Our apartment in San Francisco was a few blocks away from
Liguria Bakery in the North Beach neighborhood.
This bakery exclusively makes focaccia, which is so delicious and
popular that they usually sell out by 10 am.
They use a variety of toppings, such as green onions, thick tomato
paste, garlic, and olives. Rosemary is
my favorite, but it also must be everyone else’s favorite since it’s usually
the first to sell out!
Now that we live over 5,000 miles from that fantastic bakery,
we miss their focaccia like crazy. I
made it my mission to figure out how to make a focaccia that we like as much as
Liguria’s. It took a few tries, but I
came up with something that I think is pretty close. In fact, we like it so much that I make it
almost weekly!
I can’t tell you how easy this is to make. Baking bread from scratch can seem
overwhelming and messy, but this recipe doesn’t even require kneading it by
hand as long as you have a stand mixer with a paddle attachment. Your hands will hardly even get dirty! And trust me, the heavenly smell of freshly
baked bread in your home will make it worth every single second. Oh yeah, it also tastes amazing.
You can get so creative with the toppings here, too! There are endless combinations. Caramelized onions, kalamata olives, goat cheese...gah! I'll be honest, I am so in infatuated with the rosemary version that I haven't branched out at all. But I swear, someday I will...
While your active time with this recipe is minimal, it does
take some time for the dough to go through its rising cycles. Just make sure you start the recipe 3-4 hours
before you want to eat the bread. And
here’s a tip: this bread is best the day it’s made. Make it earlier in the day rather than later so that you leave yourself plenty of time to eat as much of it as possible! If you
do have leftovers, the texture gets a little spongier. Just pop the bread in the oven for a few
minutes to crisp the top a little bit, rather than eating the bread at room
temperature.
I know that using yeast can be intimidating. But as long as you follow the recipe and use
water at the right temperature, you should be fine. Too much salt or sugar can kills yeast, so
don’t go off-recipe with those ratios.
And in order for yeast to bloom properly (at least the dry active yeast
called for in this recipe), your water should be between 105 and 115 degrees Fahrenheit
when you add the yeast itself. Yeast
dies at 120 degrees, so just be careful that your water isn’t too hot! Too cold and it won’t activate. You’ll know within ten minutes whether it’s
working or not. When you add the yeast
to the water, it should “bloom” or create a foamy-looking mass on the surface
of the water. And it will smell
“yeasty.” If this doesn’t happen, something went wrong and you just need to try
again. And if you are really that afraid of yeast, then try Carla's biscuit recipe!
Last note: Focaccia is traditionally baked in sheet
pans. The pan that I use is an odd shape
because I have a weird oven. Just make
sure the surface area is 130-180 square inches (surface area is length x width,
just in case you forgot!). Mine is 132
square inches and creates a really tall focaccia. A bigger surface area will yield flatter
bread.
Wondering what I mean by “weird oven?” Japanese kitchens don’t traditionally have
ovens. They have fish broilers and
stovetops, but no ovens. This was
unacceptable for someone who likes to cook as much as I do, so we bought a
counter-top oven. It looks like a
glorified toaster oven, but it’s actually a really fantastic convection oven
with a variety of settings. We named ours “Bree,” since it’s made by
Breville. Bree and I are in love. Don’t judge.
She toasts, roasts, bakes, reheats, and keeps food warm. She has settings for bagels, pizzas and cookies. She is a total rockstar, even if she’s a little on
the small side.
My kitchen |
My stovetop with 3 burners. The little window under the counter is the fish broiler! The space where the oven should be? Just a pull-out drawer. |
Bree + Alyssa = true love forever |
Rosemary Focaccia
Recipe
The dough is based on an ancient Bon Appetit Recipe fromLidia Colavita (of Colavita olive oil), but the technique is mine.
2 cups water, 105-115 degrees Fahrenheit
2 teaspoons dry active yeast
2 teaspoons salt
4-5 cups of flour (I use all-purpose and can’t honestly give
you advice for using any other type of flour)
Olive oil (probably ¾ cup or so? Depends on how generous you
want to be with the oil)
2-3 tablespoons chopped fresh rosemary
2-3 tablespoons flaky sea salt, such as Maldon
Use the paddle on your stand mixer.
Add water to bowl of stand mixer, making sure it’s the right
temperature even after you add it to the bowl (if the bowl is cool then it can
lower the temperature enough that your yeast might not bloom). Run the mixer for a few seconds to dissolve
the yeast into the water. Let sit for 10
minutes. Make sure your yeast has
bloomed, otherwise start again!
Add salt and flour to the yeast/water mixture with the mixer
on medium speed. Start with 4 cups of
flour and add 2 tablespoons at a time until the dough begins to pull away from
the bowl, becoming elastic.
Coat a large bowl with olive oil. Use a spatula to move the dough from the
mixing bowl to the olive-oil coated bowl.
Turn the dough in the bowl to cover with oil. Cover with a towel and let rise in a warm,
dry spot until dough doubles in size.
This should take 60-90 minutes.
Coat your baking pan with oil. Transfer the dough to the
baking pan. Punch down the dough,
spreading it out to roughly fill the pan.
Let rise in a warm, dry place until the dough doubles in size. This should take 45-75 minutes.
Punch down the dough one more time. Let rise 30 minutes in a warm, dry
place.
Preheat oven to 450 degrees.
Use your fingers to make indentations in the dough (this
will make crevices to catch the yummy olive oil, rosemary and salt!). Drizzle with 3 tablespoons of oil and sprinkle
chopped rosemary evenly over the surface.
Bake for 20-25 minutes, until the surface is golden-brown.
Brush the remaining oil over the top of the bread with a
pastry brush. Sprinkle the flaky sea
salt over the surface. Cut and serve
warm. Try not to eat the entire pan!
Wow, just cut into mine. You are right, very hard not to eat the whole tray.
ReplyDeleteSo glad you liked the recipe! Thanks for trying it :)
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ReplyDeleteI made this! Turned out amazing and was such a big hit with the fam :)Great work on developing the recipe.
ReplyDeleteI made this for the fam and they loved it! You did a fantastic job developing the recipe :)
ReplyDeleteThanks, Cort! I'm so glad you enjoyed it :)
Delete