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Baking Great Bread at Home - Golden wheat logo representing artisan bread bakingBaking Great Bread at Home

High-hydration bread with a crackly crust and open, irregular crumb

Intermediate

Rustic ItalianCiabatta

by Henry Hunter Jr.

No shaping, no scoring, all flavor

Fermentation

12-16 hours (poolish) + 3 hours (bulk)

Bake Time

22-25 minutes

Yield

Makes 2 slipper-shaped loaves, about 450g each

Rustic Italian Ciabatta - finished bread
Henry Hunter Jr., professional baker and recipe author

Perfection is not required

"Ciabatta taught me that the less you do to good dough, the more it rewards you."
Henry Hunter Jr.

By Henry Hunter Jr., founder of Crust & Crumb Academy and Baking Great Bread at Home.

Authentic Flavor

Henry is the founder of Crust & Crumb Academy and the author of six books on bread baking, including Vitale Sourdough Mastery and From Oven to Market.

Equipment Needed

Ingredients

Scale Recipe:

Poolish (made the night before)

A wet preferment that builds flavor and extensibility. Mix this 12-16 hours before the final dough.

bread flour150g
water (room temperature)150g
instant yeast0.5g

Final Dough

Combined with the ripe poolish the next morning.

bread flour350g
water (lukewarm, about 85F/29C)250g
fine sea salt10g
instant yeast3g
extra virgin olive oil15g

Pro Tip

Use a high-protein bread flour (12%+) for best results. Keep your salt off the yeast at the start so fermentation doesn't stall.

Day 1 - Evening

Make the Poolish

5 minutes of work, then it does its thing overnight

The is a wet that gives ciabatta its signature flavor and the open crumb we're chasing. It ferments overnight while you sleep.

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1

Mix the Poolish

In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, water, and the tiny pinch of until you have a thick, pancake-batter consistency. No dry flour should remain.

2

Cover and Rest

Cover the bowl with plastic wrap or a tight-fitting lid and leave at room temperature (68-72F / 20-22C) for 12-16 hours. It's ready when the surface is covered in bubbles and it's started to pull away from the sides of the bowl.

⏱ Wait Time

Ferment 12-16 hours at room temperature

Pro Tip

The colder your kitchen, the longer it takes. If your kitchen runs warm (75F+), check at 10 hours. The poolish is ripe when the surface is domed and bubbly, not when it's collapsing.

Flavor development

The long, slow fermentation lets enzymes break down starches into sugars and develops the organic acids that give bread its depth. A short-fermented dough can never catch up.

Extensibility

The poolish pre-hydrates a portion of your flour and pre-develops gluten in a relaxed state. When you mix the final dough, it's already more stretchy and pliable. That's what ciabatta needs to build big holes.

The Takeaway

The poolish does most of the flavor work while you sleep. The final dough is just assembly.

Precise Timers

Use these interactive timers to track your stages.

Poolish Ferment

14:00:00

Day 2 - Morning

Mix the Final Dough

Wet, sticky, and nothing to panic about

This dough is supposed to be wet. Don't fight it. We're building gluten through time and folds, not kneading.

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1

Combine Poolish and Water

In a large bowl, add the ripe and the lukewarm water. Whisk or stir to break up the poolish into the water. It'll look like a cloudy, bubbly soup.

2

Add Flour and Yeast

Add the bread flour and instant yeast. Hold back the salt and olive oil for now. Mix with a dough whisk, wooden spoon, or wet hand until no dry flour remains. It'll be shaggy and sticky.

3

Rest (Fermentolyse)

Cover the bowl and let it rest 20-30 minutes. This is a . The flour fully hydrates and the gluten starts organizing itself before we add salt.

4

Add Salt and Olive Oil

Sprinkle the salt over the dough and drizzle the olive oil on top. With a wet hand, pinch and fold the salt and oil into the dough until fully incorporated. It'll feel slack and weird. That's normal.

⏱ Wait Time

Fermentolyse rest: 20-30 minutes

Pro Tip

Your dough temperature matters more than you think. Aim for a final dough temp of 76-78F (24-26C). Cooler water in summer, warmer in winter.

Precise Timers

Use these interactive timers to track your stages.

Fermentolyse Rest

25:00

Day 2 - Morning

Bulk Fermentation with Coil Folds

Four gentle folds, 30 minutes apart

We're building strength without deflating the dough. The is perfect for high-hydration doughs like this.

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1

First Coil Fold

With wet hands, reach under the middle of the dough, lift it up gently, and let it fold under itself. Rotate the bowl 90 degrees and repeat. Do this 4 times total so you've worked all four sides. Cover and rest 30 minutes.

2

Second Coil Fold

Same technique. The dough will feel stronger already. Cover and rest 30 minutes.

3

Third Coil Fold

By now the dough should be holding its shape and have visible air bubbles. Cover and rest 30 minutes.

4

Fourth Coil Fold

Final fold. The dough should feel alive, airy, and smooth. After this fold, let it finish bulk for another 60-90 minutes, covered.

⏱ Wait Time

Total bulk fermentation: 3 hours (with 4 coil folds in the first 2 hours)

Pro Tip

The dough is ready when it's jiggly, airy, and has increased in volume by 50-70%. Don't wait for it to double. Overproofed ciabatta dough is a sad, flat slipper.

The difference

A pulls the dough up and over itself, which is great for medium-hydration doughs. A coil fold lifts from the center and lets the dough fold on itself, which is gentler and preserves the gas already developing inside.

Why it matters for ciabatta

Ciabatta's open crumb comes from trapping big bubbles during fermentation, then preserving them through every stage. Aggressive handling pops those bubbles. Coil folds keep them intact.

