My Mother’s Peasant Bread: The Best Easiest Bread You Will Ever Make
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
This is the no-knead bread recipe my mother has been baking for 45 years. Start to finish, it can be ready in three hours. It bakes in well-buttered Pyrex bowls — no need to preheat a baking vessel for this recipe — and it emerges golden and crisp with a soft, tender crumb. 🍞🍞🍞🍞🍞

When I tell you that, if forced, I had to pick one and only one recipe to share with you that this — my mother’s peasant bread — would be it, I am serious. I would almost in fact be OK ending the blog after this very post, resting assured that you all had this knowledge at hand. This bread will change your life.
The reason I say this is simple. People go insane over homemade bread. Not once have I served this bread to company without being asked, “Did you really make this?” And questioned: “You mean with a bread machine?” But always praised: “Is there anything more special than homemade bread?”
So what makes this bread so special? For one, it’s no-knead. But unlike other no-knead breads, you can start this one at 4:00 pm and turn it out onto the dinner table at 7:00 pm. It bakes in well-buttered Pyrex bowls — there is no pre-heating of the baking vessels in this recipe — and it emerges golden and crisp without any steam pans or water spritzes. This is not artisan bread, nor is it trying to be. It is peasant bread, spongy and moist with a most delectable buttery crust.
Genuinely, I would be proud to serve this bread at a dinner party attended by the bread Gods: Jim Lahey, Mark Bittman, Peter Reinhart, Chad Robertson, Jeff Hertzberg, and Zoe Francois. It is a bread I hope you will all give a go, too, and then proudly serve at your next dinner party to guests who might ask where you’ve stashed away your bread machine. And when this happens, I hope you will all just smile and say, “Don’t be silly. This is just a simple peasant bread. Easy as pie. I’ll show you how to make it some day.”

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How to Make Peasant Bread, Step by Step
First: You need yeast. I love SAF Instant Yeast. Instant yeast can be whisked directly into the flour without blooming or proofing. If you want to stick to active-dry yeast, there are instructions in the recipe notes on how to do so. Red Star yeast is great.

Whisk together flour, salt, sugar, and instant yeast. Add lukewarm water.

Mix until you have a sticky dough ball. Let it rise for 1.5 to 2 hours…

… or until it looks like this:

Punch down the dough using two forks.

Then split the dough down the middle again using the two forks.

Because this is a very wet dough, it must be baked in an oven-proof bowl. I am partial to the Pyrex 1L 322 size, but any similarly sized oven-proof bowl will work.

Butter the bowls well; then transfer half of the dough to each prepared bow.

Let the dough rise again until it crowns the rim of the bowl, about 30 minutes.

Transfer the bowls to the oven to bake:


This bread is irresistible when it’s freshly baked, but it also makes wonderful toast on subsequent mornings as well as the best grilled cheese and sandwiches of all kinds.


My Mother’s Peasant Bread: The Best Easiest Bread You Will Ever Make
- Total Time: 2 hours 27 minutes
- Yield: 2 loaves 1x
Description
Notes:
This is a sticky, no-knead dough, so, some sort of baking vessel, such as pyrex bowls (you need two 1-qt bowls) or ramekins for mini loaves is required to bake this bread. See notes below the recipe for sources. You can use a bowl that is about 2 qt or 2 L in size to bake off the whole batch of dough (versus splitting the dough in half) but do not use this size for baking half of the dough — it is too big.

