Focaccia — Zacchary Bird

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Zacchary Bird
Zacchary Bird

THE ULTIMATE NO-KNEAD FOCACCIA

Vegan Focaccia by Zacchary Bird

This recipe literally makes headlines and is one of my most popular ever,

probably due to it sitting right at the intersection of no-knead and garlic-doused breads. What sets this recipe apart is the attention to flavour. Fresh confit garlic is studded into the dough, then the infused oil is whisked with kalamata olive brine and poured over the top to add flavour, salt and moistness as the bread bakes.

Oh, and that dough has mashed potato stirred in to increase moisture, flavour and shelf-life! Stir the simple ingredients together in less than a minute, let the yeast do their job in the fridge then bake at your leisure! This is a bread making process that works for you instead, so find out why this specific focaccia recipe is so delicious that it’s been featured on national television twice.

Is it really a headline grabbing recipe?

Yes, it is.

What flour do I need?

All purpose flour is totally fine to use here. Keep your eye out for strong, high-protein bread flour or specific pizza/focaccia flour blends. Tipo ‘00 flour is also an Italian staple ingredient which is more finely milled than all purpose. I use a 50/50 mix of bread flour and tipo ‘00 flour for my focaccia, so I’d recommend that!

Why no need to knead?

Because this dough is high-hydration (meaning there’s almost as much water as there is flour), the gluten proteins are able to move about more freely and essentially do the kneading job themselves. Keeping the dough in the fridge allows the yeast to slowly leaven the dough and impart flavour whilst gluten does its thing.


What does the potato do?

This focaccia is a winner even without the extra potato, but adding cooked potato to dough increases the amount of starch, which increases how much liquid the dough can hold. That means softer bread that goes stale more slowly.

Why the huge range in fridge time? How long do you do?

The longer you can leave the dough in the fridge, the better the resulting flavour. A minimum overnight stay in the fridge (a full night’s sleep of 8 hours, to be specific) will do the trick. I prefer to allow my dough to sit in the fridge for 2-3 days for the most incredible flavour so don’t be afraid to try that out, too. All you have to do is nothing. Set and forget with emphasis on forget! Once you realise how easy and delicious this focaccia is, you’ll move into the lifestyle I lead of always having a bowl of focaccia dough in the fridge to be dragged out and baked whenever you’re in the mood.

Do I have to make garlic confit?

Ugh, no. You can skip making tender, buttery, smearably-soft garlic pieces and the resulting garlic infused oil if you hate the finer things in life, but it’s so simple to cover garlic cloves in olive oil and leave them on low in the oven while you’re doing something else in the kitchen. If you can be arsed doing so, garlic confit and the infused oil are a delightful thing to have on hand, and make the flavour of this focaccia MAGNIFICENT.

IMPORTANT!

Garlic confit, the oil, and any focaccia using either of them MUST be stored in the fridge between preparing and using, or they can become a health hazard. (Specifically, botulism. No fun.)



Bit greedy on the toppings, no?

Traditional focaccia doesn’t go too topping heavy. Usually something simple like rosemary suffices and makes a delicious bread (I wrote this sentence at gunpoint wielded by the Italian government). This simple bread can hold so many delicious flavours so round these parts I prefer to test its limits! Check the ingredients for my fave toppings and choose a few to combine. I mean, I literally put all of them on every single time, but you do you do. 

Can I bake this in a different sized baking dish?

Oh, please do. I use an approximately 40cm x 28cm rectangle baking tray to bake one batch of focaccia. If I’m making a double batch, I use my oven’s extra-wide roasting tray to make one enormous beauty and it works just great. You can also divide the dough into several smaller baking dishes so don’t feel constrained to make one large one. I’ve also had success dividing the dough into 24 muffin tins for extra crispy, mini-focaccia bites. If using muffin tins, bake for 20-25 minutes instead. Really, whatever you can shove the dough into should do the trick.

The measurements below make one large, family-sized focaccia. My go-to order is a double batch so there’s one to take with me to parties and one to scavenge personally when I get home.

