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Home Breads

Cheese Bread (no knead!)

By Nagi Maehashi
178 Comments
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Published16 Jun '23 Updated21 Aug '25
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Recipe

Swirls of cheese, an insanely golden crispy cheese crust, and soft fluffy crumb. This cheese bread is every cheese-loving carb-monsters’ dream come true! A very easy, no-knead bread recipe based on the beloved No-Knead Crusty Artisan Bread – are you ready for this??!

No Knead Cheese Bread ready to be eaten
No Knead Cheese Bread ready to be eaten

Cheese Bread

This is a bread you’d struggle to buy. Because I just can’t see any bakery cramming in as much cheese as I do. 250g – that’s half a pound! For un-missable cheese flavour.

Indulgent? Excessive? Perhaps.

But if I’m going to make a cheese bread, I want to do it right! None of this wimpy barely-there sprinkle of cheese on just the surface. I’d rather just make a plain loaf of bread and make a cheese toastie!

About this no-knead bread business

This gorgeous loaf is made using a no-knead bread dough that has been read over 7 million times since I published it in 2020. It’s tried and tested miracle recipe (thank you New York Times!) that’s easy enough for beginners yet seasoned bread enthusiasts appreciate its Artisan qualities.

Here’s how it goes down:

  1. Mix flour, yeast, salt and water with a wooden spoon (10 seconds).

  2. Leave to double in volume (1 to 3 hours).

  3. Fold in cheese, shape in a round (5 minutes).

  4. Bake (40 minutes). Eat (30 seconds).

No Knead Cheese Bread ready to be sliced and eaten
Cut open No Knead Cheese Bread

Ingredients

Here’s what you need to make this – yeast, flour, salt, water and cheese. Yep, really, that’s it!

For the bread dough

Ingredients in homemade No Knead Artisan style bread
  • Bread flour is best, if you can – Use bread flour if you can. Bread flour has more protein in it than normal flour which means more gluten, and this makes the dough more elastic and yields a more fluffy yet chewy texture inside the bread, just like the (pricey!) artisan bread you get from your favourite bakery.

    However, this bread is still fantastic made with plain/all-purpose flour. Put it this way – I wouldn’t make a special trip just to get bread flour if I have a hankering for this right now. But I would go and get it if I was making this for company!

  • Instant yeast – The base recipe calls for Instant Yeast (aka Rapid Rise yeast) which does not need to be dissolved in water and left to foam. You can also use normal yeast (“Active Dry Yeast” or just “dry yeast”) – you just need to change the order of the steps and dissolve the yeast in water first. The bread will come out the same!

Instant yeast

The cheese

I use Colby but you can use (almost) any meltable cheese you want (thoughts below). But I really urge you to:

  1. Don’t skimp on quantity. I use a whole 250g/8oz (2 1/2 packed cups) in this bread. The early versions started with 1 cup, then just creeping up and up. For full-on unmissable OMG cheese flavour, 250g/8z is the amount to use! (In case you’re curious, I did creep up a little more but it started to weight the bread down. Cheese greediness backfired!)

  2. Shred your own cheese. Store bought cheese is chunkier (so it weighs the bread down and won’t rise as well) and doesn’t melt because it is coated with anti-caking agents. For the best cheese ribbons and best cheese crust, grate your own! (But, in the event of a Cheese Bread emergency – and it can happen – packet shredded cheese will do).

Shredded cheese for cheese bread

I use Colby – I like using Colby because it melts “softly” so it kind of melds into the bread crumb beautifully without weighing it down or bleeding oil. It also bakes up beautifully golden on the crust. For a premium version, I use gruyere. But it makes this considerably pricier!

Other cheese – Any cheese (other than mozzarella) that melts well will work great here, like cheddar, tasty, Monterey Jack, gruyere. I like Colby for it’s melting qualities and it doesn’t weigh the bread down as it rises in the oven, and it’s not greasy (like Tasty cheese). Re: mozzarella – it will work fine but it doesn’t have enough flavour in it compared to other cheeses.


