Easy Jalapeño Cheddar Bread

4.52 from 184 votes
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The first time I pulled this Jalapeño Cheddar Bread out of the Dutch oven, I genuinely couldn’t believe I had made it. The crust had the most perfect crackly sound when I tapped it. The inside was airy and chewy. The cheese melted into the crumb and crisped up on top. It looked exactly like something from a really good bakery!

And I had done zero kneading. The whole hands-on time was maybe 15 minutes.

This no knead jalapeño cheddar bread is one of the most rewarding bakes on this entire site – not because it’s difficult, but because the result is so dramatically better than the effort involved. You mix the dough, let it rise twice, fold in jalapeños and sharp cheddar, and bake it in a preheated Dutch oven at 450°F. The Dutch oven does the work of a professional steam-injected oven, giving you a crackling crust and a springy, airy interior that takes actual skill to produce any other way.

If you’ve never made bread before, start here. If you’ve been intimidated by bread, this is the one that will change that.

Don’t want all the extras in a recipe post? We provide a skip to recipe button in the top left corner, as well as a clickable table of contents, just below, to help make this page easier to navigate.

At Sweet C’s, I add lots of tips in all of my recipes – because I am a home cook without any formal training, and I find I am more confident making dishes when I understand why it works, and what each ingredient means to the flavor of a recipe. My goal is for even the most beginner home cook to feel empowered in the kitchen.

Why You’ll Love This Recipe

  • No kneading, no stand mixer, no bread machine — just a bowl, a spoon, and time
  • Beginner-friendly technique with professional results — the Dutch oven does everything you’d normally need a $500 deck oven to do
  • Sharp cheddar and jalapeño in every bite — cheese baked into the crumb, crispy cheese on the crust, jalapeño heat that builds as you chew
  • Make-ahead friendly — mix the dough the night before, refrigerate, and bake the next day; the longer rise actually deepens the flavor
  • 4.5 stars from 184 home bakers — the most-reviewed bread on this site, and the comments say it all

Quick Recipe Snapshot

Prep: 15 minutes active | Rise: 3–4 hours total | Bake: 55–60 minutes Total: About 4.5 hours (mostly hands-off) Servings: 12 slices Calories: ~236 per slice Best for: Soup nights, charcuterie boards, dinner parties, gifting, weekend baking

No Knead Jalapeño Cheddar Bread Ingredients

For the Bread:

  • 600g (about 4 cups) all-purpose flour, lightly packed and leveled
  • 2 cups lukewarm water
  • 1½ teaspoons salt
  • 1 packet (7g / 2¼ tsp) active dry yeast
  • 2 tablespoons pickled jalapeño rings, drained and completely patted dry
  • 2 cups sharp cheddar cheese, shredded
  • Extra flour for shaping
  • Parchment paper (strongly recommended)

How to Make No Knead Jalapeño Cheddar Bread

picture of yeast proofing in water in measuring cup

Proof Yeast

Add the lukewarm water to a small bowl and stir in the yeast. The water should feel warm but not hot on your wrist – around 100–110°F. Too cold and the yeast won’t activate; too hot and it dies. Let sit for 5 minutes until you see a light foam form on top. If nothing happens after 5 minutes, your water was the wrong temperature or your yeast is old – start over.

picture of water poured into the middle of well in flour in mixing bowl

Mix Dough

In a large bowl, whisk together the flour and salt. Make a well in the center and pour in the proofed yeast water. Mix with a spoon or Danish dough whisk until a shaggy dough forms and pulls away from the sides of the bowl. The dough will be rough and sticky – that’s correct. It should be tacky but not so wet it sticks to your palm. Add flour or water 1 tablespoon at a time to adjust.

picture of risen dough in a bowl

First Rise

Cover the bowl with plastic wrap or a damp towel and let rise at room temperature until doubled, about 1.5–2 hours. A warm kitchen speeds this up; a cold kitchen slows it down. The dough is ready when you poke it with your finger and it slowly springs back – if it springs back immediately, it needs more time; if it deflates completely, it’s slightly over-proofed (still fine, just proceed).

