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A homemade baguette is a true treat! Better yet, this recipe requires only four simple ingredients and absolutely no kneading.
Baguette is perfect for every occasion. From soups to salads to hearty roast dinners, fresh baked bread is always welcome on our table.
Baguette making can be an extremely time consuming process, but with this no-knead recipe you will cut corners without compromising taste. We are obsessed with the chewy inside and crispy exterior. It’s just like the baguette we had on our last family trip to Paris!
What is Baguette?
If you have eaten at a French restaurant, it’s likely you have tried this iconic bread. Simply put, a baguette is a long, thin loaf of French bread that is characterized by a crisp crust and chewy center. The ingredients are pure and simple, consisting of water, flour, salt and yeast.
How Do You Make Baguettes From Scratch?
This method is the easiest way to make baguette and happens to also be my personal favorite. Follow these simple steps to nail the loaf each time:
- Mix the dry ingredients together and add water. Cover with plastic wrap and let sit overnight (up to 20 hours) on the countertop in a well oiled bowl.
- Generously flour your hands and your baking sheet.
- Form dough into baguette shape (about 12 inches long) and let it rise in a warm place for 1-2 hours. Follow this video tutorial for tips on shaping the dough.
- Bake in the oven for ten minutes with a pan of boiled water resting on the bottom rack. Remove the water and bake until golden brown.
DON’T PANIC! The dough will be really sticky and that’s perfectly OK. To make handling it easier, make sure the work surface is really well-floured or wet your hands periodically throughout the shaping process. I also love using a dough scraper for easier handling.
Tips for the Best Baguette
- Use the right flour. Try using flour with higher protein content to get the best texture. A couple of my favorites include King Arthur or Bobs’ Red Mill. Any Canadian brand will typically fit the bill.
- Score the top with a very sharp knife. Scoring, or slicing, the top of your baguettes isn’t just for decoration. When you initially shape your bread, you are creating a very taut surface. When you pop your baguette into the oven without scoring the top, the heat causes a burst of gas called an “oven spring” that can rupture the top of the bread and destroy its shape.
- Freeze and reheat your baguette. I like to bake a couple loaves of bread at once and freeze a couple for later. Reheat them in the oven and they will be just as good as freshly baked bread!
- Make sure your yeast is fresh. This common mistake happens to the best of us. Over time, active yeast deactivates and loses its ability to make your bread rise and fluff. Always check the label to make sure it’s not expired!
- Don’t skip the steam bath. The steam bath is crucial to making the outside of your bread crusty. It’s well worth the extra step!
How to Shape The Baguette
Serving Baguette
I probably don’t have to tell you too much about how to enjoy baguette, but here are some of my favorite ways to serve it.
- European-style butter or high-quality olive oil. Pulgra and Kerrygold are delicious options you can find at most grocery stores.
- Smoked Salmon Dip. This 15-minute recipe is super easy and features an instructional video with yours truly and my husband, Tim! 😉
- Slathered with Raspberry Jam. Our recipe only requires 3 simple ingredients and our boys are hooked on it.
- Alongside a steaming bowl of borscht. It’s sorrel season! Pair a toasty piece of baguette with our schavel borscht.
- Make a steak sandwich. C’mon, you deserve one!
- Serve up some bruschetta. Nothing says summer quite like bruschetta made with farmer’s market tomatoes.
FAQ
Why are my baguettes flat?
When shaping the baguettes you will need to use ample flour to successfully shape the baguettes- have a well floured surface and hands, and keep folding the dough until you get a tight, skinny log/baton shape. Watch this tutorial on shaping the dough.
Why is the dough sticky or wet?
Rest assured it is normal for the dough to be very sticky and wet as this is a high hydration dough. More flour is added when shaping the dough-you will need to have well floured hands and surface when shaping the baguettes.
What if my dough is rising faster than 12-20 hours?