How to make this No-Knead Cheese Bread

Heads up – There’s a lot of detailed information in this section to give bread first timers the confidence to make this. For experienced bread makers, this recipe is a cinch so I suggest you skip straight to the recipe or recipe video. 🙂

For those familiar with the beloved no-knead Crusty Artisan Bread – the method is the same except with cheese folded in and piled on top!

1. The no-knead bread dough

Dump everything in a bowl and mix. No kneading!

How to make No Knead Cheese Bread
  1. Shaggy dough – Using a rubber spatula, mix flour, salt and yeast in a large bowl. Add water, then mix using the handle of the spatula until you can no longer see flour.

    Why the handle of the rubber spatula? Kind of mimics the dough hook of stand mixers. Less surface area to wipe gummy dough off.

  2. Dough consistency – It should be too sticky to knead by hand, but not pourable like cake batter (see video at X seconds).

How to make No Knead Cheese Bread
  1. Rise – Cover with cling wrap and leave to rise in a warm place for 1 to 2 hours until the dough doubles in volume. The surface should be bubbly, and the mixture should jiggle when you shake the bowl.

    What’s a warm place? 25°C/77°F+. Warmer = faster rise. Avoid direct sunlight, it dries out the surface of the dough. In winter, I sit the bowl next to a heater. In summer, anywhere in the house! TIP – your dryer Run it (empty) for a few minutes. Put bowl in, shut door. Nice and warm inside = perfect draught free dough rising location!

  2. The proofed dough (ie rising the dough) – Aim for around double for the best bread rising. If it rises too much (eg triple) or not enough, then the bread will not rise enough or will collapse.

Dough, done – and you didn’t even get your hands dirty! Onto shaping, cheesing and baking.


2. Shaping and cheesing

This section is wordy. But in practice, it’s straight forward. You’ll see in the recipe video!

How to make No Knead Cheese Bread
  1. Pre-heat pot – 30 minutes before the dough is ready, put a 24-28cm / 4.5-8 quart heavy based pot with a lid in the oven. Then preheat the oven to preheat to 240°C/450°F (220°C fan-forced). We want that pot hot!

    Curious why a hot pot? Read the Q&A in the No-Knead Crusty Artisan Bread. No dutch oven? That’s ok! Use a pan of water in the oven instead. Instructions in recipe notes.

  2. Scrape dough out – Sprinkle a 30cm/12″ area with ~1 tablespoon flour. Scrape the dough out onto the flour using the rubber spatula.

  3. Shape into disc – Sprinkle the surface with 1 teaspoon flour so you can pat it down into an approximate 20cm/8″ disc without the dough getting stuck all over your hands. No need to be meticulous about a perfect shape or size, just approximate is fine.

  4. Cheese it – Set aside 1/3 of the cheese for topping. Cover surface with half the remaining cheese, leaving a 2cm/3/4″ border.

Folding the cheese inside the loaf

How to make No Knead Cheese Bread
  1. Fold inwards – Using a dough scraper or anything of similar shape (cake server, large knife, spatula), fold the sides inwards 4 times to roughly form a roundish shape. Sprinkle the scraper as needed to stop the dough from sticking to it.

    Cheese each layer – After each fold, top the naked dough with some of the remaining cheese, but keep the final layer cheese-free as this will be the base of the bread.

How to make No Knead Cheese Bread
  1. Wonky is fine! Don’t worry about the shape at this stage. The purpose of the folding steps is to deflate the air bubbles in the dough and bury the cheese inside the bread.

How to make No Knead Cheese Bread
  1. Paper transfer – Place a 40cm/16″ sheet of baking/parchment paper next to the dough then flip it onto the paper so the seamside is (mostly) facedown.

    Tidy the shape roughly, using the dough scraper, into an even round or oval shape. Don’t bother being too fastidious here because no matter what shape the dough is, it always expands and rises into a perfect round shape, as dictated by the pot.

  2. Cheese crown – Pile the reserved cheese on. It piles up high. Such a satisfying vision!

Baking time!