Step 4: Fold in the Jalapeños

Uncover the dough. Pat your jalapeño rings completely dry — this is the single most important step. Wet jalapeños turn the dough watery and prevent a proper rise. Press the rings firmly between paper towels. Gently fold them into the dough until distributed. Return to the bowl, cover, and let rise another 1.5–2 hours until doubled again.

Step 5: Preheat and Shape

Place your Dutch oven (with lid) into the cold oven and preheat to 450°F. Allow at least 30 minutes for the Dutch oven to fully heat — you want it absolutely screaming hot. Meanwhile, flour a sheet of parchment paper generously, turn the dough out onto it, and shape it into a rough ball with floured hands. Fold in the shredded cheddar as you shape, pressing it into the dough. Dust the top with flour, cover loosely with plastic wrap, and rest 30 minutes.

A Jalapeno Cheddar bread loaf resting on a wooden table.

Bake & Cool

Content goes here

Dutch Oven Tips for Perfect Jalapeño Cheddar Bread

Why the Dutch oven is the key. When you place dough into a screaming hot, covered Dutch oven, the moisture in the dough creates steam. That trapped steam keeps the crust pliable for the first 20–30 minutes, allowing the bread to expand fully before the crust sets. This is called “oven spring” and it’s what produces an airy, open crumb rather than a dense, compact loaf. Removing the lid in the last 10–15 minutes lets the steam escape and the crust brown and crackle.

Preheat it properly. At minimum 30 minutes at 450°F, ideally 45 minutes. A Dutch oven that isn’t fully preheated won’t produce enough of a steam burst for proper oven spring.

Ceramic vs. cast iron both work. Either a traditional cast iron Dutch oven or a ceramic-coated one (like a Le Creuset or Staub) produces excellent results. The only difference is that bare cast iron may brown the bottom more aggressively — keep an eye on it in the last few minutes.

The parchment paper sling. Cut a strip of parchment larger than the Dutch oven opening. Place the dough ball in the center. When ready to bake, lift by the parchment ends and lower the whole thing into the pot. No burnt fingers, no sticking, easy removal.

No Dutch oven? Here’s what to do. The next best option: a heavy oven-safe pot with a lid. If you have neither, bake on a preheated baking stone or heavy sheet pan at 425°F and place a metal pan of hot water on the rack below to generate steam. Bake 45–55 minutes. The crust won’t be quite as crackling but the bread will still be excellent.

Recipe Variations

Extra Spicy Jalapeño Cheddar Bread – Double the jalapeño rings to ¼ cup and add ¼ teaspoon of cayenne pepper to the flour mixture. Top the loaf with fresh sliced jalapeños (not pickled) before the uncovered bake – fresh jalapeños char slightly and add a smokier, more intense heat than pickled.

Jalapeño Pepper Jack Bread – Swap the sharp cheddar for pepper jack cheese. The pepper jack melts more readily and adds its own jalapeño flavor, making the bread spicier throughout. Add a pinch of smoked paprika to the dough for a Southwestern spin.

Bacon Jalapeño Cheddar Bread – Fold in ½ cup of cooked, crumbled bacon along with the jalapeños and cheese in step 4. The bacon fat that renders into the bread adds richness and a subtle smokiness. Pat the bacon dry just like the jalapeños to avoid excess liquid.

Roasted Garlic Jalapeño Cheddar Bread – Add 6–8 cloves of roasted garlic (smashed into a paste) to the dough when you fold in the jalapeños. Roasted garlic is sweet and mellow — it deepens the savoriness of the cheese without the sharpness of raw garlic. One of the best combinations in this bread.

Honey Jalapeño Cheddar Bread – Add 1 tablespoon of honey to the dough water before mixing. Honey adds a faint sweetness that balances the heat of the jalapeño – a sweet-heat combination that makes this bread addictive. Drizzle another teaspoon of honey over the top in the last 5 minutes of baking for a glossy, caramelized crust.