The Takeaway

Gentle hands, open crumb. Rough hands, tight crumb.

Precise Timers

Use these interactive timers to track your stages.

Between Folds

30:00

Final Bulk Rest

1:15:00

Day 2 - Midday

Divide and Cut (Not Shape)

This is the ciabatta secret

Ciabatta doesn't get shaped. It gets poured, dusted, and cut. The word ciabatta literally means slipper, and that's exactly what we're after.

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1

Prepare Your Surface

Generously flour a clean work surface with bread flour (or a 50/50 mix of bread flour and semolina for extra texture on the bottom crust). Be more generous than you think.

2

Pour the Dough

Gently scrape the dough out onto the floured surface. Don't deflate it. It should flop out as a rough rectangle. Dust the top with more flour.

3

Stretch Gently

With floured hands, gently stretch the dough into a rough rectangle about 10x8 inches. Don't press hard. You want to keep all those bubbles alive.

4

Cut Into Two Loaves

With a bench scraper or sharp knife, cut the rectangle down the middle to make two long slipper-shaped loaves. That's it. No shaping, no tucking, no sealing. The rough edges are a feature.

5

Transfer to Parchment

Carefully lift each loaf onto a piece of parchment paper. Some bakers flip them seam-side up so the original bottom shows the floured, more rustic surface. Your call.

Pro Tip

The messier it looks on the counter, the better your ciabatta will be. Smooth, uniform ciabatta is the sign of a dough that was over-handled.

Day 2 - Midday

Final Proof

Short, warm, and watched

Unlike lean breads that get a long cold retard, ciabatta wants a short, warm final proof.

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1

Cover and Rest

Cover the loaves loosely with a floured cloth or plastic wrap. Let them proof at room temperature for 30-45 minutes. They should look puffy and relaxed but not flat.

2

Preheat the Oven

While the loaves proof, preheat your oven to 475F (245C) with a baking stone or steel on the middle rack and a cast iron pan on the bottom rack for steam. Preheat for at least 45 minutes.

⏱ Wait Time

Final proof + oven preheat: 30-45 minutes

Pro Tip

The works here too. Poke gently. If the dough springs back slowly but doesn't fill in completely, you're ready to bake.

Precise Timers

Use these interactive timers to track your stages.

Final Proof

40:00

Oven Preheat

45:00

Shaping

The No-Shape Method

Ciabatta is famous for having essentially no shaping step. This is what makes it approachable for beginners and still rewarding for advanced bakers.

Traditional Slipper

The classic. Long, narrow, and rustic.

Recommended
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1

Pour, don't dump

Gently scrape dough onto a well-floured surface.

2

Flour the top

Dust generously so your hands don't stick.

3

Stretch lightly

Hands flat, stretch into a rough rectangle.

4

Cut

One clean cut down the middle with a bench scraper.

Ciabatta Rolls

Same dough, cut into 6-8 smaller pieces. Perfect for panini or sliders.

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1

Divide

Cut the rectangle into 6-8 equal pieces with a bench scraper.

2

Space them out

Arrange on parchment with space to spread.

3

Proof and bake

Reduce bake time to 15-18 minutes total.

Proof Test: Poke test works the same way. Springs back slowly but not completely means it's ready.

The Final Step

Bake

High heat, big steam, fast bake. Ciabatta bakes faster than most artisan loaves because of the thin, flat shape.

Bake Time: 22-25 minutesOven: 475°F / 245°CInternal Temp: 205°F / 96°C

Baking Methods

The classic method. A preheated stone or steel plus a steam pan gives you the best crust and spring.

Equipment: Baking stone or steel, cast iron pan for steam, pizza peel

1

Prep the Steam

Have 1 cup of hot water ready in a measuring cup.

2

Load the Loaves

Slide the parchment with both loaves onto the preheated stone using a pizza peel or the back of a sheet pan. Immediately pour the hot water into the cast iron pan below and close the oven door fast.

3

Bake with Steam

Bake at 475F (245C) for 12 minutes with steam.

4

Vent and Finish

Carefully remove the steam pan (or just crack the oven door for 10 seconds). Bake another 10-13 minutes until deep golden brown and the internal temp hits 205F (96C).

5

Cool

Transfer to a cooling rack. Let rest at least 30 minutes before slicing. Ciabatta cuts best when fully cool.

"Don't skip the steam. Dry oven heat gives you a pale, tough crust. Steam gives you that signature ciabatta crackle."

Nutrition Facts

Per 1 slice (50g)18 servings per recipe

Calories125
Carbohydrates24g
Protein4g
Fat1.5g
Fiber1g
Sodium260mg

* Values are estimates based on standard ingredients

Storage

Room Temperature

Best eaten the day it's baked. Will keep 1-2 days in a paper bag. The crust will soften as it cools, which is normal.

Refrigerated

Not recommended. Refrigeration accelerates staling.

Frozen

Up to 2 months. Wrap tightly in plastic, then foil. Slice before freezing for easy toasting.

Refresh

Toast slices directly from frozen, or warm a whole loaf at 350°F (175°C) for 10-12 minutes.

💡 To refresh, spritz with water and reheat at 375F (190C) for 5-7 minutes. The crust will crackle back to life.

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Troubleshooting

Baker's Notes

Common questions and solutions for perfect results

If you're serious about scoring, you need the right blade in your hand. Wire Monkey makes handcrafted bread lames from black walnut — built to last, balanced in the hand, and sharp enough to glide through cold dough cleanly every single time. No dragging, no hesitation marks. Just a clean cut.

Wire Monkey handcrafted wood scoring lames — handmade in Connecticut from real wood

Wire Monkey Handcrafted Bread Lames

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Baking Great Bread at Home

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Henry Hunter Jr.

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