3. Baking (& eating)

Unlike the bread shaping, this part is delightfully short to explain in words!

How to make No Knead Cheese Bread
  1. Take out hot pot – Remove hot pot from the oven.

  2. Transfer dough – Hold the paper to transfer dough into the pot, keeping it on the paper. Put lid on.

  3. 35 minutes covered – Bake 35 minutes with the lid on.

  4. 10 minutes uncovered – Remove lid. Bake uncovered for 10 minutes to colour the surface.

  5. Transfer to cooling rack – Remove pot from oven. Use paper overhang to transfer bread onto a cooling rack. Slide paper out from underneath.

  6. Rest for at least 10 minutes before slicing. Resting is important for breads! In this step, the inside finishes cooking and dries out. If you’re impatient and cut bread straight out of the inside, the inside will smear like it’s uncooked dough – even if it’s not. Yep, been there, done that. Patience is not my virtue – and I get punished for it!

Now, it’s time to EAT!

No Knead Cheese Bread fresh out of the oven

Note: The artwork of the cheese ribboned throughout is different every time. It’s like a surprise-inside!

Face of No Knead Cheese Bread

Matters of serving and keeping cheese bread

This bread, when hot and fresh, needs nothing to accompany it to be enjoyed. The cheese is molten, the bread is soft, the crust is salty and crispy.

However, you and I both know that a slathering of butter would only elevate the eating experience!

It stays fresh enough to eat un-toasted for around 24 to 36 hours. After this, just give them a quick toast in your toaster then slather with butter. The cheese on the surface of each slice goes golden and crusty, and you also get molten bits. It’s so good, you will forever hope for more cheese bread leftovers. – Nagi x

Toasted No Knead Cheese Bread slathered with butter

Watch how to make it

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No Knead Cheese Bread ready to be eaten

Cheese bread (no knead!)

Author: Nagi
Prep: 5 minutes mins
Cook: 45 minutes mins
Dough rising: 2 hours hrs
Bread
Western
5 from 81 votes
Servings10 – 12
Tap or hover to scale
Print
Recipe video above.

Ingredients

  • 3 cups bread flour (Note 1 re: plain/all-purpose flour)
  • 2 tsp instant yeast aka rapid rise (Note 2)
  • 1 1/2 tsp cooking/kosher salt
  • 1 1/2 cups very warm tap water (Note 3)
  • 2 1/2 cups (tightly packed) Colby cheese , freshly shredded (or other cheese of choice – Note 4)
Prevent screen from sleeping

Instructions

SHORTHAND RECIPE – for experts

  • Mix dry ingredients, mix in water. Rise 2 – 3 hrs until doubled.
  • Preheat pot 240°C/450°F (220°C fan). Turn dough out. Reserve 1/3 cheese for topping. Fold inwards 4 times, stuffed/layered with remaining cheese. Flip onto parchment paper. Pile reserved cheese on top.
  • Bake 35 minutes covered, 10 minutes uncovered. Rest 10 minutes. Eat!

FULL RECIPE

    Magic no-knead dough:

    • Shaggy dough – Using a rubber spatula, mix flour, salt and yeast in a large bowl. Add water, then mix using the handle of the spatula until you can no longer see flour. The dough should be too sticky to knead by hand, but not pourable like cake batter (see video at X seconds).
    • Rise – Cover with cling wrap and leave to rise in a warm place for 2 to 3 hours until the dough doubles in volume (Note 5). The surface should be bubbly, and the mixture should jiggle when you shake the bowl.
    • Preheat pot – Half an hour before the dough is ready, put a 24-28cm / 4.5-8 quart heavy based pot with a lid in the oven to preheat to 240°C/450°F (220°C fan-forced). Note 7 for no dutch oven method.