No-Knead Focaccia

No-Knead Focaccia

Yield: 16
Author: Zacchary Bird
Prep time: 15 MinCook time: 30 MinInactive time: 72 HourTotal time: 72 H & 45 M
This focaccia dough is so stupidly simple to make that there's little doubt why it's one of my most popular recipe. It's been featured on television several times and was the spark point for my entire The Vegan Baker cookbook. Find out here why my version is easier, softer and ten times more delicious than your average focaccia dough.

Ingredients

Dough
  • 275 g (91⁄2 oz) 00 (tipo) flour
  • 275 g (91⁄2 oz) bread flour
  • or.. 550g plain (all-purpose) flour
  • 4g (1 slightly heaped teaspoon) instant dried yeast
  • 2 teaspoons fine salt
  • 500 ml (17 fl oz) warm water
  • 150 g (51⁄2 oz) mashed potato (optional)
  • 120 ml (4 fl oz) kalamata olive brine
  • 1 teaspoon coarse salt, plus extra for sprinkling
Confit Garlic Oil
  • 2 to 4 garlic bulbs, peeled
  • at least 120 ml (4 fl oz) olive oil
Plus toppings, like my favourites
  • rosemary leaves
  • cherry tomatoes
  • kalamata olives
  • pickled peppers
  • 1 small onion, sliced into thin rounds

Instructions

  1. To make the confit garlic oil, preheat the oven to 130°C (265°F). Place the garlic cloves in a small baking dish, cover with the oil and bake for 11⁄2–2 hours, checking after the 1-hour mark to make sure the garlic is still submerged in the oil, until the garlic is soft. Pour the oil and garlic into a clean jar and keep in the fridge until needed; it will keep for up to 2 weeks. Important! Garlic confit, the oil, and any focaccia using either of them MUST be stored in the fridge or else they can become a health hazard (specifically, botulism. No fun.) Double, triple, quadruple this to make smearable garlic confit that goes on everything, plus nobody can get mad at the extra stash of garlic flavoured oil they swim in.
  2. Combine the flours, yeast and fine salt in a large mixing bowl. Add the warm water and potato, if using, and stir until incorporated; you should have a sticky, slightly runny dough that can still be manoeuvred by hand. Pour 2 tablespoons of the confit garlic oil over the dough, then flip the dough over a few times to coat fully in the oil. Cover the bowl securely with plastic wrap and store in the fridge for at least 6 hours, and up to 72 hours – the longer, the better!
  3. On the day you want to bake the focaccia,grease a 28 cm × 40 cm (11 in × 16 in) baking tray with another 2 tablespoons of the confit garlic oil. Deflate the dough by grabbing a piece and folding it into the middle of the dough ball, then rotate and repeat this action until the dough is more manageable. Place the dough in the middle of the baking tray and use your fingertips to prod and push the dough into the edges of the tray.
  4. Cover with plastic wrap to avoid a skin forming, then move to a warm spot and leave to rise for at least 2 hours. When risen, the dough should have bubbles throughout, and any coldness from the fridge should have been warmed away.
  5. To get it ready for baking, preheat the oven to 220°C (430°F). Use your fingertips to prod all over the top of the risen focaccia, through to the base of the baking tray, to create the signature dimples. Scatter the confit garlic and your chosen toppings all over the focaccia, then go in with a second dimpling to push them in. Doing this makes even more room for a second scattering of toppings if you’re keen for an overloaded version. Whisk together most of the remaining garlic oil and the olive brine (I use a 1:2 ratio of oil to brine) then pour this over the top of the focaccia. Finish with a scattering of coarse salt.
  6. Bake the focaccia for about 30 minutes, rotating the tray halfway through cooking. Brush any remaining garlic confit oil over the top and sprinkle with more coarse salt to make every bite perfect from the get-go.
  7. Cool the focaccia on the tray for 20 minutes, then transfer to a wire rack or chopping board, ready for slicing and serving. Alternatively, you can store it in the fridge for 3–4 days to slice and reheat as desired.

Nutrition Facts

Calories

343.38

Fat

8.62 g

Sat. Fat

1.22 g

Carbs

57.75 g

Fiber

3.76 g

Net carbs

53.98 g

Sugar

2.43 g

Protein

8.41 g

Sodium

550.18 mg

Cholesterol

0 mg
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Bread
Italian
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Let’s get a good close perve at the no knead focaccia recipe from The Vegan Baker cookbook (Photo Credit: Emily Weaving)