Overnight, Refrigerator Focaccia = The Best Focaccia Bread Recipe
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Cold, refrigerated dough is the secret to making delicious focaccia! Allowing the dough to rest 18 to 48 hours in the fridge will yield extra-pillowy and airy focaccia, though if you are pressed for time, you can make this start-to-finish in 3 hours. This 4-ingredient recipe requires only 5 minutes of hands-on time. Video guidance below!
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Review:
“Love this recipe! I’ve made this so many times that I’ve lost count. Super simple and delicious. My family loves it. Whenever someone asks me for a focaccia recipe, I always show them this one. This recipe is awesome. Thank you for sharing!” — Lucy
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: focaccia is the bread recipe for beginners. Why? Because:
- The no-knead, 4-ingredient dough takes 5 minutes to mix together.
- It requires no special equipment, no tricky shaping technique, and no scoring.
- If you have a 9×13-inch baking pan and your fingertips (for dimpling), you’re good to go.
- It emerges soft and pillowy, olive oil-crusted, golden all around, and it’s completely irresistible.
In sum, it’s hard to beat focaccia (pronounced foh-kah-chuh) in the effort-to-reward category. If you are intimidated by bread baking, this is the recipe I suggest making first, both for its simplicity and flavor. After all, this focaccia bread recipe is adapted from my mother’s simple peasant bread recipe, a recipe that has removed the fear of the bread baking process for many.
For the past few months, I’ve been making the focaccia bread recipe from my cookbook Bread Toast Crumbs, but changing the method: using more yeast, using less yeast, doing longer, slower rises at room temperature, doing longer, slower rises in the refrigerator. Find the results below.
This post is organized as follows:
- What Makes The Best Focaccia
- Four Tips for Success
- How This Focaccia Recipe Differs from Others
- Focaccia Bread Ingredients
- How to Make Focaccia, Step by Step
- Adding Rosemary, Herbs and Other Toppings to your Focaccia Dough
- How to Make a Focaccia Bread Art
- Tomato Focaccia
- How to Make a Focaccia Bread Sandwich
- Can I Skip the Overnight Rise?
PS: Once you master this simple focaccia, try your hand at this simple sourdough bread recipe, another recipe that requires minimal effort but yields spectacular results.
What Makes The Best Focaccia?
I’ll spare you all the details of the various experiments and skip straight to what I’ve found creates the best focaccia, one that emerges golden all around, looking like a brain, its surface woven with a winding labyrinth of deep crevices: high-hydration, refrigerated dough.
This is nothing novel—many bakers extol the virtues of the cold fermentation process—and it came as no surprise to me either: it was, after all, past-prime Jim Lahey refrigerated dough that showed me how easy focaccia could be: place cold, several-days-old pizza dough in a well-oiled pan, let it rise for several hours or until it doubles, drizzle with more oil, dimple with your fingers, sprinkle with sea salt, then bake until done.
Employing a refrigerator rise requires more time because the cold environment slows everything down initially, and during the second rise, the cold dough takes time to warm to room temperature. The overall effort, however, is very hands-off, and the result — a light, airy, pillowy dough — is well worth it.
As important as refrigerating the dough is using a high hydration dough, meaning a dough with a high proportion of water relative to the flour. The high proportion of water will create a dough with beautiful air pockets throughout. (Incidentally, this is the secret to making excellent pizza dough as well as light, airy sourdough sandwich bread.)
How This Focaccia Recipe Differs from Others
There are lots of focaccia bread recipes out there, so why make this one? This one differs from many of the recipes out there in two ways:
- The long, cold, refrigerator rise.
- The absence of sugar or honey or any sort of sweetener.
Why isn’t there any sweetener in this recipe? Simply stated, a sweetener is just not needed — the yeast, contrary to popular belief, does not need sugar to activate or thrive. Sugar will speed things up, but when you’re employing a long, slow rise, speed is not the name of the game.
Moreover, and this is getting a little scientific, but during the long, cold fermentation: enzymes in both the flour and the yeast will break down the starches in the flour into simple sugars, which will contribute both to flavor and to browning, again rendering sugar unnecessary. Cool, right?
Four Tips for Success
- Allowing the dough to rest 18 to 24 hours in the fridge yields the best results. (You can leave the dough in the fridge for as long as 72 hours.)
- A buttered or parchment-lined pan in addition to the olive oil will prevent sticking. When I use Pyrex or other glass pans, butter plus oil is essential to prevent sticking. When I use my 9×13-inch USA Pan, I can get away with using olive oil alone.