This dough needs ample time to rise because not a lot of yeast is called for. The longer it sits, the better the final texture and taste. You may find that the dough rises much faster if you live in a warmer, humid climate. In this case, the rising time may be closer to 12 hours- you can place the dough into the fridge for the remainder of the rising time, if desired.
Why is the crust so hard?
Baguettes are known for their crispy, golden exterior. If you’d like to soften the crust, wrap your baguettes in a clean kitchen towel after baking.
How many baguettes does this recipe make?
This recipe will easily yield 2-6 baguettes, depending on the size of baguette you prefer!
Recipe
No Knead Bread-Baguette
Print Pin
Servings
12 servings
Prep Time 25 minutes mins
Cook Time 40 minutes mins
Total Time 1 hour hr 5 minutes mins
Recipe contributed by: Natalya Drozhzhin
Homemade baguette is a true treat! Better yet, this recipe requires only four simple ingredients and absolutely no kneading.
Ingredients
- 6 cups all-purpose flour (depending on a brand, you may need to add more flour)
- 3 cups lukewarm water
- 2 tsp yeast
- 2 tsp salt
US Units – Metric
Instructions
The night before, combine all ingredients together. First mix the dry ingredients together and then add water. Mix the ingredients until the dough comes together. Cover it with a plastic wrap and let it sit for 12-20 hours on the countertop.
The following day, the dough should be wet, sticky and bubbly. Generously flour your hands and the baking sheet.
Take the dough (if it sticks, apply more flour to your hands) and form a baguette shape. You will easily get atleast 2-3 baguettes. For tips on shaping the dough, watch this tutorial. Place it on a baking sheet and sprinkle a generous amount of flour on it. Score the top with a sharp knife and cover it with a towel. Let the dough rise in a warm place for 1-2 hours.
Preheat the oven to 450 °F. You will need to have 2 shelves in an oven. Fill a deep baking pan with 2 cups of hot boiled water, and place it on the lower rack, inside your oven. This will make the bread crispy on the outside. Place the bread on the middle rack. Remove water from the oven after 10 minutes. Keep on baking the bread for another 30 minutes or until golden crispy brown.
Nutrition Facts
No Knead Bread-Baguette
Amount Per Serving
Calories 230 Calories from Fat 9
% Daily Value*
Fat 1g2%
Saturated Fat 1g5%
Sodium 392mg16%
Potassium 73mg2%
Carbohydrates 48g16%
Fiber 2g8%
Sugar 1g1%
Protein 7g14%
Calcium 11mg1%
Iron 3mg17%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.
Posted August 11, 2020
About Author
MarcMar 3, 2024 Greetings from Montréal. Quick question. Rapid rise yeast versus regular. I suspect you use rapid since you make no mention of "proofing" the yeast. Any comment?
Merci beaucoup et bonne appétit.
Marc
Natalya DrozhzhinMar 4, 2024 Hi Marc! I use active dry yeast -it's linked in the ingredients section.
DebraMar 1, 2024 This will sound like a ridiculous question HOWEVER, here goes: the top instructions say in a well oiled bowl. In the lower area it doesn’t mention the oil. So I’m wondering if I mix all the ingredients and then turn it into a well oiled bowl? I’m dying to attempt this bread so if anyone sees this question pls let me know what you think! THANK YOU!!
Natalya DrozhzhinMar 1, 2024 Hi Debra, you dont have to oil the bowl. You could move the dough to another bowl. Personally, I dont move it most of the time. For a lot of people, it makes it easier down the road. Hope this helps. 🙂
PatFeb 29, 2024 Love this. Recepie made it several times with no issues I have used Robin Hood flour thank you for posting recepie
Natalya DrozhzhinFeb 29, 2024 Thanks for sharing Pat. I'm glad this recipe is a repeated success for you!