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Ingredients
- 4 cups (512 g) unbleached all-purpose or bread flour
- 2 teaspoons (10 g) kosher salt
- 2 cups (454 g) lukewarm water (made by mixing 1.5 cups cold water with 0.5 cup boiling water)
- 2 teaspoons (8 g) sugar
- 2 teaspoons (8 g) instant yeast, I love SAF Instant Yeast, see notes below
- room temperature butter, about 2 tablespoons
Instructions
- Mixing the dough: In a large mixing bowl, whisk together the flour, salt, sugar, and instant yeast (I love SAF Instant Yeast). Add the water. Mix until the flour is absorbed. (If you are using active dry yeast, see notes below.)
- Let it rise. Cover bowl with a tea towel or plastic wrap and set aside in a warm spot to rise for at least an hour. (In the winter or if you are letting the bread rise in a cool place, it might take as long as two hours to rise.) This is how to create a slightly warm spot for your bread to rise in: Turn the oven on at any temperature (350ºF or so) for one minute, then turn it off. Note: Do not allow the oven to get up to 300ºF, for example, and then heat at that setting for 1 minute — this will be too hot. Just let the oven preheat for a total of 1 minute — it likely won’t get above 100ºF. The goal is to just create a slightly warm environment for the bread.
- Preheat the oven to 425ºF. Grease two 1-qt or 1.5-qt oven-safe bowls (see notes below) with about a tablespoon of butter each. Using two forks, punch down your dough, scraping it from the sides of the bowl, which it will be clinging to. As you scrape it down try to pull the dough toward the center (see video below for guidance). You want to loosen the dough entirely from the sides of the bowl, and you want to make sure you’ve punched it down. Then, take your two forks and divide the dough into two equal portions — eye the center of the mass of dough, and starting from the center and working out, pull the dough apart with the two forks. Then scoop up each half and place into your prepared bowls. This part can be a little messy — the dough is very wet and will slip all over the place. Using small forks or forks with short tines makes this easier — my small salad forks work best; my dinner forks make it harder. It’s best to scoop it up fast and plop it in the bowl in one fell swoop. Some people like to use flexible, plastic dough scrapers for this step.
- Let the dough rise again for about 20 to 30 minutes on the countertop near the oven (or near a warm spot) or until it has risen to just below or above (depending on what size bowl you are using) the top of the bowls. (Note: Do not do the warm-oven trick for the second rise, and do not cover your bowls for the second rise. Simply set your bowls on top of your oven, so that they are in a warm spot. Twenty minutes in this spot usually is enough for my loaves.)
- Bake it. Bake for 15 minutes. Reduce the heat to 375º and bake for 15 to 17 minutes longer. Remove from the oven and turn the loaves onto cooling racks. If you’ve greased the bowls well, the loaves should fall right out onto the cooling racks. If the loaves look a little pale and soft when you’ve turned them out onto your cooling racks, place the loaves into the oven (outside of their bowls) and let them bake for about 5 minutes longer. Remove from oven and let cool for 10 minutes before cutting.
Notes
- The bowls: The cheapest, most widely available 1-qt bowl is the Pyrex 322. Update: These bowls are becoming harder to find and more expensive. Here’s another option: the Pyrex 3-piece set. You can split the dough in half as always (see recipe) and bake half in the 1-quart bowl and half in the 1.5 quart bowl. The loaves will not be the same shape, but they will be delicious nonetheless. This Anchor Hocking set is another great option.
- Yeast: I buy SAF Instant Yeast in bulk from Amazon I store it in my fridge or freezer, and it lasts forever. If you are using the packets of yeast (the kind that come in the 3-fold packets), just go ahead and use a whole packet — It’s 2.25 teaspoons. I have made the bread with active dry, rapid rise, and instant yeast, and all varieties work. The beauty of instant yeast is that there is no need to “proof” it — you can add the yeast directly to the flour. I never use active-dry yeast anymore.
- If you have active-dry yeast on hand and want to use it, here’s how: In a small mixing bowl, dissolve the sugar into the water. Sprinkle the yeast over top. There is no need to stir it up. Let it stand for about 10 to 15 minutes or until the mixture is foamy and/or bubbling just a bit — this step will ensure that the yeast is active. Meanwhile, in a large bowl, whisk together the flour and salt. When the yeast-water-sugar mixture is foamy, stir it up, and add it to the flour bowl. Mix until the flour is absorbed.
