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Monday 9 November 2020 11:11

Focaccia Pugliese Recipe from Food of the Italian South Cookbook

Just as Naples is the capital of Italy’s thick-rimmed wood fired pizza pies, Bari and its surrounding Pugliese towns are known for a beloved regional flatbread, focaccia. An olive oil-rich dough is baked in iron pans at places like Panificio Fiore on Strada della Città in Bari Vecchia, then sold by the slice. The pan [...]

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Focaccia Pugliese Recipe from Food of the Italian South Cookbook
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Just as Naples is the capital of Italy’s thick-rimmed wood fired pizza pies, Bari and its surrounding Pugliese towns are known for a beloved regional flatbread, focaccia. An olive oil-rich dough is baked in iron pans at places like Panificio Fiore on Strada della Città in Bari Vecchia, then sold by the slice. The pan is drenched in oil before the soft dough is stretched into place, so when it all goes into the oven, the dough practically fries in the pan as it bakes, rendering the bottom and sides crispy and pleasantly oily.



To get the unique texture of Focaccia Pugliese, you need to bake with intense heat from underneath. Since the conditions of Puglia’s bakeries are difficult to replicate in a home oven, I suggest cooking the dough quickly on a stovetop, then transferring it to the oven. You will get the best results by using a frying pan or skillet with only metal and no plastic or wood parts for baking the focacce. If you have enough all-metal 10 to 12-inch diameter pans for all 3 focacce, you can prepare them simultaneously. Otherwise, set the dough aside in the refrigerator to prevent it from over-fermenting at room temperature while you work one piece of dough at a time.



 

This recipe features cherry tomatoes and olives, but you can use sliced onions, sliced potatoes, or raw tomato sauce seasoned with salt and herbs instead. If you don’t have a mixer, you can mix longer by hand to the recommended consistency.


Makes 3 (10 to 12-inch) focacce

  • 350 grams filtered water
  • 300 grams farina di semola rimacinata (freshly milled if you can get it–I like Tumminia flour from Sicily,
    available from Gustiamo
    ;
    Caputo brand
    is another option but budget a longer rising time)
  • 200 grams bread flour
  • 100 grams boiled, riced, and cooled potato
  • 2 grams active dry yeast
  • 12 grams sea salt
  • 5 grams sugar
  • 155 grams extra-virgin olive oil, plus more for oiling bowls
  • 500 grams (about 1 pound) cherry tomatoes
  • 3 teaspoons dried oregano
  • About 30 black olives, pitted
In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the dough hook, combine the water, farina di semola rimacinata, bread flour, potato, yeast, salt, sugar, and 50 grams of olive oil. Mix on low for 2 minutes, then increase the speed to medium and mix until smooth and slightly tacky, 18 to 20 minutes. 

Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured surface, allowing it to gently release from the bowl, and cut it into 3 equal pieces weighing about 330 grams each with a dough scraper or knife. Shape each piece into a ball and place each in a bowl generously greased with olive oil. Brush lightly with olive oil and cover with plastic wrap. Set aside to rise at room temperature until the dough has nearly doubled in size (2 to 6 hours, depending on your kitchen temperature and the freshness of the flour–see ingredients list).

Pour 25 grams of olive oil in a cast iron pan and make sure it covers the bottom and an inch up on the sides, turn one of the doughs into the pan. Using greased fingers, carefully push and stretch the dough into the shape of the pan, taking care not to tear it.

Gently press ⅓ of the halved cherry tomatoes, cut side down, and about 10 olives into the dough, distributing evenly. Cover the pan with a cloth and set aside to proof for 20 minutes.

Meanwhile, preheat the oven to 425ºF and place a baking stone or steel set on the middle rack in the oven to preheat as well.

Remove the cover and sprinkle dried oregano over the dough. Season with salt. Drizzle 10 grams of olive oil over each pan. Using greased fingertips, press into the dough around the tomatoes and olives to form dimpled impressions.

Place the pan on a stove top and heat over medium-high heat for about 3 minutes, or until the oil starts to bubble and crackle. This will create a crispy and oily crust that cannot be achieved in most home ovens. Check the underside of the dough, gently lifting with a heat-proof spatula. It should be a very dark golden color. If it has not browned, cook 30 seconds to 1 minute more.

Transfer the pan onto the pre-heated baking stone or steel. Bake until the Focaccia has a dark golden crispy crust, about 17 minutes; focacce brown irregularly so having darker spots mixed with lighter parts is normal.

Transfer the Focaccia to a wire rack and allow to cool for 5 minutes before slicing.

Repeat with the remaining two dough balls.

Recipe from Food of the Italian South.



The post
Focaccia Pugliese Recipe from Food of the Italian South Cookbook
appeared first on
Katie Parla
.

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