No Knead Jalapeño Cheddar Rolls – Instead of shaping into one large round, divide the dough into 8 equal balls after the second rise. Arrange in a greased 9×13 baking dish (they’ll be pull-apart rolls) or on a parchment-lined sheet pan with space between them. Bake at 400°F for 25–30 minutes until golden. Skip the Dutch oven entirely.

Make-Ahead & Storage

Night-before method (best for flavor): After the first rise, cover the dough tightly with plastic wrap and refrigerate overnight (up to 18 hours). The slow cold fermentation develops a deeper, more complex flavor – similar to bakery sourdough. When ready to bake, pull the dough out and let it come to room temperature for 30–60 minutes, fold in the jalapeños and cheese, then proceed with the second rise and bake.

Freeze the dough: After the first rise and before folding in jalapeños, wrap tightly in plastic wrap and freeze for up to 3 months. To use: thaw overnight in the refrigerator, bring to room temperature, fold in jalapeños and cheese, and allow a longer second rise (2–3 hours, since the dough will be cold and slow to rise again).

Freeze the baked loaf: Cool completely, then wrap tightly in plastic wrap followed by foil. Freeze for up to 3 months. Thaw at room temperature for 2–3 hours, then warm in a 350°F oven for 10 minutes to revive the crust.

Room temperature storage: Store in a bread bag or wrapped in a clean towel at room temperature for up to 2 days. Avoid plastic bags – they trap moisture and make the crust soft. After 2 days, the bread is best toasted.

Refrigerator: Wrap tightly and refrigerate for up to 5 days. Toast slices directly from cold for the best result.

What to Serve with Jalapeño Cheddar Bread

This bread was made to be torn apart at the table, and it pairs with almost everything:

  • Easy Bread Dip – a restaurant-style herb and olive oil dip that pairs perfectly with the spice of the jalapeño; dip a chunk of warm bread and you’ll finish the loaf before dinner starts
  • Taco Soup – the obvious bowl-soaking candidate; the cheesy, spicy bread was practically designed to be dunked into a bowl of taco soup
  • BBQ Baked Beans with Ground Beef and Bacon – serve thick slices alongside the beans as the bread course; the smokiness of the chipotle in the beans and the jalapeño in the bread are natural complements
  • Beer Can Chicken – slice the bread, shred the chicken into it, and call it the best sandwich you made this year
  • Bacon Wrapped Jalapeño Poppers – double the jalapeño for a party spread; bread on one side, poppers on the other, everyone wins
  • Green Chile Guacamole – tear bread into chunks for scooping; it holds up better than chips with a heavy guacamole
  • Easy Bacon Butter Spread – spread on warm slices and let the bacon butter melt into the crumb; a completely unreasonable combination in the best possible way

Recipe FAQs

Do I need a Dutch oven for this recipe?

The Dutch oven produces the best results – the trapped steam creates the crackling crust and airy crumb. That said, you can use any heavy oven-safe pot with a lid, or bake on a baking stone at 425°F with a metal pan of boiling water on the rack below for steam. Bake 45–55 minutes. It won’t be quite as dramatic on the crust, but the bread will still be delicious.

Why does this recipe have no sugar?

Sugar is often added to bread to help activate the yeast faster, but it’s not required. Flour contains enough natural sugars to feed the yeast during a proper proof. Leaving sugar out gives this bread a cleaner, more neutral flavor that lets the jalapeño and cheddar come forward instead of competing with sweetness.

Why is patting the jalapeños dry so important?

Pickled jalapeños are packed in brine – if you fold that liquid into the dough, it dilutes the gluten structure, makes the dough sticky and hard to shape, and creates wet pockets in the finished loaf. Pat them firmly with paper towels until no moisture transfers. This step takes 30 seconds and makes a real difference.

Can I use fresh jalapeños instead of pickled?

