Garden Focaccia

I’ve been making focaccia for years and most often topping them with rosemary or olives. Classic stuff. Then this year, a trend emerged on instagram of people decorating their focaccias like little paintings. Most often they feature flowers and meadows – hence the name garden focaccia. For this focaccia I headed down to my little garden and picked some rosemary sprigs (which were just blooming), some chives with chive flowers and some bay leaves from my bay bush. I’ve also used peppers to create a flower, and played with olives and cherry tomatoes that were still in the fridge. Just let your imagination go wild!

This recipe was created as part of my “Recipes for Staying Home” show, you can watch the episode here.

This is a recipe from my cookbook ‘Flavours of Home’.

Ingredients

450g strong bread flour (T1050)
50g semolina, plus extra for dusting
1 tsp salt
21g fresh yeast
290ml lukewarm water
a pinch of sugar
1 tbsp olive oil + extra to brush
salt and pepper

Optional the toppings:
rosemary sprigs
chives
basil
bay leaves
olives
peppers
cherry tomatoes
red onion slices

Method

Makes 1 big loaf

Put the flour, semolina and salt into a bowl of a freestanding mixer and mix.

Crumble the yeast into a jug and add 50ml of water, stir to dissolve. Add the remaining water, sugar and olive oil and stir.

Add the liquid ingredients to the flour and knead with a freestanding mixer for about 5 minutes to get a bouncy, non-sticky dough.* You might need to add a bit of flour if the dough feels too sticky.

Take the dough out of the bowl and form a ball. Lightly brush the inside of the bowl with a bit of olive oil before putting the dough back in. Cover with a clean teatowel and put in a warm place and leave to double in size, which takes about 1 hour.

After 1 hour, sprinkle some semolina onto a baking tray**. Tip the dough onto the baking tray, not kneading it, but stretching it into a rectangle of approximately 30x20cm.

Brush the surface generously with olive oil and decorate with your chosen pattern of vegetables. Sprinkle with a bit of salt and leave to rest for 15 minutes.

Meanwhile, put a baking dish with water at the bottom of the oven and preheat the oven to 200°C fan.

After 15 minutes, the dough might have risen a bit again, so you might need to push back the vegetables of your pattern into the dough to hold

Bake the focaccia in the oven for about 25 minutes until golden brown (the bottom should sound hollow).

Transfer onto a wire rack, brush with a bit more olive oil and leave to cool before slicing.

* if you’re kneading the dough by hand, you need to knead for 10 minutes.

**no need to line the tray with baking paper, the focaccia will come out without it.

Recipe Gallery

Similar Recipes