    Shape loaf:

    • Pat into disc – Sprinkle work surface with 1 tbsp flour. Scrape dough out, sprinkle surface with flour, pat into a ~20cm/8" disc.
    • Cheese it – Set aside 1/3 of the cheese for topping. Cover surface with half the remaining cheese.
    • Fold inwards stuffed with cheese – Using a dough scraper or anything of similar shape (cake server, large knife, spatula), fold the sides inwards 4 times to roughly form a roundish shape, topping each layer of with the remaining cheese (but keep the final layer cheese free, it will be the base of the bread). (Note 6 for tips)
    • Paper transfer – Flip the dough onto a sheet of parchment/baking paper so the seamside is (mostly) facedown. Tidy the shape if desired. (Note 6)
    • Cheese crown – Pile the reserved cheese on.

    Bake

    • Hot pot transfer – Remove hot pot from the oven. Use paper to transfer dough into the pot, keeping it on the paper. Put lid on.
    • Bake 35 minutes. Remove lid. Bake 10 minutes to colour the surface.
    • Cool – Remove pot from oven. Use paper to transfer bread onto a cooling rack. Remove paper. Cool at least 10 minutes before slicing! (Note 8)

    Recipe Notes:

    Read in post for more details on each point below.
    1. Bread flour – more chewy result like your favourite (expensive!) artisan bakery bread. Plain/all-purpose flour works fine but not quite as chewy. 
    2. Instant yeast – Doesn’t need to be frothed in warm water, just mix straight into dry ingredients. Comes in canisters, labelled as “instant yeast”. Active dry yeast (ie normal yeast) – Dissolve yeast in 1/4 cup of the warm water first (no need to let it foam). then mix in remaining water. Immediately add flour and salt, then mix. Proceed with recipe as written.
    3. Water – Not boiling (kills yeast), not lukewarm (inhibits dough rising). Stick your finger in. Happy to bathe in it? Perfect temp! (If you want to be accurate, 35C/95F is a good target, but the acceptable range is fairly broad. This bread is forgiving!)
    4. Cheese – Freshly grated is best because it melts better (store bought shredded = anti-caking agents = inhibits melting) and the strands are finer so it doesn’t weigh the bread down. However, in the event of an emergency, pre-shredded will work just fine, your bread will be springy and soft and have the same wicked crust. It just won’t rise quite as well as pictured.
    Other cheeses – Any cheese (other than mozzarella) that melts well will work great here, like cheddar, tasty, Monterey Jack, gruyere. I like Colby for it’s melting qualities and it doesn’t weigh the bread down as it rises in the oven, and it’s not greasy (like Tasty cheese). Re: mozzarella – it will work fine but it doesn’t have enough flavour in it compared to other cheeses.
    5. Warm place = ~25°C/77°F+. Warmer = faster rise. Avoid direct sunlight. Neat trick – your dryer! Run it (empty) for a few minutes. Put bowl in, shut door. Nice and warm inside = perfect draught free dough rising location!
    6. Folding inwards – Dust the dough scraper with flour as needed. No need to worry about being meticulous here, we can reshape it later, this is more about deflating the dough and enclosing the cheese inside the dough.
    Shaping dough – The dough expands so much in the oven and the pot defines the shape so there’s not much point shaping it. You don’t even need to tidy it that much. Just roughly shape it into a uniform round or oval.
    7. No dutch oven method – use 20cm/8” square metal pan (NOT glass, may shatter). Place in oven on middle shelf where bread will bake (or shelf under if tray won’t fit on same shelf), preheat oven. Boil kettle. Place paper with shaped dough on a baking tray. When you put the bread in, work fast as follows – place bread in oven next to (or on the shelf above) the pan, fill pan with about 2cm/1″ boiling water, shut oven door = makeshift dutch oven steamer effect! Bake for 40 minutes until it’s a deep golden brown (if it gets too brown because of the cheese, cover loosely with foil).
    8. Resting bread for at least 10 minutes before cutting is essential as it will finish cooking and dry the crumb out. If you slice before then, the dough will look raw (it’s not, but it will seem like it is).
    9. Make-ahead – Overnight refrigeration of the Crusty Artisan Bread on which the Cheese Bread dough is based not only works 100% (re: rising) but the bread develops more flavour. As yet untested for cheese bread! Concerned the amount of cheese in this might affect the rising ability. Will update once tested.
    10. Storage – The bread is at its prime freshly made, still great for 24 – 36 hours. After this, toast and slather with butter. So good, you will forever hope for leftover cheese bread!
    Nutrition per slice, assuming 10 slices.
     