- Troubleshooting: You can find step-by-step video instruction here.
- Several commenters have had trouble with the second rise, and this seems to be caused by the shape of the bowl they are letting the dough rise in the second time around. Two hours for the second rise is too long. If you don’t have a 1-qt bowl, bake 3/4 of the dough in a loaf pan and bake the rest off in muffin tins or a popover pan. The second rise should take no more than 30 minutes.
- Also, you can use as many as 3 cups of whole wheat flour, but the texture changes considerably. I suggest trying with all all-purpose or bread flour to start and once you get the hang of it, start trying various combinations of whole wheat flour and/or other flours.
- The single most important step you can take to make this bread truly foolproof is to invest in a digital scale. This one costs under $10. If you are not measuring by weight, do this: scoop flour into the measuring cup using a separate spoon or measuring cup; level off with a knife. The flour should be below the rim of the measuring cup.
- Here’s a printable version of this recipes that’s less wordy: Peasant Bread Recipe, Simplified
- How to Bake the Peasant Bread in a Dutch Oven: Preheat a Dutch Oven for 45 minutes at 450ºF. Dust a clean work surface with flour. After the first rise, turn the dough out onto the floured surface and shape it into a ball: I like to fold it envelope style from top to bottom, then side to side; then I flip it over and use the pinkie edges of my hands to pinch the dough underneath and create some tension. Transfer the dough to a sheet of parchment paper. Let rest for 20 minutes. If you feel your dough is spreading too much you can lift up the sheet of parchment paper, dough and all, and place it in a bowl of a similar size. After the 20 minutes, transfer the dough, parchment paper and all to the Dutch oven. Carefully cover it. Bake 30 minutes. Uncover. Bake 15 minutes more.
- To bake the peasant bread in a loaf pan: If you are using an 8.5×4.5-inch loaf pan or a 9×5-inch loaf pan, you can bake 3/4 of the dough in it; bake off the rest of the dough in ramekins or other small vessels … the mini loaves are so cute. You can also make 1.5x the recipe, and bake the bread in 2 loaf pans. If you have a large loaf pan, such as a 10×6-inch loaf pan, you can bake off the entire batch of dough in it. For loaf pans, bake at 375ºF for 45 minutes.
- How to Bake at Hight Altitude:
- First try the original recipe as written (preferably with a scale). You may not need to make any adjustments. One commenter, who lives at 9200 ft finds the original recipe to work just fine as is.
- If the original recipe doesn’t work, try adding a little bit more water because it rises fast and it is so dry: about a quarter cup for every 512 g of flour.
- Try decreasing the yeast to 1.5 teaspoons.
- If your dough is especially gooey, try decreasing the water by 1/4 cup. But, if you aren’t using a scale, my first suggestion would be to buy a scale and weigh the flour, and make the bread once as directed with the 2 cups water and 512 grams flour, etc.
- Punch the dough down twice before transferring it to the buttered Pyrex bowls. In other words, let it rise for 1-1.5 hours, punch it down, let it rise again for about an hour, punch it down, then transfer it to the buttered bowls.
- Variations:
- #1. Cornmeal. Substitute 1 cup of the flour with 1 cup of cornmeal. Proceed with the recipe as directed.
- #2. Faux focaccia. Instead of spreading butter in two Pyrex bowls in preparation for baking, butter one 9×9-inch glass baking dish and one Pyrex bowl or just butter one large 9×13-inch Pyrex baking dish. If using two vessels, divide the dough in half and place each half in prepared baking pan. If using only one large baking dish, place all of the dough in the dish. Drizzle dough with 1 tablespoon of olive oil (if using the small square pan) and 2 tablespoons of olive oil (if using the large one). Using your fingers, gently spread the dough out so that it fits the shape of the pan. Use your fingers to create dimples in the surface of the dough. Sprinkle surface with chopped rosemary and sea salt. Let rise for 20 to 30 minutes. Bake for 15 minutes at 425ºF and 17 minutes (or longer) at 375ºF. Remove from pan and let cool on cooling rack.
- #3. Thyme Dinner Rolls
- #4 Gluten-free
- #5. Everything Bagel Seasoning Bread. Simply coat the buttered bowls with everything bagel seasoning. Other seeds and seed mixes work, too, like sesame seeds and dukkah.
- #6: Whole Wheat Peasant Bread. Use as much as 50% whole wheat flour.
- Prep Time: 5 minutes
- Cook Time: 32 minutes
- Category: Bread
- Method: Baked
- Cuisine: American
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.



