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Recipe · Ciabatta · Overnight

65% Hydration Overnight Ciabatta

The Italian answer to the baguette: rougher, wetter, more dramatic. A long fermentation in the biga gives flavor, the high hydration produces the open crumb, and the rustic shape comes from the dough itself, not the baker.

Total time

14 hours

Active

75 minutes

Hydration

65%

Difficulty

⌬⌬⌬

A 65% dough is what a new baker should start on. The flour-to-water ratio is generous to flour, so the dough behaves predictably, takes shape readily, and bakes into a structured loaf without surprises.

Overnight fermentation is where flavor lives. The dough goes in the refrigerator after a brief room-temperature ferment, the cold slows the yeast and lets enzymes do their work, and the loaf you bake the next day tastes like it cost more than it did.

Ingredients

900g total dough. Yields 2 ciabattas, ~400g each baked.

Ingredient Grams Baker's %
Bread flour 522 g 100%
Water 339 g 65%
Salt 10.4 g 2%
Instant yeast 1.6 g 0.3%
Olive oil 26 g 5%

Schedule

  1. Day 1, 6:00 PM
    Mix flour and water. Autolyse 30 minutes.
  2. Day 1, 6:30 PM
    Add yeast and salt. Mix until smooth.
  3. Day 1, 7:00 PM
    Stretch and fold every 30 minutes for 2 hours.
  4. Day 1, 9:00 PM
    Bulk ferment 1-2 more hours at room temperature.
  5. Day 1, 10:30 PM
    Divide the dough into 2 equal portions. Pre-shape each, rest 20 minutes, then shape gently into rectangles on a heavily floured surface. Cover and refrigerate overnight.
  6. Day 2, 7:00 AM
    Pull from the refrigerator. Preheat the oven and a baking stone to bake temperature. Place a steam tray on the lower rack.
  7. Day 2, 8:00 AM
    Skip scoring (ciabatta bakes without cuts). Slide onto the preheated stone. Bake at 475°F with steam (a tray of boiling water on the lower rack) for 22 minutes until deep golden.

Method tips for this style

Don't try to shape ciabatta with your hands. Turn the bulk-fermented dough onto a heavily floured counter, divide with a bench scraper, and lift each portion gently onto the peel. The shape is whatever the dough wants to be.

What to expect

A denser version of the style than purists would shape. The dough handles easily and bakes into a structured loaf, but you give up some of the open-crumb drama the higher hydrations bring.

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