KorvusFeb 29, 2024 This recipe is god awful. I followed it exactly, step by step, tried all the troubleshooting provided, watched the video tutorials, everything. During no step did my dough look anything like the pictures, even though I followed the measurements exactly. I know the dough was supposed to be wet and sticky, but it was SO sticky that you literally can't form any shape whatsoever and you can't work it in your hands because it just sticks to your hands and the bowl constantly. The dough does not keep a shape at all. Every attempt I made to get it into a baguette shape, it simply melted into a flat blob. I can't even imagine how horrible it's gonna look when baked. I've had years of baking experience, I've made breads before, and I've never had a recipe turn out this awful.
EmMar 1, 2024 Calling it awful just because it did not work out for you is rude. I have made this twice and it turned out successful. I did not use the flour the recipe suggested but the trick was to add the water little by little until I got a workable dough consistency. I don't have years of baking experience, but it worked for me. 😅
Natalya DrozhzhinFeb 29, 2024 Hi Korvus, I am so sorry that you were struggling with this recipe. Which brand of flour did you use? Depending on the brand of flour, you may need to add a bit more. Its hard to make suggestions without seen the entire process. It sounds like the work surface wasn't floured during shaping? Also, you can oil or wet your hands to make the shaping process easier, hope this helps in the future.
KorvusFeb 29, 2024 The store was out of the flour suggested, so I used the all purpose flour I use for everything, including other breads, with no issue. My hands and surfaces were beyond floured, I even added several extra cups of flour to the bread and it was still beyond sticky and wouldn't hold any shape. They're in the oven now and just melted into each other, and harder than rocks. I couldn't even score the bread because the cuts just melted. I'm just baffled really. Never in my life has a recipe gone so poorly.
Natalya DrozhzhinFeb 29, 2024 Thank you for sharing this with me. This recipe has been on our rotation and I it is sticky but manageable. I am not sure why it didnt work out well for you. The only thing I can think of is the type of flour. When I bake at my in-laws and they dont have the brand I am use to, the bread never comes out as good. Do you know the brand? I think it would help others to know. Thanks for your feedback.
JulesFeb 21, 2024 I am trying your recipe, with high hopes, but honestly having to wade through 30+ ad windows is trying my patience.
Natalya DrozhzhinFeb 21, 2024 Hey Jules, Click on the "jump to recipe" option under the title and it'll take you directly to the recipe. I hope this helps. 🙂
GwenFeb 19, 2024 Loved this bread. I have to work on my technique of shaping them, but they turned out great.
Natalya DrozhzhinFeb 20, 2024 Hey Gwen, So happy to hear you love this bread! Thanks for sharing.
Debi SFeb 16, 2024 I just took mine out of the oven, they look amazing and smell even better! I read all the comments about using extra flour and I believe that helped my success here. I made a half batch because I was worried after reading the tips. Next time I am making a whole batch and sharing with my neighbors. Thank you everyone.
Natalya DrozhzhinFeb 16, 2024 Thanks for the feedback Debi. Sharing with your neighbors sounds like a lovely idea!
AmyFeb 14, 2024 Hi
Great recipe But No Need for plastic wrap!
What did we use prior to plastic wrap?
Yes a towel over the top works just as well. People think. This plant doesn't need plastic wrap over every loaf of bread made.Natalya DrozhzhinFeb 14, 2024 Hi Amy, I like this perspective, thank you for sharing your feedback!
GabbyFeb 11, 2024 My dough is very soft, and it doesn't have a nice baguette shape. It's flattening during the second proofing process. What did I wrong? Maybe I havetouse more flour? (I used king arthur organic bread flour)
Natalya DrozhzhinFeb 12, 2024 Hey Gabby, I would try adding some more flour! I hope this helps.
SamFeb 9, 2024 Love the recipe. Super simple. Are there any changes to the recipe if I substitute whole wheat flour say with a 75 whole wheat/25 AP split?
Natalya DrozhzhinFeb 9, 2024 Hey Sam, So grateful to hear you love this recipe. If you're looking for a whole wheat baguette, I would recommend trying our whole wheat baguette recipe: https://momsdish.com/recipe/2…
CarolynFeb 7, 2024 Can I let it sit on the counter for 24-26 hours?