- Count on 2 to 4 hours for the second rise. This will depend on the temperature of your kitchen and the time of year.
- After the second rise, dimple the dough, then immediately stick the pans in the oven — this has been a critical difference for me in terms of keeping those desirable crevices. If you dimple and let the dough rise again even for 20 minutes before popping the pan in the oven, the crevices begin to dissolve.
Ingredients
- Flour: bread flour or all-purpose flour will work equally well here. If you live in a humid environment or abroad, I suggest trying to get your hands on bread flour. King Arthur Flour is my preference.
- Yeast: SAF Instant Yeast is my preference, but active dry yeast works just as well. See recipe box for instructions on how to use active-dry yeast in place of instant.
- Salt: I say this all the time, but a big part of making a good loaf of bread comes down simply to using the right amount of salt given the amount of flour you are using by weight. It’s like anything: bread has to be well seasoned. At a minimum, use 10 grams (2 teaspoons) of salt for every 500 grams (4 cups) of flour. I highly recommend investing in some good, flaky sea salt for sprinkling on top of the focaccia dough — it tastes better than the more finely ground varieties of salt. I use Diamond Crystal kosher salt for the dough, but any salt you have on hand will work just fine for the dough.
- Water: There is a lot of water in this dough — it’s 88% hydration — and all of that water helps produce a light, airy, pillowy dough.
- Olive oil: Olive oil both in the bottom of the pan and on top of the dough is essential for encouraging nice browning, flavor, and that quintessential oiliness we all love about focaccia.
- Rosemary or other seasonings: Rosemary is a classic focaccia topping, and you can either sprinkle it over the dough before baking or you can chop it up and add it to the dough. Many people love sun-dried tomatoes and olives in their focaccia. See below for how to incorporate these other ingredients into your focaccia dough.
How to Make Focaccia Bread, Step by Step
Gather your ingredients: 4 cups (512 g) flour, 2 teaspoons (10 g) salt, 2 teaspoons (8 g) instant yeast (SAF is my preference), 2 cups (455 g) water:
Whisk together the flour, salt, and yeast first:
Add the water:
Use a spatula to stir the two together.
Slick the dough with olive oil:
Slick the surface of the dough with olive oil; then cover the bowl. You all have one of these, right? Stick the bowl in the fridge immediately; leave it there to rise for 12 to 18 hours (or longer—I’ve left it there for as long as three days). NOTE: It is important the dough really be slicked with olive oil especially if you are using a cloth bowl cover or tea towel as opposed to plastic wrap or the lid pictured in the photo below this one. If you are using a tea towel, consider securing it with a rubber band to make a more airtight cover. If you do not slick the dough with enough oil, you risk the dough drying out and forming a crust over the top layer.
Another option: the lid that comes with the 4-Qt Pyrex bowl. This is handy for fridge storage because you can stack things on top of it.
Remove from fridge, and remove the cover:
Deflate the dough and transfer to a prepared pan. I love this 9×13-inch USA pan. If you don’t have one you can use two 8- or 9-inch pie plates or something similar. If you are using glass baking dishes be sure to grease the dishes with butter before pouring a tablespoon of olive oil into each. (The butter will ensure the bread doesn’t stick.) Don’t touch the dough again for 2 to 4 hours depending on your environment.
After two to four hours, or when the dough looks like this…:
… it’s time to dimple it! You can use simply olive oil and salt — I recommend good, flaky sea salt for this. Note, the dough in the photo below spent three days in the fridge, and the dough was super bubbly!
if you are using rosemary, sprinkle it over the dough. Then pour two tablespoons of olive oil over the dough, and using your fingers, press straight down to create deep dimples. Sprinkle with flaky sea salt — again, something like Maldon is great here.
Transfer to oven immediately and bake at 425ºF for 25 minutes or until golden all around. Remove focaccia from pans and place on cooling racks.
How to Incorporate Rosemary, Herbs, and Other Ingredients & Toppings into Your Focaccia Dough
One of the most frequently asked questions I get is: How can I add other toppings or ingredients to my focaccia bread? You can do this in two ways:
- Add them on top as you would rosemary or other herbs. The key is to make sure the ingredients are slicked lightly with olive oil to ensure they do not burn in the oven. I like to sprinkle the rosemary over top of the dough, then drizzle it with olive oil, then dimple the dough.
- You can add them directly to the dough. In step one, when you whisk together the flour, salt, and instant yeast, add your ingredients — chopped olives, sun-dried tomatoes, roasted garlic — to the flour and toss to coat; then add the water.