    Nutrition Information:

    Calories: 273cal (14%)Carbohydrates: 29g (10%)Protein: 13g (26%)Fat: 11g (17%)Saturated Fat: 7g (44%)Polyunsaturated Fat: 1gMonounsaturated Fat: 3gCholesterol: 31mg (10%)Sodium: 552mg (24%)Potassium: 102mg (3%)Fiber: 2g (8%)Sugar: 0.3gVitamin A: 329IU (7%)Vitamin C: 0.01mgCalcium: 234mg (23%)Iron: 1mg (6%)
    Keywords: Cheese Bread, easy yeast bread, no knead bread
    Did you make this recipe?I love hearing how you went with my recipes! Tag me on Instagram at @recipe_tin.

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    178 Comments

    1. Coco B says

      August 2, 2024 at 5:16 am

      Making cheese bread as we speak! Yummmmm

      Love Dozer’s bucket of toys. Our pile is larger and not nearly so neat. His favorite toy we call ‘BG’ for billy goat and looks very much like that gray furry thing on the top of Dozer’s pile!!

      Reply
    2. Sarah says

      July 29, 2024 at 7:34 pm

      5 stars
      So, funny story… When I made this, I prepared the ingredients and had some warm water in a bowl so I could measure out from. I was rushing and I forgot to measure the water, poured it all in. I have no idea how much there was, and the dough was pretty jiggly when I turned it out after proofing.
      I thought, it’s ok, trust the process… so I proceeded to fold in the cheese, put the wobbly blob into the oven and crossed my fingers.
      Half way through the bake I suddenly remembered what I had done. I though never mind, if it works it works..

      I took it out the oven and it was amazing! Fluffy, cheesy, crusty.
      I can’t believe it turned out so well even though I messed up! It really is a magic bread 😁

      Reply
    3. Chris says

      June 16, 2024 at 6:26 pm

      5 stars
      I’ve made this loaf so many times now… I like to add a tsp of Rapunzel vegetable stock powder and drop the salt back to a ½ tsp and I usually use about half and half edam and colby and it is pretty much fail safe! Had the neighbours over for soup & bread and their faces lit up when I put this loaf of the table 😁

      Can confirm, leftover slices with a generous dab of mustard and some sliced sandwich ham makes an EXCELLENT toastie!

      Reply
    4. Fiona Wheeldon says

      April 16, 2024 at 8:15 am

      Hi Nagi…have you tested making ahead for this bread yet?

      Reply
      • Cheryl says

        May 11, 2024 at 3:52 pm

        I too would love to know if this bread can be made ahead

        Reply
        • Linda says

          June 16, 2024 at 7:14 am

          5 stars
          In the past,I have used the make-ahead method with another recipe for no-knead cheese bread and it. Worked very well. I put the cheese in after it came out of fridge while I was waiting for it to come to room temp. I am trying it with this recipe too.

          Reply
    5. Tracy Haferbier-Ross says

      April 6, 2024 at 6:52 am

      5 stars
      holy moly. I’ve made your original bread maybe 50 times since finding it in 2020, but not in the past year. I went to the recipe, got the link to the cheesey version and tried it this morning. Shredded a brick of pepperjack cheese, and added some extra crushed red pepper flakes tossed in for a little more zip and ohmygoodness! I took that one to work to share, now to make another for my family ! Thanks for always inspiring with your achievable and fun recipes!

      Reply
    6. Pamela Purcell says

      April 5, 2024 at 7:20 am

      5 stars
      Just made this cheese bread. Added some garlic and WOW it is delicious. Great and easy recipe

      Reply
    7. Pat says

      April 4, 2024 at 9:12 am

      5 stars
      Parmesan people, parmesan! Just made this cheese version with freshly grated parm and it is amazing! Thanks so much for this recipe I’ve made and will make often!