Natalya DrozhzhinFeb 7, 2024 Hey Carolyn, If you must keep it out longer, I'd place it in the fridge after about 12 hours.
LidiaFeb 5, 2024 After reading other recipes I think I know what's wrong: the steam. The pan with hot water should go in the oven 5-10 minutes before the baguettes so it has time to come back up to boiling temperature and steam the oven. I will try a 3rd time.
Natalya DrozhzhinFeb 6, 2024 Hi, I think you can also lower temperature, some ovens run at higher temperature than others. They also soften as they cool off.Depending on their size, you can reduce baking time as well. Hope the pointers are helpful.
LidiaFeb 5, 2024 I followed your recipe exactly for the second time. My baguettes came out hard as rocks. I wish I could upload a picture to get your feedback as to what may have gone wrong.
Natalya DrozhzhinFeb 6, 2024 Hi Lidia, you can try lowering temperature. Also, as they cool down they may soften a bit.
BethFeb 4, 2024 Hi! This recipe looks great. Could I bake the loaves in a large preheated Dutch oven, rather than put water in the oven? Thanks!
Natalya DrozhzhinFeb 5, 2024 Hey Beth, The steam bath helps create the crusty exterior, so I don't skip it when making baguettes. I have not made baguettes in a Dutch oven because my long shape wouldn't fit in the ones I have.
BethFeb 5, 2024 Thank you so much!
Rocky ConwayFeb 3, 2024 Is there a baguette recipe for not the overnight process?
Natalya DrozhzhinFeb 5, 2024 Hey Rocky, The flavor develops from a long, slow rise so the overnight process is important.
ChrisFeb 3, 2024 Excellent recipe. This is a keeper. Next time I am going to jazz it up a little. Thanks so much for this recipe.
Natalya DrozhzhinFeb 5, 2024 You're welcome Chris! I'm curious how you plan to jazz up the recipe?
OlgaFeb 1, 2024 I did everything exactly how the recipe said and the bread didn't work out. The dough was on the counter top for 16 hours and when I decided to bake it, it stank because it already перекисло. And the dough was to flat, even with adding a whole bunch of flour for it not to be stinky and flat. I don't know what I did wrong.
Natalya DrozhzhinFeb 2, 2024 Hi Olga, No knead dough requires long periods to get to the peak of fermentation process. If the kitchen is too warm it can speed things up. Also, I am wondering what flour did you use?
Cadence HelmeJan 29, 2024 I halved this recipe and even though my dough wasn't sticky or bubbly on the top it still baked up fantastically. I need to work on my shaping but even halved I think I could have easily made two baguettes.
Natalya DrozhzhinJan 30, 2024 Thanks for sharing Cadence. So happy to hear it worked out for you!
Adriana CollinsJan 24, 2024 I tried shaping my dough like the video but they’re still kinda flat. I followed the recipe to a T
Natalya DrozhzhinJan 25, 2024 Hey Adriana, What type of flour did you use? I would suggest using ample flour when shaping the baguettes and keep folding the dough until you get a tight, skinny log/baton shape.
InaJan 24, 2024 These are unbelievably easy and so good! Made many times already. Thank you for such an amazing recipe.
Natalya DrozhzhinJan 24, 2024 I'm so glad to hear that! Keep on enjoying!
EliJan 23, 2024 What temp is the baguette when done
Natalya DrozhzhinJan 23, 2024 Hey Eli, Anywhere between 190-210°F. I hope this helps!
ElenaJan 19, 2024 Used Robinhood AP flour, after first proof, the dough came out very wet and sticky, even after thoroughly flouring the surface and hands. The knife scoring didn't work, immediately disappears into the raw dough. What a mess! I watched the dough shaping video a lot and did many pinches, and the rolls become flat almost immediately. I weighed out the cups of flour and water precisely. Will try baking it but not hopeful.