How to Make a Focaccia Bread Art
Pictured above is my “Ode to Spring” (🤣) Focaccia Bread Art (or Garden Scape). As noted above, the key with adding toppings is to slick them lightly with olive oil to ensure they don’t completely char. Keep in mind that some items will char, and a little charring is not a bad thing.
To make a focaccia bread art:
- Follow the recipe through the step in which you dimple the dough just before baking. Arrange your toppings — sliced peppers, asparagus, scallions, olives, tomatoes, onions, etc. — over top and dimple again, pressing the ingredients into the dough to embed them — you can be more aggressive than you think.
- Brush the entire surface with olive oil; then sprinkle with sea salt.
- Bake as directed.
Tomato Focaccia
Pictured above is a cross between pissaladière and tomato focaccia. I love the addition of tomatoes to pissaladière because it adds a freshness and brightness, a hit of acidity to offset the sweet caramelized onions and salty anchovies, olives, and capers.
You can use any summer tomatoes you have on hand — diced cherry tomatoes, Roma, plum, sliced beefsteak tomatoes, heirloom tomatoes, etc. If you choose to dice up Roma or plum tomatoes, there is no need to seed them, but leave any juices lingering on the cutting board behind.
Top the unbaked focaccia with a thin layer of tomatoes; then bake as directed.
How to Make Focaccia Bread Sandwiches
One of my favorite things to do with either the rounds of focaccia or the 9×13-inch slab of focaccia is to make a giant sandwich: simply halve the whole finished loaf of focaccia in half crosswise; fill it as you wish, close the sandwich; then slice and serve.
Here’s one of my favorites: Roasted Red Peppers, Olive Tapenade, & Whipped Honey Goat Cheese
Can I Make this Overnight Focaccia Without the Overnight Rise?
Yes, you can. In fact, in my cookbook, Bread Toast Crumbs, I do not employ an overnight rise. Start-to-finish it can be made in about three hours. The finished bread will not be as pillowy, but it will still be light, airy, and delicious.
To skip the overnight rise, simply let the mixed dough rise at room temperature until doubled, about 1.5 to 2 hours. Then proceed with the recipe, knowing the second rise will only take about 30 minutes.
The Best, Easiest Focaccia Bread Recipe
- Total Time: 18 hours 30 minutes
- Yield: 2 loaves
Description
Cold, refrigerated dough is the secret to making delicious focaccia! Allowing the dough to rest 18 to 24 hours in the fridge will yield extra-pillowy and airy focaccia, though if you are pressed for time, you can make this start-to-finish in 3 hours. This 4-ingredient recipe requires only 5 minutes of hands-on time. Video guidance below!
Adapted from the focaccia recipe in Bread Toast Crumbs.
A few notes:
- Plan ahead: While you certainly could make this more quickly, it turns out especially well if you mix the dough the day before you plan on baking it. The second rise, too, takes 2 to 4 hours.
- If you are short on time and need to make the focaccia tonight: Let the mixed dough rise at room temperature until doubled, about 1.5 to 2 hours. Then proceed with the recipe, knowing the second rise will only take about 30 minutes.
- You can use various pans to make this focaccia such as: two 9-inch Pyrex pie plates. (Use butter + oil to prevent sticking.) One 9×13-inch pan, such as this USA pan — do not split the dough in half, if you use this option, which will create a thicker focaccia . A 13×18-inch rimmed sheet pan — this creates a thinner focaccia, which is great for slab sandwiches.
- As always, for best results, use a digital scale to measure the flour and water.
- I love SAF instant yeast. I buy it in bulk, transfer it to a quart storage container, and store it in my fridge for months. You can store it in the freezer also.
- If you are using active-dry yeast, simply sprinkle the yeast over the lukewarm water and let it stand for 15 minutes or until it gets foamy; then proceed with the recipe.
- Flour: You can use all-purpose or bread flour here with great results. If you live in a humid environment, I would suggest using bread flour. If you are in Canada or the UK, also consider using bread flour or consider holding back some of the water. Reference the video for how the texture of the bread should look; then add water back as needed.