7,129 Comments on “My Mother’s Peasant Bread: The Best Easiest Bread You Will Ever Make”
I’ve made this bread dozens of times since I discovered it during Covid. It is ridiculously simple, impossible to screw up and always delicious. Love all the comments on how to fancy it up, but there is no need (and no-knead!) as its the yummy, soft, crusty, buttery white bread of your dreams as is.
Great to hear, Amy! Thanks so much for writing and sharing this 🙂
Hi! I love your recipes! Can i use this peasant bread recipe but do the long rise in the fridge (like focaccia)? If so, what are the day of bake rise instructions? Thank you!
Hi, and yes you can! The only thing to consider is that the second rise — once the bread has been transferred to the bowls — will take longer than usual because the dough will be so cold. It might take over an hour. Consider slicking the dough lightly with olive oil to protect it from drying out. Alternatively you could over the bowls with plastic wrap but remove the plastic wrap as soon as the dough approaches the rim of the bowl.
I’ve tried to make bread several times & haven’t had much luck, but this recipe is amazing & came out perfect! Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge! Can you tell me if this would work with GF bread flour? Thank you again, I’ll be making this for years to come:)
Great to hear, Tracy! I have a gluten-free version of the recipe here: Gluten-Free Peasant Bread Recipe
I halved the recipe and it made one perfect loaf. It was easy, quick, and yummy!
Great to hear, Shannon. Thanks so much for writing 🙂
Hi! I’ve made your peasant bread recipe many times much to the happiness of my family – delicious and fool proof! I am finally ready to make a sour dough starter (I know, late to the COVID sough dough bakers – LOL!) and wondered whether you can use the sour dough starter (and/or all or any portion of the “discard”) in this peasant bread recipe? Many thanks for your thoughts!
Hi and yes, you can! You can use 100 grams of starter in place of the yeast. Keep in mind, the rises will be longer/slower. If you use discard, you’ll want to use some yeast to bc the leavening power of the discard might not be enough to leaven the loaves.
I discovered this recipe a few weeks ago and have made two big loaves per week! Rather than halving the mix, I just use one 1.5 qt Pyrex and it comes out perfect every single time! My kids love it. It’s perfect as sandwich bread and toasts great too. I’m going to experiment with wholewheat flour next. This is my absolute favorite go-to bread recipe. Love that it’s all done and dusted in under four hours.
Great to hear, Cheryl! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes — so helpful for others who might not have the 1-qt bowls or who are looking to make a larger loaf.
I’ve made this often, but find myself not getting the oven spring I would like. Suggestions please! My rye loaf did not rise at all in the oven….
Hi Jane! Is your yeast fresh (as in not expired)? And what kind are you using? SAF Instant yeast is my favorite. Are you using a scale to measure? And are you using two 1-qt bowls to bake the bread in?
I use SAF, which I keep in the freezer. And due to a mishap which had yeast everywhere, I know it’s good. (picture yeast blooming all over my sink.) I make 1/2 a recipe – 1 loaf – and am careful to keep the flour/water percentage as in the 2 loaf recipe. I use the 1qt pyrex bowls.
Maybe you just need to be more patient with each of the rises. Go for 2-3 hours for the first rise; go for at least 1 hour with the second rise or don’t put the bread in the oven until the dough crowns the rim of the bowl.
What kind of flour (brand included) are you using?
I use KAF bread flour.
OK, great. I think increasing the rise times should help.
Love this and so does my husband. We were out of bread with a snowstorm coming. I had wanted to try the recipe but I was always making your sour dough foccacia bread (which I love). I tried this recipe as it’s lighter and better for a sandwich or toast. I am not buying store-bought bread again. All organic and no added perservatives.
Great to hear, Patty! Thanks so much for writing and sharing this. As much as I love sourdough, this recipe requires a fraction of the effort, and it is always met with rave reviews. Enjoy your toast and sandwiches!
This was delicious! My first time baking with rapid rise yeast. Easy recipe! Will definitely make this again!
Great to hear, Edie! Thanks so much for writing. Isn’t instant yeast a game changer? So much easier 🙂
This was so different from any bread recipe I made, BUT so good. I used glee to grease the bowl. This was so easy and came out better than a lot of bread recipes I have made, I LOVE the butter taste. Do not think twice this is a winner. I am now a home mom chef and will repeat this one. I did cook it till 207 degrees and put it back in the oven for 4 min’s to crisp the butter side up.
Great to read all of this, Barbara! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes 🙂
I’ve made this so many times and it’s so forgiving. I’ve mixed different flowers when I didn’t have four cups of the same. I’ve made it in all temperatures and weathers. It just never has let me down and people always think I’m a wizard when I bring fresh bread. Honestly this is like top 10 recipes of my life.
Awww, Holly! It’s so nice to read this. Thanks so much for writing and sharing this. Means a lot 🙂