Natalya DrozhzhinJan 21, 2024 Hi Elena, I am sorry you struggled with a sticky dough! The dough is very sticky and should hold shape but some brands of flour require a little more. I have not tested with Robinhood AP, I believe its Canadian brand and I have tried other Canadian flour and it worked for us. Let me know how it came out after baking.
maggieJan 19, 2024 i just bought a baguette baking pan should i put the dough in it to rise for the 1-2 hours or after it has risen on a sheet pan! i have made this bread twice and love it! thank you!
Natalya DrozhzhinJan 19, 2024 Hey Maggie, Yes, I would let it rise in the baguette baking pan. Thanks for sharing your love for this bread. I appreciate the feedback! 🙂
TraceyJan 18, 2024 I’m at high altitude and loaf is flat, s should I add more flour at the beginning before rise or as I shape?
Natalya DrozhzhinJan 18, 2024 Hey Tracey, I would try adding a bit more flour before the bread rises, this should help the bread from rising too quickly.
Tracey NickellJan 18, 2024 Wow, I added 1/2 cup before first rise, they are so much better, actually huge. Thanks
Natalya DrozhzhinJan 19, 2024 So glad that helped!
AliceJan 17, 2024 Phenomenal. Best baguette I ever made. They don’t look as nice as yours because I don’t have a lame or razor to score the tops, but once I get that, they’ll be perfect!
I did 3/4 of the recipe at 4.5 cups flour, 2.25 cups water, and 1.5 each of salt and yeast. Made two beautiful, standard size baguettes.
I also baked in one of those baguette aluminum bakers with the little holes. A bench scraper was key since the dough is so hydrated.
Thanks!
Natalya DrozhzhinJan 18, 2024 Thanks for the feedback Alice! I'm excited for you to make these baguettes again! Enjoy!
LeaJan 15, 2024 My daughter and I made baguettes yesterday using this recipe and they turned out perfect! I had to freeze a loaf to keep my family from eating it all. Nice and crispy on the outside, soft on the inside. Will make again!
Natalya DrozhzhinJan 15, 2024 Thank you for the kind words Lea. I'm so glad you and your daughter enjoyed it!
MollyJan 11, 2024 My dough is almost to the top of my bowl after only a few hours of resting should I just leave it alone, transfer to a larger bowl, or can it be used earlier?
Natalya DrozhzhinJan 12, 2024 Hey Molly, I'd leave it alone and place it in the fridge to rise the remainder of the time. Let me know how it turned out. 🙂
MartieJan 11, 2024 My loaves "spread out" more than I would have liked during the rise. Do you think, perhaps, I should add a bit more flour with shaping my loaves? Thanks so much!!
Natalya DrozhzhinJan 12, 2024 Hey Martie, What type of flour did you use?
SusanJan 9, 2024 The easiest and most delicious bread! My first try - success! Thank you so much!
Natalya DrozhzhinJan 9, 2024 You're welcome Susan! First time success is the best! Enjoy! 🙂
Linda O'LearyJan 7, 2024 Hi Natasha this is my second attempt and although my baguettes are less flat than last time they still don’t have that nice round shape. I watched your video twice. Maybe bread making is not my forte lol.
Heather ArnottJan 8, 2024 For a rounder shape, I use a curved non-stick baguette pan. The bottom shape is rounded with little bumps, due to the tiny holes in the pan. Easy to find on Amazon.
KathyJan 17, 2024 I use the same pans and they make a huge difference! They are more than worth it!☺️
Natalya DrozhzhinJan 7, 2024 Hi Linda, maybe the dough is too runny, some brands of flour just don't give you the right consistancy. Can you add slightly bit more flour?
ArluJan 10, 2024 I used king arthur flour and its super runny... is there specific flour brand for thus one? Thank you
Natalya DrozhzhinJan 10, 2024 I have used King Arthur. It wasnts very runny. You can try adding 1/2 extra. Sometimes elevation can play a roll as well.