Ingredients
- 4 cups (512 g) all-purpose flour or bread flour, see notes above
- 2 teaspoons (10 g) kosher salt
- 2 teaspoons (8 g) instant yeast, see notes above if using active dry
- 2 cups (455 g) lukewarm water, made by combining 1/2 cup boiling water with 1 1/2 cups cold water
- butter for greasing
- 4 tablespoons olive oil, divided
- flaky sea salt, such as Maldon
- 1 to 2 teaspoons whole rosemary leaves, optional
Instructions
- Make the dough: In a large bowl, whisk together the flour, salt, and instant yeast. Add the water. Using a rubber spatula, mix until the liquid is absorbed and the ingredients form a sticky dough ball. Rub the surface of the dough lightly with olive oil. Cover the bowl with a damp tea towel, cloth bowl cover, or plastic wrap and place in the refrigerator immediately for at least 12 hours or for as long as three days. (See notes above if you need to skip the overnight rise for time purposes.) NOTE: It is important the dough really be slicked with olive oil especially if you are using a cloth bowl cover or tea towel as opposed to plastic wrap or a hard lid. If you are using a tea towel, consider securing it with a rubber band to make a more airtight cover. If you do not slick the dough with enough oil, you risk the dough drying out and forming a crust over the top layer.
- Line two 8- or 9-inch pie plates or a 9×13-inch pan (see notes above) with parchment paper or grease with butter or coat with nonstick cooking spray. (Note: This greasing step may seem excessive, but with some pans, it is imperative to do so to prevent sticking. With my USA pans, I can get away with olive oil alone; with my glass baking dishes, butter is a must.)
- Pour a tablespoon of oil into the center of each pan or 2 tablespoons of oil if using the 9×13-inch pan. Using two forks, deflate the dough by releasing it from the sides of the bowl and pulling it toward the center. Rotate the bowl in quarter turns as you deflate, turning the mass into a rough ball. Use the forks to split the dough into two equal pieces (or do not split if using the 9×13-inch pan). Place one piece into one of the prepared pans. Roll the dough ball in the oil to coat it all over, forming a rough ball. Repeat with the remaining piece. Let the dough balls rest for 3 to 4 hours depending on the temperature of your kitchen (Note: no need to cover for this room temperature rise).
- Set a rack in the middle of the oven and preheat it to 425°F. If using the rosemary, sprinkle it over the dough. Pour a tablespoon of oil over each round of dough (or two tablespoons if using a 9×13-inch pan). Rub your hands lightly in the oil to coat, then, using all of your fingers, press straight down to create deep dimples. If necessary, gently stretch the dough as you dimple to allow the dough to fill the pan. Sprinkle with flaky sea salt all over.
- Transfer the pans or pan to the oven and bake for 25 to 30 minutes, until the underside is golden and crisp. Remove the pans or pan from the oven and transfer the focaccia to a cooling rack. Let it cool for 10 minutes before cutting and serving; let it cool completely if you are halving it with the intention of making a sandwich.
- To store the focaccia: When it has completely cooled, transfer it to an airtight bag or vessel and store it at room temperature for up to 3 days. Otherwise, freeze it for up to 3 months. Always reheat it on subsequent days to revive its crust: 350ºF for 15 minutes.
- Prep Time: 18 hours
- Cook Time: 30 minutes
- Category: Bread
- Method: Oven
- Cuisine: Italian
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
4,680 Comments on “Overnight, Refrigerator Focaccia = The Best Focaccia Bread Recipe”
This is my first time to make froccacia and it turned out alright. Eventhough I muck it up a bit halfway through because I had to change the pan, still turned out good. Thank you for this easy to follow recipe.
Great to hear! Thanks for writing 🙂
Great recipe!
How can you tell if you overproofed the dough? Can you let it sit at room temp for longer than 4 hours?
Absolutely amazing recipe! Works every time and so easy. Magical!
Other then rosemary what else can I use for flavor?
Hi! It’s honestly great with sea salt and olive oil alone if you don’t like rosemary. I don’t really have any other recommendations for dried herbs here.
I have made it with sun dried tomatoes, olives, and fresh rosemary on the top. I’ve also done a caramelized onion on top.
My word, what an easy focaccia recipe.
cold rise 13 hours, counter proof 3 hours. Incorporated sun-dried tomatoes in initial mix.
Baked beautifully (my oven, 20 mins).
Pillows of Italy….thank you for this wonderful recipe.
Wonderful to hear this, Kay! Thanks for writing and sharing your notes. Sun-dried tomatoes sound lovely 🙂
Absolutely delicious! Just finished making for second time! Everyone raved how good it was!
Great to hear, Jen!
Hello! Can you please tell me how I determine the length of time for the second rise. What are my indications that it’s ready to bake? Thanks in advance!