Yes – finely dice 2–3 fresh jalapeños and fold them in the same way. Fresh jalapeños are sharper and brighter in flavor than pickled; pickled jalapeños are tangier and milder. You can also use a combination. If using fresh, you don’t need to pat dry.

Can I make this gluten-free?

Yes – King Arthur Measure for Measure 1:1 gluten-free flour works best (several readers have confirmed this in the comments). The loaf will be slightly denser and the crust won’t crackle quite as dramatically, but the flavor is excellent. Don’t substitute almond flour or coconut flour – they don’t have the structure to hold bread together.

How do I know when the bread is done?

The top should be deeply golden brown. More reliably: insert an instant-read thermometer into the center – it should read 200–210°F. If the crust is browning too fast before the interior is done, tent loosely with foil for the last 10 minutes.

Why didn’t my dough rise?

Most likely cause: water that was too hot (killed the yeast) or too cold (didn’t activate it). The target is 100–110°F – warm but comfortable on your wrist. The second most common cause: old yeast. If your yeast didn’t foam within 5 minutes of sitting in warm water, replace the packet before proceeding.

Can I add more jalapeño?

Yes – increase to ¼ cup of rings for a noticeably spicier loaf, or add 2–3 fresh sliced jalapeños on top before the uncovered bake for heat and visual appeal. More than ¼ cup in the dough can make it too wet; compensate by patting even more aggressively dry and adding an extra tablespoon of flour.

More Bread Recipes to Bake Next

Easy No Knead Herb Bread – the original recipe this jalapeño cheddar version is built from; rosemary, thyme, and garlic in the same Dutch oven method

Buttery Soft Dinner Rolls – when you want enriched, pull-apart rolls instead of rustic artisan loaves

Skillet Irish Potato Bread – made in a cast iron pan, no yeast, ready in 30 minutes; a completely different approach to bread that’s just as satisfying

Scottish Morning Rolls – soft, flour-dusted rolls with a slightly crisp bottom; perfect for breakfast sandwiches alongside this bread’s soup-adjacent applications

Easy Homemade Pizza – the same basic dough technique applied to pizza; if you can make this jalapeño cheddar bread, you can make your own pizza doughnd some of our favorites below:

Try these bread recipes next:

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4.52 from 184 votes

Easy Jalapeno Cheddar Bread

By: Courtney O’Dell
Servings: 12
Prep: 15 minutes
Cook: 2 hours 30 minutes
Total: 2 hours 45 minutes
baked bread round with peppers and cheese cut in half on a table
Easy Jalapeno Cheddar Bread is a simple recipe for artisan style bread at home with no kneading or fancy equipment.

Ingredients 

  • 600 grams AP flour, about 4 cups, lightly packed and leveled off
  • 2 cups water, 473.18mL lukewarm water
  • teaspoons salt
  • 1 yeast, 7g, 2 1/4 teaspoons
  • 2 tbsp jalapeno rings, drained of excess liquid and patted dry
  • 2 cups cheddar cheese, sharp , shredded