Unbelievably easy recipe that comes out perfect if you follow the instructions to the letter. Delicious bread that stays fresh in a plastic bag for several days at room temperature. Excellent for soup bowls.
Great to hear, Iliana 🙂 Thanks so much for writing!
Thank you so much for this recipe! I can’t wait to try it. I have 2x 1.5 quart bowls. I presume that I could scale the recipe to increase by 50% and that amount of dough would fit well in my bowls. Do you think that sounds right?
Yes! If you make 1.5 x the recipe, it will work in two 1.5-qt. bowls. Note: You do not need to scale up the yeast.
Just tried this! And finally after so many bread fails, I’m in love. Bread Love! Reminds me of the toast I loved at a now gone diner. I’m so excited! Thank you, thank you, thank you!
Could I double the recipe and put all of it a metal 11×6 loaf pan. I wonder if it would have the great crust or not from not being glass.
Great to hear, Robin! You can actually fit a single batch of the dough in a 10×5-inch loaf pan, so I think if you double it, that will be too much dough for 11×6. Maybe 1.5x the recipe? The crust is still tasty when the bread is baked in a loaf pan, but there is something especially delicious about the buttery crust when baked in a glass bowl 🙂
Just made this bread. Followed the recipe exactly, also have two Pyrex 322 bowls, and this came out wonderful! Husband likes it too. I don’t think I’ll buy bread ever again! (Good thing it makes two loaves, the first one is going fast.)
Great to hear, Mary! Thanks so much for writing and sharing this. I have to double this recipe now because we go through it so quickly 🙂
Hi! I love this bread so much and have made it often. I need to make it for some folks who are vegan and am wondering if just greasing the bowl with vegetable oil will work or if I will have a stuck loaf…maybe brush with oil and coat with flour? (I would prefer not to buy spray or shortening of it can be avoided…)
Hi! I hope I’m catching you in time. Vegan buttery sticks work well for creating that nonstick barrier. Oil alone will not work — your dough will likely stick. Room temperature (as in solidified) coconut oil also works. Hope that helps!
I received some loaves as a gift and they were delicious! I am making my first batch now, 25% home-ground hard red wheat, AP flour, and a few teaspoons of gluten.
I have to say the web page design and heavy ads are making it really difficult to follow the instructions and leave this comment on my phone though! Glad you have a book.!
Is there a printable version of this? I cannot find a print button anywhere on your site. Thank you
Hi! The print button is located at the top of the recipe box, next to the “save recipe” button. But here’s a direct link to the printer page: https://vector-hatch.live/2012/11/07/my-mothers-peasant-bread-the-best-easiest-bread-you-will-ever-make/print/51440/%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Can I replace dry yeast with fresh bakers yeast ?
How to calculate?
Thanks
Dorit
Yes, I think so. I think you’ll need roughly 20 grams of fresh bakers yeast for this recipe.
I can’t tell you how many women I have shared your recipe with! Everyone I know is now making this bread. I have a batch in the oven right now with everything bagel mix. My bestie made it with raisins and cinnamon, dusting the top with sugar and cinnamon, it was outstanding!!!! Love love this bread, best toast ever!
So nice to read all of this, Susan!! Thanks so much for writing and sharing this, and thanks for spreading the peasant bread love!
Ali, if I halve the recipe, how much dough in a 472 pyrex (1 1/2 pt) and probably ramekins. Because putting the divided 1 loaf dough in two 472 bowls, just not satisfactory. Thanks.
Hi! 1.5 pts is nearly 1 qt, so if you halve the recipe, bake the entire amount of dough in the single 1.5 pt bowl… that should work.
can i use a dutch oven for this?? thank you!! <333
Yes! See the notes below the recipe box 🙂
I absolutely LOVE this bread!! I’ve been making it for weeks for my family (it’s toddler approved:) and for my friends, I even gave some loaves as birthday gifts to my friends.
I have one question, I want a more uniform bottom and top crust, is there anyway I could go about adding butter to the top of the dough right before the second rise? I am not a baker and have no idea if this is possible or would turn out how I want it to, which is why I’m asking. Thank you! 😊 This bread is amazing
I’m so happy to read this, Athena! Thanks so much for writing 🙂
I have to be honest, I have never tried doing anything to the exposed surface, because that ultimately becomes the bottom, and nobody really sees it. That said, I understand wanting to butter it in an effort to add additional flavor/color/uniformity. I think you could probably brush some melted butter over it right before you bake it. That might be the easiest. Or brush melted butter over it just before the second rise as you considered. If you give it a go, circle back… i’d love to hear how it turns out.
This bread is fantastic! Have you or any readers baked the whole recipe in the Emile Henry bread pot? Would the pot need to be buttered?
Hi Claudia! If you want to use an unpreheated pot, you will definitely need to butter it. If you are planning on preheating the pot, see the notes below the recipe card regarding baking in a Dutch oven.
LOVE LOVE LOVE this recipe so easy!!!
Great to hear, Julie! Thanks so much for writing 🙂