The dough should be doubled in volume and very pillowy to the touch; When you dimple the dough, the dimples should remain — if the dough hasn’t rested long enough, the dimples will disappear quickly/the dough will spring back. The dough should feel very relaxed and easy to stretch to fit the pan.
Hi! In the middle of my first fridge proof! I was wondering if olive oil had to be used throughout the recipe or if I can use EVOO as well?
EVOO is great! I only use EVOO… I should specify that.
This was just perfect. So easy to understand and so easy to make! Turned out great! Thank you for teaching me how to do this!
Great to hear! Thanks for writing 🙂
I absolutely love this recipe and your instructions/ video are so very helpful. I have made this focaccia recipe several times for entertaining and as a gift to others. Next time, I am going to be selfish and make it just for ME! Thank you!
🤣 Great to hear, Liz! Thanks so much for writing 🙂
In all my years of making recipes from food blogs and pinterest, I have NEVER gone through the trouble of leaving a review.
Miss ma’am, you have outdone yourself with this one. Granted I’m new to the bread making world but you have made me a believer with this one recipe.
So incredibly easy, very hands off and unfussy and the TASTE!!! I will probably dust this off in 24 hours.
Thank you so much for this recipe. I let mine rest about 32 hours, mashed roasted garlic with olive oil and herbs de provence for my topping after making the holes and some flaky sea salt you recommended, which was so great.
I’ll be making this as long as I live and breathe, thank you!!!
So nice to read all of this! Your roasted garlic + herbs de provence topper sounds lovely. Thank you for taking the time to write 🙂
I found the need to add quite a lot more flower to get the dough to anything close to a sticky ball ( was super precise with all measurements to the gram).
At almost 90% hydration I wasn’t too concerned adding the extra flour – just a bit confused that mine seems to have turned out that way. Any advice or ideas on what might have gone wrong?
Hi! What kind of flour are you using? And do you live in a humid environment?
Hi, thanks for the reply! It’s about 85% humidity where I live at the minute and I used a 50/50 blend of 00flour and strong bread flour
OK! Good to know. 00 flour will definitely make for a wetter dough — it does not absorb water the way bread flour does. I would consider using 100% bread flour for your next experiment, and you might consider holding back some of the water at the start. Reference the video/photos for dough consistency and if necessary stir in the water you held back.
If you’d like to continue using your blend of flours, definitely hold back some water from the start — I’d suggest holding back 50 grams then adjusting as necessary moving forward based on your results.
Thanks so much, very helpful advice.
I made the focaccia yesterday and they were absolutely amazing.
Oh great to hear! Thanks for reporting back 🙂
Alexandra thanks so much for the recipe.I set my dough for 20 hours in the fridge. I decorated the top with green onion, black olives, sliced garlic cloves, and fresh rosemary. The freshata came out marvelous.
Great to hear! Sounds delicious and beautiful!
This focaccia is so easy and delicious! Thanks for making homemade bread accessible to a total beginner like me.
Great to hear, Cindy! Thanks for writing 🙂
I made this for my mom. We like it. It is delicious! I used the refrigerated method. I call it the no-fuss easy method.
Great to hear, Veenie! Thanks for writing 🙂
First attempt ever at foccacia and it turned out amazing. Dough sat for 2 days and the final texture was airy and perfect. Topped with roasted garlic, tomato, sauteed shallots, rosemary. Such an easy to follow recipe!
Yum! Great to read all of this 🙂
Excellent focaccia recipe! I made two 9″ rounds , one with sun-dried tomatoes, grated parm and rosemary, the other with kalamata olives, oregano and spinach. Wow!! The focaccia puffed up into perfection!! my clan devoured it .
This recipe is the best!!! Easy to do and the overnight rise really made it wonderful.
Thank you Chef Ali for an excellent recipe!
Great to hear, LK! All of those toppings sound outstanding. Thanks for writing 🙂
I have made your focaccia bread numerous times and it always turns out perfect. Even when I cut the refrigerator time a little short or decide to throw a 1/4 tsp honey in. It’s always tasty, chewy, and makes the best paninis. Thank you for this great recipe. I sometimes set oven on broil for the last couple of minutes for an extra crispy crust.
Great to hear! Thanks for writing and sharing these notes 🙂
I may have used this recipe as a base when I had extra preferment lying around, and no clue what to do with it. I used 3.5 cups of flour, because I prefer a wetter dough that is more like a batter. (How foccaccia is made at the bakery I work at)
I let it mix on my mixer to get nice and glutinous.
Because of the preferment, I put the dough in the pans straight away. Let rise, then dimple and more olive oil. A touch of sea salt, and then into the oven.
