No Knead Focaccia
No Knead Focaccia
4 cups/500g white bread flour (or swap half of the strng white flour for more nutritious flours such as spelt or rye or whole wheat)
1 1/4-oz/7g (1 envelope) instant dried yeast
1 T. honey (or agave syrup, for vegans)
4 tablespoons/60ml olive oil
For the herb garden topping
Flaky salt or 1 T. of caper brine or olive brine, plus a mix of any leaves and edible petals that you can grow or forage, such as sage, marjoram, rosemary, marigolds, rose petals, pansies, fig leaves
Measure the flour into your biggest mixing bowl. Using a big wooden spoon or spatula, stir in 2-3 teaspoons/10-15g salt, the yeast, honey, and 1 2/3 C. lukewarm water. Stir well until it comes together and there are no unmixed bits. Add up to 2 ½ tablespoons/40ml more water and keep stirring until you have a wet, shaggy dough. Cover with a plate and let rise at room temperature for at least 4 hours or up to 8. It should be very bubbly and will have doubled or tripled in volume (hence the need for your biggest bowl). Take a big heavy pan—I use a 12-inch/30cm iron pan but if you don’t have something similar, it will also work fine on a lined baking sheet. Line it with parchment paper if it’s a pan that sticks. Pour 2 T. of the olive oil into the bottom of the pan or sheet and gently pour in the bubbly dough. Using your fingers, make deep holes in the dough, like craters on the moon. Spread the final 2 T. of oil over the top. Let rise at room temperature for another 2 hours or so until it is even more risen and bubbly. When you are nearly ready to bake, preheat the oven to 450° F. Decorate the focaccia with a range of leaves and petals (bear in mind that they shrink in the oven so use more than you think you need) and sprinkle with a little flaky salt or drizzle 1 T. of brine from ajar of capers, which adds a delicious tang. Bake for 20-30 minutes, or until the color of autumn leaves. Cool on a wire rack.