Instructions 

  • In a small bowl, add water and stir yeast packet in (make sure water is warm, but not too hot – if it is too cold or too hot it will not bloom properly).
  • Let yeast bloom for about 5 minutes – it will have a light foam on it.
  • In a large bowl, mix dry ingredients with a spoon.
  • Make a small well in the middle of the dry ingredients, and when yeast is proofed, slowly pour into dry ingredients.
  • Mix by hand (either with your hands, or a spoon).
  • The dough will turn begin to come together and pull away from the bowl.
  • If the dough is too sticky, add more flour in small increments, about 1 tablespoon at a time. If the dough is too dry, add more water, 1 tablespoon at a time.
  • Once the dough has come together, cover it and let it rise until it doubles in size (about 1.5 to 2 hours).
  • Uncover the dough and give it a few pokes with your finger.
  • If the dough has risen correctly, it should indent under the pressure of your fingers and slowly deflate.
  • Gently scoop up the dough and make sure to remove it from the sides of the bowl (you want it to fully rise again, if it is still stuck to the sides of the bowl in parts, it won’t.)
  • Fold in jalapenos (make sure you pat them dry, excess liquid will make the dough watery and messy- it should stay nonstick. If it becomes too watery, add more flour by the teaspoon until bread is not sticky to the touch.)
  • Place back in bowl, cover, and allow the dough to continue to rise for another 1.5-2 hours.
  • Preheat oven to 450 degrees (230 degrees C, gas mark 8) and add dutch oven to it, (you want it to be incredibly hot).
  • Punch down dough.
  • Generously flour a sheet of parchment paper; transfer dough to parchment and, with floured hands, shape into a ball.
  • Place dough on parchment paper and sprinkle top lightly with flour.
  • Quickly fold in cheese, making sure to incorporate through the dough.
  • Top with a sheet of plastic wrap and let rest 30 minutes.
  • Remove Dutch oven from oven.
  • Uncover dough and carefully transfer to Dutch oven, with or without parchment paper beneath (if bottom of Dutch oven is not coated with enamel, keep parchment paper beneath dough- I always use parchment paper because it is just the easiest and I never have to worry about anything sticking).
  • Cover Dutch oven with lid and return to oven.
  • Bake bread 45 minutes covered, then another 10 to 15 minutes uncovered until dough is baked through and golden brown on top.
  • Cool slightly before slicing.

Video

Nutrition

Serving: 1gCalories: 236kcalCarbohydrates: 33gProtein: 9gFat: 7gSaturated Fat: 4gPolyunsaturated Fat: 2gCholesterol: 20mgSodium: 931mgFiber: 1g

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Additional Info

Course: Breads
Cuisine: American
Tried this recipe?Mention @sweetcsdesigns or tag #sweetcsdesigns!
bread sliced in half with jalapeños and cheddar baked inside

About Courtney

Recipe by Courtney O’Dell, creator of Sweet Cs Designs — sharing well-tested comfort food recipes and practical cooking guides.

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4.52 from 184 votes (180 ratings without comment)

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40 Comments

  1. La Verne Gene Jackson says:

    Hello, Courtney, I don’t have Dutch oven yet, but I do have a deep Pyrex baking dish, and I was wondering if I could use that until my Cast-Iron Dutch oven arrives!!! Could you please advise? I would greatly appreciate it!!! Thank you so much, and be blessed!!!????

    1. Courtney ODell says:

      La Verne, it should be ok. I find the bread gets a better crispier outside from the dutch oven, thanks to how it conducts heat – but the pyrex will still work! Just know it might not be quite as crispy an outside as you’ll get from the dutch oven, but the flavor will still be there!

  2. Jacqueline says:

    Can I divide the dough after 1st rise to make 2 small loaves? I’m making it now for the 2nd time and it’s SO good! I want to make small loaves for gifts. Thanks!

  3. Susan says:

    Can I make the dough and put in bowl and put towel or something over it and let it rise for 12-18 hours? I have been making really great bread in that manner for several months. Then mix in the cheese and jalapeños and let it rise again? I am excited to try this bread it looks fantastic! Thanks for posting it!

  4. Cory Neidig says:

    Recipe looks great, however, the 3 hour total time was what we were planning for and at minimum, the instructions leave the total time at 4 hours and 20 minutes (unless I’m reading it wrong). We didn’t noticed that until we had already mixed the ingredients and started the process. Not a big problem and again it looks like it will be great, but I just wanted to point that out.

  5. Danelle says:

    I don’t have a Dutch oven. What do you suggest as an alternative way to bake? I have a pizza stone and have baked round loaves on it. Would this work?

    1. Courtney ODell says:

      The best results will come from a dutch oven, but a pizza stone will work. The base will be a little crunchier than the top, but that is fine, it will still be good!

  6. Allison says:

    What kind of flour did you use? I currently don’t have bread flour and wonder if I can substitute all purpose flour instead…

    1. Courtney ODell says:

      All purpose – updating the recipe since it isn’t clear above.