I used a flavoured olive oil (tuscan herb) and it brought so much flavour to the foccaccia. My family devoured this in less than 24 hours. I have another one rising on the table right now.
One of the best mistakes I ever made.
So nice to read all of this! Thanks so much for writing and sharing all of these notes. So inspiring for others 🙂
Loved making this and motivated to try more of your bread recipes! Flawless recipe and the video is so helpful!!! I made it with rosemary but next time, will opt for olives and tomatoes. Love that you can mix by hand and forget about it for 48+ hours! Thank you, Ali!
So nice to hear, Hina! Thanks so much for writing. Olives + tomatoes will be delicious 🙂
Hi! Looks amazing and can’t wait to try. You mentioned that you could do this recipe without putting it in the refrigerator overnight. Could you please tell me how long the proving tine(s) would be without the cold prove? I want to make this but time is a constraint and would love to make it in a shorter amount of time.
Thanks so much!
I am wondering if I can use gluten free King Arthur Flour for this? I love bread and having issues with wheat makes it difficult for me and bread. Any suggestions would be appreciated very much.
Thank you,
Sherian McLaughlin
Hi SHerry! I don’t think a 1:1 swap will work here. Gluten-free baking can be a little tricky. I might consider using this gluten-free bread recipe as a guide amd adapting it for this focaccia: Gluten-Free Peasant Bread Recipe
So good!!
Very easy to make for first time baker and was absolutely delicious. added olives and cherry tomatoes to the top before baking and it was perfect.
Yum!!!
Just made this and cant stop eating it. Just making your pizza dough too.
Great to hear, Suzanne!
Hello. Thanks for recipe for focaccia which I am making for first time. I followed instructions in your description (not in your printable recipe). Therefore, I did not make dough balls. I just refrigerated overnight & put dough in baking dish as described. Hope it turns out. Looked ok when I put it in oven!
This focaccia is amazing! I made it exactly the way the 1st time. The 2nd time I added black olives and Parmesan cheese. It’s worth the overnight wait. I’ll keep making this focaccia for a long time!!!
Great to hear! All sounds delicious! Thanks for writing 🙂
Dear Alexandra
I have used your online focaccia recipe and I I also have the recipe in your book. Online you use 2 teaspoons of yeast, in the book it’s 1. I’m confused! Please help.
Dee
Hi! In this recipe, the dough is mixed and then immediately transferred to the fridge, so the little bit of extra yeast helps give it a boost, which it needs in those colder temperatures. Hope that makes sense!
Happiness is dough slowly rising in the fridge. Can’t wait to see results tomorrow.
Hope it turned out well for you, Amy 🙂
It was truly RESTAURANT QUALITY!! Very impressive. I used tin cake pans with parchment paper, needed only a slight coat of oil on sides. 25 minutes was sufficient. Will definitely be making this again and again.
Awww yay! So nice to read all of this. Thank you for writing 🙂 🙂 🙂
i’ve made this twice now! my husband loves it, and i do too. i just took the second batch out of the oven. what is the best way to store this?
thank you!
Great to hear! I store it in an airtight bag at room temperature for up to 3 days or freeze for up to 3 months. Always reheat on subsequent days before serving.
Hi!
I’m in the UK and have just tried this recipe for the first time😬 when adding the 455g of water it really looked more like a batter and was very loose. I didn’t want to interfere with the recipe and decided to simply stick to your instructions! I used white strong bread flour but out of curiosity after I’d mixed the ingredients and put it in the fridge for the first rise I weighed the two cups of water on my scales and that was around 350g? So I’m now confused! Should I have used 2 cups of Luke warm water(350g) or 455g of water? My dough definitely looks wetter than yours in the video!🤦🏻♀️ Could you advise whether I might need to cook it for longer or whether it may be more dense!? I’m hoping to top it with tomato pesto and oregano after the second rise and will let you know the results! 🤞🤞🤞
Also wondering if I can substitute some white flour for wholemeal?
Love this website! I can’t wait to try more of your recipes!💗
Hi Hayley! The 455 grams is accurate. You’ll likely need to reduce the water from the start next time around. Having troubleshooted with many people from the UK over the years, the solution for a too-wet dough and for the recipe to work better, is to reduce the water — some brands of UK flour just don’t absorb water the way most US brands of bread flour do.
I hope it turned out OK – let me know. But regardless, try starting with 375-400 grams of water next time around. You can always add water in little by little until it looks like the dough in the video.