bowl. Stir in 1 cup of the cheese and then add water until well blended.
Cover bowl with plastic wrap and leave in a warm place to rise for a minimum of 12 hours (16-24 hours is better).
Remove the dough from the bowl and place on a generously floured work surface, sprinkle with flour, and fold it in on top of itself three or four times.
Turn the bowl you were using at first upside down over the dough and let it rest for 15 minutes.
After 15 minutes, form the dough into a ball. Wash and thoroughly dry the original bowl and then return dough to bowl and cover bowl with a cotton dish towel.
Let rise for 2 hours. The dough should double in size.
30 minutes before the dough is ready, heat oven to 450 degrees and put in baking pot. Remove the pot from the oven and dump the dough ball into the pan. Cover the pot and bake for 30 minutes.
Remove the lid and sprinkle the remaining 1/4 cheese on top. Bake another 15 to 30 minutes or until the loaf is nicely browned.
Remove from oven and cool on rack.
Notes
Bake in a 6 to 8 quart heavy pot with a cover (pyrex, cast iron, enamel or ceramic work best). I use an 8 quart enamel-coated cast iron dutch oven.
I am not a nutritionist. These values were calculated automatically with the Spoonacular Food API.
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!
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Why is my bread dense: Usually bread will be too dense when there is too much flour. Keep in mind this dough will be pretty sticky, do not add more flour than specified. Other factors that come into play are humidity and age of flour. Little yeast, long rise, sticky dough are keys to a good, light loaf.
The main difference is in the way that gluten is formed in the loaves. Kneaded breads use kneading to develop the gluten and no-knead breads use the natural chemical changes that happen when flour and water are mixed to develop the gluten.
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.
And gluten is what makes bread deliciously chewy. If you don't knead your dough, your baked bread won't rise as high, and the overall texture and appearance will be dense.
Starch helps the dough by trapping the gas from the yeast in the dough and makes the bubbles stronger. This helps the bread to rise and be lighter and fluffier. If you are boiling potatoes, you can use the unsalted water in place of the water in your bread recipe to help out the yeast.
Apple cider vinegar, on the other hand, is an acidic liquid and does not have the leavening properties needed to make dough rise. It won't contribute the same gas and fermentation process that yeast provides.
Wetting the dough causes the surface to steam.Covering it traps the moisture. This partnership stops the bread from drying out on the surface in the hot air of the oven and forming a premature crust. Your bread rises more and produces a richer colour, becoming glossy on the surface.
Because yeast does not divide much in bread dough (only 20-30% increase in cell numbers in 4 hours), what you start with is what you end up with in terms of yeast numbers. This can affect the bread by adding a "yeasty" taste if you put too much into the dough.
What bakers call the “poke test” is the best way to tell if dough is ready to bake after its second rise. Lightly flour your finger and poke the dough down about 1". If the indent stays, it's ready to bake. If it pops back out, give it a bit more time.
The proofing time for bread dough varies based on the dough's makeup (amount of preferment, flour choices, and hydration) and the temperature at which it's proofed. The dough should generally be proofed for around 1 to 4 hours at a warm temperature or overnight (or more) at a cold refrigerator temperature.
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.
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.
What bakers call the “poke test” is the best way to tell if dough is ready to bake after its second rise. Lightly flour your finger and poke the dough down about 1". If the indent stays, it's ready to bake. If it pops back out, give it a bit more time.
Getting the amount of flour right is vital due to the high flour ratio to the other bread ingredients. Measuring one or two tablespoons too much per cup (easy to do) can cause your bread to be dense.
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