      Reply
    8. Elizabeth says

      April 2, 2024 at 10:42 pm

      5 stars
      I made this at the weekend for family and three of them have got in touch to ask for the recipe! I’m amazed at how easy it was for how good it tasted. I even forgot about it in the oven while I was outside, not sure how much longer it was in for but it’s clearly a forgiving recipe!

      Reply
    9. Celeste Oyama says

      March 16, 2024 at 3:14 pm

      5 stars
      I made this recipe several times now and it’s always yummy even though it always comes out different each time. My question- your video shows you turning out the dough, adding the cheese, and then shaping the loaf and THEN heating dutch oven for 3o min. It seems that you are giving the dough a second proof for 30 minutes while dutch oven is heating. However, the written directions don’t mention a second proof. Maybe this is why my bread doesn’t come out as high and open even crumb as yours? Please clarify, thanks!

      Reply
    10. Rick Medina says

      March 14, 2024 at 12:24 pm

      5 stars
      Please revise my rating to five stars as i pushed the wrong tab.

      Reply
    11. Jody says

      March 13, 2024 at 3:02 pm

      Wonderful and great tasting but parchment paper completely stuck to bread have to trim it all off. Can this be made with non stick spray and no paper

      Reply
      • Kathryn says

        August 6, 2024 at 10:48 pm

        Jody, make sure you have plenty of flour on your parchment paper before rolling the dough onto it.

        Reply
    12. Sue Heddle says

      March 8, 2024 at 3:57 pm

      Added to the list for my birthday do alongside the corn ribs. I made one yesterday to try and will make 2 more on the day. Thank you again!

      Reply
    13. Caroline says

      February 23, 2024 at 10:31 pm

      5 stars
      absolutely amazing

      Reply
    14. Irene Mountford says

      February 17, 2024 at 12:55 am

      5 stars
      Made this bread for first time today, don’t have a Dutch oven but do have a stainless steel casserole with a tight fitting lid which was a success with sourdough and it was a success with this loaf, which was excellent and since stainless steel doesn’t have to be pre heated it saves in energy, thank you.

      Reply
    15. Erin says

      February 4, 2024 at 1:53 pm

      5 stars
      The bread turned out beautifully and tasted delicious. I am a beginner at making breads and this made me feel like an expert. The crust is crispy and the center is soft. I used active dry yeast. Let it sit in warm water before mixing. I also added garlic and thyme.

      Reply
    16. Beth C says

      January 28, 2024 at 4:01 pm

      5 stars
      This recipe is perfect! I reminds me of a giant version of the Panera Asiago cheese bagel. It’s so good. Thank you for this!

      Reply
    17. Elise says

      January 24, 2024 at 4:47 am

      I dont always leave comments but I HAD to do it this time! Past Saturday we have made the bread without the cheese and today we’ve made it with the cheese and both were so easy and DELICIOUS!!!!! Thank you for this simple yet so delicious recipe! Greetings from the Netherlands 🙂

      Reply
    18. Lisa says

      January 21, 2024 at 2:51 am

      I’ve made this bread several times, with and without the cheese. It’s always delicious, but my bottom crust always comes out rather tough even though I’m following all the directions. What am I doing wrong?

      Reply
      • Kimba says

        January 29, 2024 at 7:23 am

        Put a baking sheet on the rack below the dutch oven for the last 10 minutes of baking – I learned this from one of Nagis other recipes and it works everytime

        Reply
    19. Nina says

      January 20, 2024 at 10:34 am

      Made this tonight. It came out really great. I folded some caramelized onions along with the cheese and we really could not stop eating it. It will definitely become a regular with us.

      Reply
    20. Nena says

      January 12, 2024 at 5:20 am

      5 stars
      Beautiful!!
      But help – how do you get the parchment paper off?

      Reply
      • Patricia Carolan says

        January 16, 2024 at 3:40 am

        When I used a cheaper parchment sheet, it stuck to the loaf. On my next try I used (Reynolds) parchment from a roll. Its a little thicker and zero sticking!

        Reply
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